Describe two of the torts that can be brought to court by someone who suffered damages at the hands of a government agency and explain what the victim would have to prove in order to be successful

What will be an ideal response?


The charge against government agencies tends to be centered on gross negligence. In these court cases, the victim is arguing the government abused their discretionary authority through inaction or incompetence. A few states require the plaintiff to demonstrate the gross negligence was clearly related to the crime at hand, called the doctrine of sovereign immunity. One type of tort is called nonfeasance, where the plaintiff alleges the police failed to protect them and they were owed a special duty—for example, as a witness for the prosecution in a serious case. Another type is wrongful escape, where the victim argues the department of corrections did not adequately supervise or released an individual who then committed harm.

Criminal Justice

You might also like to view...

?When combining all mass murders, mini-mass murders, and attempted mass murders, the incidences of such murders remains _____.

A. ?very high. B. ?very low. C. ?consistently stable. D. ?a mystery to explain.

Criminal Justice

Acts of ______ occur because of deep-seated frustrations with how society functions.

a. dissident terrorism b. state-sponsored terrorism c. religious terrorism d. cyberterrorism

Criminal Justice

What is the median?

A. It is the score that cuts a distribution in half, with 50% of the scores above that value and 50% below. B. It is the score that represents the arithmetic average of a distribution. C. It is the score that rests at the 50th percentile. D. It is the absolute value of the scores that sit at the very end of the tails of a normal distribution.

Criminal Justice

While police patrol has many objectives, most police experts agree that the majority of police patrol efforts are devoted to:

A) ?crime fighting. B) ?order maintenance. C) ?responding to emergencies. D) ?deterring crime. E) ?personal safety.

Criminal Justice