Can American police use pain to make you talk? Depends on where you live.

A case from Texas sets a dangerous precedent

An arrest.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Screenshot/Daily Mail, iStock)

In the United States, government officials cannot inflict pain to compel you to speak — unless you live in Texas, Louisiana, or Mississippi.

A three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals recently held that police officers do not violate the Constitution when they use "pain control maneuvers" against restrained, non-resisting people to make them answer questions, setting a dangerous, legally incorrect precedent. But the full court still has a chance to fix this outrageous decision, protect Americans from similar future abuses, and ensure that if such violations do occur, government officials are held accountable.

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Alexa Gervasi

Alexa is a graduate of Texas A&M University and Georgetown University Law Center. She completed law school through Georgetown Law's evening program, spending her days working as the Program Manager for the Georgetown Center for the Constitution, directed by Professor Randy E. Barnett. After law school, Alexa spent some time in private practice before jumping ship to clerk for the Honorable D. Michael Fisher of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. She then had the distinct privilege of clerking on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals for the liberty-loving Honorable Don R. Willett before joining the Institute for Justice.