Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, a Democrat, has argued in court filings that the Pennsylvania law on police use of deadly force violates a federal legal standard that such force against a fleeing suspect can only be used when reasonably needed to prevent imminent serious injury or death.
“While states have inherent discretion to police conduct within their borders, they may not yield it in ways offensive to the Constitution,” Krasner’s lawyers wrote in a July brief. “This includes the circumstance here, where unless interpreted as the commonwealth asserts, Pennsylvania law would exclude from criminal liability police officers who infringe on personal liberties in ways that would otherwise call for prosecution under the Crimes Code.”
But Pownall’s lawyers have urged the justices not to rewrite state law “to satisfy (prosecutors’) public policy concerns,” and said the Supreme Court shouldn’t be considering the question at this stage of the criminal case.
More broadly, his lawyers argued “there is nothing even remotely unconstitutional” about the state law on use of force during an arrest, according to an Aug. 31 brief.