Denver to pay $3.76M to grandmother due to "Find My" error
Police who wrongly raided and ransacked an elderly woman's home looking for a stolen truck and guns with Apple's Find My have cost the city of Denver $3.76 million in compensation and damages.

Denver police seeking to recover a stolen truck loaded with guns, ammo, and cash back in January of 2022 used Apple's Find My technology on another iPhone to locate the vehicle, but picked the wrong house out of a fairly wide area to storm in an effort to catch the thieves.
As a result, 78-year-old grandmother Ruby Johnson has received a sizable award from the jury in the resulting lawsuit.
The city will be paying the $3.76M award even though the defendant officers -- Detective Gary Staab and Sgt. Gregory Buschy -- were sued as individuals. Denver police had previously cleared both men of any wrongdoing, but the jury disagreed.
"We are disturbed by the lack of training or policy changes and hope that the amount of the punitive damages award will send a strong message that the police department must take seriously the constitutional rights of its residents," Johnson's attorney Tim Macdonald told CNN. A Denver District Court clerk said the city has not yet filed an appeal of the verdict.
The American Civil Liberties Union, which brought the case on behalf of Mrs. Johnson, noted that the raid was predicated on "based on "an alleged location ping from an iPhone's Find My' app that the officers did not understand and for which they had no training." Policed relied on a "Find My" ping from an iPhone 11 that was probably still in the stolen truck, but the area identified included parts of six other properties across parts of four city blocks.
The ACLU and the jury concluded that the two police officers who ordered the raid had no reason to single out Mrs. Johnson's house as the target. The officers are liable for approximately $1.25 million each in punitive and compensatory damages.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Hmmmm...
Edited to add
There is no Qualified Immunity in Denver (law change after the murder of George Floyd/Black Lives Matter Summer of 2020), so the two officers will be partially liable. Sadly, they will have to pay only $25K each (the law stipulates officers are responsible for 5% of awards or $25K, whichever is lowest). Too bad the assistant DA and brain dead judge can't be held responsible for the granting of a warrant with so little evidence.
Six U.S. states (that I know of) have passed laws that prohibit or limit the use of qualified immunity as a defense in state courts: Colorado, Nevada, Montana, New Mexico, Massachusetts, and Connecticut, along with New York City. If those states have had a problem hiring qualified officers, I haven't heard about it.
Stupidity runs a mock and I'm not talking about a genuine mistake made by the police officers.
The Grandma wasn't hurt and I'll bet she hasn't had so much excitement in a long time in her life.
I also bet she was black.....
Even worse are most of the comments on here 😏
Do you have qualified immunity at your work? Assume not… Did it cause civilization to collapse?
What a load of malarkey
Qualified Immunity needs to be reviewed and seriously curtailed or outright eliminated. No knock raids on homes should be exceptionally rare instead of SOP, civil forfeiture is nothing but a scam police use to fund more overtime by taking property from citizens under the most specious of auspices, the warrantless eavesdropping by spoofing cell towers, the outrageous pensions paid to police and the whole chummy relationship between Grand Juries, DAs and Police.
It is totally out of control.
No. I try to stay away from third world countries.