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- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons abstract "Ali v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, 552 U.S. 214 (2008), was a United States Supreme Court case, upholding the United States's sovereign immunity against tort claims brought when "any law enforcement officer" loses a person's property.Abdus-Shahid M. S. Ali, a federal prisoner in Atlanta, Georgia, was transferred to a prison in Inez, Kentucky. His personal property, packed into two duffel bags, was shipped separately. Upon inspecting his property after arrival at the new prison, he said that $177 worth of property was missing from the bags. Ali filed an administrative claim; relief was denied because Ali had signed a receipt form. Ali filed a lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Prisons. The case turned on the grammar of part of the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), a 1946 law that waives sovereign immunity in some cases so that the federal government may be sued for certain torts. The FTCA states that the waiver of immunity does not apply to claims arising from the detention of property by "any officer of customs or excise or any other law enforcement officer." Ali argued that this text had been intended to encompass only law enforcement officers concerned with customs or excise laws. The Bureau of Prisons argued that the word "any" should be interpreted broadly.The Supreme Court ruled against Ali in a 5-4 decision. Justice Clarence Thomas wrote, "The phrase 'any other law enforcement officer' suggests a broad meaning," and compared the phrasing to the phrasing of other laws, with and without the word "any." In his dissent, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that the majority was using "wooden reliance" on the single word any without considering the rest of the paragraph of the FTCA, and added, "If Congress had intended to give sweeping immunity to all federal law enforcement officials from liability for the detention of property, it would not have dropped this phrase onto the end of the statutory clause so as to appear there as something of an afterthought."".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons wikiPageExternalLink 06-9130_20071029-argument.mp3.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons wikiPageID "17644734".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons wikiPageRevisionID "596824421".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons arguedate "--10-29".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons argueyear "2007".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons decidedate "--01-22".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons decideyear "2008".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons dissent "Breyer".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons dissent "Kennedy".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons docket "6".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons fullname "Abdus-Shahid M. S. Ali, Petitioner v. Federal Bureau of Prisons et al.".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons hasPhotoCollection Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons holding "The United States cannot be sued for failing to return property when the loss is caused by any law enforcement officer.".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons joindissent "Stevens".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons joindissent "Stevens, Souter, Breyer".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons joinmajority "Roberts, Scalia, Ginsburg, Alito".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons litigants "Ali v. Federal Bureau of Prisons".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons majority "Thomas".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons oralargument 06-9130_20071029-argument.mp3.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons parallelcitations "17280.0".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons scotus "2006".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons uspage "214".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons usvol "552".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons subject Category:2007_in_United_States_case_law.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons subject Category:United_States_Supreme_Court_cases.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons subject Category:United_States_federal_sovereign_immunity_case_law.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons type Case.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons type LegalCase.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons type SupremeCourtOfTheUnitedStatesCase.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons type UnitOfWork.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons type Event.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons type Situation.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons comment "Ali v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, 552 U.S. 214 (2008), was a United States Supreme Court case, upholding the United States's sovereign immunity against tort claims brought when "any law enforcement officer" loses a person's property.Abdus-Shahid M. S. Ali, a federal prisoner in Atlanta, Georgia, was transferred to a prison in Inez, Kentucky. His personal property, packed into two duffel bags, was shipped separately.".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons label "Ali v. Federal Bureau of Prisons".
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons sameAs m.0463gr0.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons sameAs Q4725329.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons sameAs Q4725329.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons wasDerivedFrom Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons?oldid=596824421.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons isPrimaryTopicOf Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons.
- Ali_v._Federal_Bureau_of_Prisons name "Abdus-Shahid M. S. Ali, Petitioner v. Federal Bureau of Prisons et al.".