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Yes. Families can sue when a loved one dies in police custody in California. Whether the death resulted from excessive force, a medical emergency that officers ignored, or dangerous conditions inside a facility like Men's Central Jail or the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in Los Angeles, the law gives surviving family members a path to hold the people responsible accountable.
People assume that because someone was arrested, their rights stopped mattering. That's not how the law works. The moment a person is taken into custody, the government becomes responsible for their safety. That responsibility doesn't disappear because of what the person was charged with, how they behaved, or what the officers say happened.
This post covers who can file a lawsuit, what legal claims apply, what the government will do to fight back, and what your family needs to do before the deadlines close.
Call us 24/7 at (310) 658-8935 to speak with a California police brutality lawyer, or reach out online to start your free case review.
In-custody deaths don't follow one pattern. Some are sudden. Some happen slowly, over hours, while family members wait outside for news that never comes. The circumstances vary, but the legal question is the same in every case: did the people responsible for your loved one's safety fail them?
The situations that most often lead to lawsuits include:
In 2025, data from LA County showed 46 people died in county jails the previous year alone. That number represents 46 families who got a phone call no one should ever receive.
Not everyone can file. California law sets out a specific order of priority for who has standing to bring a wrongful death claim.
Spouses and domestic partners come first. Then children of the deceased. Then parents, if there is no surviving spouse or children. Other relatives — siblings, for example — may have standing if they were financially dependent on the person who died and there are no surviving family members with higher priority.
There is a second type of claim called a survival action, and it works differently. A wrongful death claim compensates the family for their own losses: the income they won't receive, the relationship they lost, the grief they carry. A survival action is brought on behalf of the deceased person's estate and seeks damages for what the person themselves suffered before they died — their pain, their fear, the medical costs incurred, the wages lost. In California, a 2022 amendment to the survival action statute now allows estates to pursue pain and suffering damages that were previously unavailable.
These two claims are often filed together. A civil rights lawyer handling an in-custody death case will almost always pursue both.
The main federal claim is brought under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983. This law allows families to sue when a government official acting in their official capacity violated someone's constitutional rights. In custody death cases, that usually means a Fourth Amendment claim for excessive force or a Fourteenth Amendment claim for deliberate indifference to a serious medical need.
Deliberate indifference is the legal standard that applies once someone is in custody. It means the officers or jail staff knew about a serious risk to the person's health or safety and chose to do nothing. It's a higher bar than negligence. The family has to show the people responsible actually knew — not just should have known — and ignored it anyway.
California's Tom Bane Civil Rights Act offers a separate state law path. It applies when government employees interfere with someone's constitutional rights through force, intimidation, or coercion. One critical advantage in Bane Act claims: California's Senate Bill 2 bars officers from raising a qualified immunity defense. That matters because qualified immunity has historically been the primary tool used to shield officers from personal liability.
A police brutality lawyer handling these cases will assess which combination of claims gives the family the best position — and that analysis often determines whether a case settles or goes to trial.
Qualified immunity is the doctrine that has let officers avoid personal liability for decades. The argument is that even if an officer violated someone's rights, they're protected as long as the right wasn't "clearly established" by prior court decisions involving nearly identical facts.
It has frustrated families in countless cases. Officers have escaped accountability for conduct that most people would recognize as obviously wrong.
But California changed that calculus. Under Senate Bill 2, officers cannot use qualified immunity as a defense in Bane Act lawsuits. That doesn't mean every case is easy. Government agencies still fight hard, contest the facts, and argue that whatever happened was justified under the circumstances. What it does mean is that one of the most reliable escape hatches is closed in California state court claims.
Federal Section 1983 claims still face qualified immunity arguments. This is one of the reasons an experienced civil rights lawyer structures these cases carefully — the interaction between federal and state claims, and which forum the case is litigated in, can significantly affect the outcome.
Two clocks start running the day your loved one dies. Both are unforgiving.
For state law claims, you must file a government tort claim with the responsible agency within six months of the death. This is a notice requirement that has to happen before any lawsuit is filed. Miss it and your state claims are almost certainly gone permanently, regardless of how strong the case is on its merits.
For federal Section 1983 claims, no pre-suit notice is required. The deadline to file the lawsuit itself is two years from the date of death.
Most families are not thinking about legal deadlines in the immediate aftermath of a loss. They're arranging funerals, notifying relatives, and trying to get answers about what actually happened. Six months passes fast when you're in that state. The government tort claim deadline is the one that most often catches families off guard — and losing that window can significantly limit what the family can recover.
Expect a fight. Government agencies defending in-custody death cases routinely argue that the force used was justified, that officers didn't know the person was in medical distress, that the person's own conduct caused or contributed to their death, or that the facility met its standard of care.
They will obtain their own expert witnesses. They will request the deceased person's medical and criminal history. They will point to any behavior during the encounter — resistance, agitation, anything — as justification for what happened.
None of this is automatic. Families have won substantial verdicts and settlements across Southern California in cases where agencies made exactly these arguments. California paid a $24 million civil rights settlement to the family of a man who died in CHP custody after repeatedly saying he couldn't breathe while officers held him face-down. A wrongful death case against an Anaheim police department resulted in a $2.9 million settlement. Cases in Riverside, Orange County, and San Bernardino have produced verdicts and settlements in the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars.
The evidence matters enormously. Body camera footage, jail surveillance video, medical records, internal communications, and witness accounts have all proven decisive in these cases. The earlier a civil rights lawyer gets involved, the better the chances that evidence is preserved before it disappears.
Grief is real and it deserves space. At the same time, the legal clock doesn't pause for it.
Can we sue if our loved one was already convicted and serving time?
Yes. Convicted individuals retain constitutional rights, including the right to adequate medical care and protection from excessive force. The legal standard shifts from the Fourth Amendment to the Eighth Amendment once a person is convicted, but the right to sue remains.
What if the official report says our loved one died of natural causes?
Challenge it. Official reports from the agency responsible for a death in its own custody are frequently contested in litigation. Independent autopsies and medical experts have contradicted official findings in numerous California cases.
Can we sue the individual officers and the county?
Yes. Section 1983 allows claims against individual officers and, where a policy or pattern within the department drove the violation, against the city or county as well. Your police brutality lawyer will evaluate both.
What if we don't know exactly what happened?
That's common. Families rarely have full information at the start. Discovery in civil litigation — depositions, document requests, body camera footage — is how the facts get uncovered. Not knowing the full story at the outset does not prevent you from filing.
What damages can our family recover?
A wrongful death claim can include the financial support the deceased would have provided, loss of companionship, funeral costs, and emotional distress. A survival action pursued by the estate can include the pain and suffering your loved one experienced before death, medical costs, and in cases of egregious conduct, punitive damages.
What if our loved one had a prior criminal record?
It doesn't disqualify the case. A person's history does not change the government's constitutional obligation to keep them safe while in custody.
If your loved one died in police custody in Southern California, our civil rights lawyers and police brutality lawyers at Justin Palmer Law want to hear what happened. Contact us today for a free consultation.
Call us 24/7 at (310) 658-8935 to speak with a California police brutality lawyer, or reach out online to start your free case review.
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