Fatal Police Shootings
If your loved one was shot and killed by police, the family may have a claim if the force was excessive, unnecessary, or used when safer options were available.
Insider Lawyers
Families may have a wrongful death or civil rights claim when police, jail guards, or prison officials use deadly force, ignore known danger, or fail to protect someone in custody.
We review serious fatal cases involving police shootings, jail deaths, prison deaths, inmate violence, ignored medical emergencies, and failure-to-protect claims.
No fee unless we win.
We focus on catastrophic fatal cases — not general police complaints.
If your loved one was shot and killed by police, the family may have a claim if the force was excessive, unnecessary, or used when safer options were available.
A death may require legal review if it happened after a chase, arrest, restraint, taser use, beating, chokehold, or delayed medical response.
Jails and prisons have a duty to protect people in custody. A death may be actionable when staff ignored obvious danger, medical distress, suicide risk, or violence from another inmate.
We are especially interested in cases where guards moved someone into a dangerous cell, placed them with a known violent inmate, ignored threats, or failed to separate people after warning signs.
We focus on catastrophic police, jail, and prison cases where someone died or suffered life-changing injury. If your loved one died in custody or after police contact, contact us as soon as possible.
Police, jail, prison, county, city, and state cases can involve strict claim deadlines. Families should speak with a legal team quickly so evidence can be preserved and deadlines can be reviewed.
Time limits and government claim notice requirements may apply. Speaking with a lawyer helps families understand deadlines and options — not a guarantee of any outcome.
These cases often depend on whether officers, guards, jail staff, or prison officials knew or should have known about a serious risk and failed to act.
Staff knew about threats, violence, gang issues, prior assaults, or a dangerous cellmate.
Officials failed to separate inmates, ignored warnings, or placed someone in an unsafe housing situation.
Police or custody staff used deadly force, restraint, tasers, or physical force that may have been unnecessary or unreasonable.
Staff ignored signs of overdose, breathing problems, injuries, mental health crisis, withdrawal, or medical distress.
Video, dispatch logs, jail records, witness statements, autopsy findings, and medical records may help prove what happened.
A pattern of ignored warnings, missed safety checks, or known risks left unaddressed by supervisors and staff.
When someone dies in police custody, jail, or prison, families are often given incomplete answers. A legal investigation may uncover what officers, guards, supervisors, or medical staff knew before the death happened.
You do not need to know every legal detail before calling. If something feels wrong about how your loved one died, we can review the facts and help determine whether the case should be investigated.
Insider Lawyers
Confidential family review. A legal team member may follow up by phone or email — no obligation.
They may. These cases depend on the facts, including whether the force was reasonable, whether the person posed an immediate threat, what video shows, and whether officers followed required procedures.
Possibly. A case may exist if staff knew or should have known about a serious danger and failed to protect the person in custody.
That may be important. Unsafe cell placement, ignored threats, known violent cellmates, or failure to separate inmates can be key facts in a custody death case.
Deaths involving ignored medical distress, overdose symptoms, breathing problems, injuries, mental health crisis, or withdrawal may require immediate legal review.
As soon as possible. Evidence can disappear, witnesses can become harder to find, and government-related claims may involve strict deadlines.
Contact Insider Lawyers today. We review serious fatal police, jail, prison, and custody death cases throughout California.