As Coopers’ Code takes a short holiday break, we’re bringing back a conversation that remains as powerful and necessary as ever.A mother and her two daughters were handcuffed and detained for nearly an hour in a parking lot while doing absolutely nothing wrong. No probable cause. No matching description. No apology. What followed became the Loggervale case, also known as the “Parking While Black” case, a landmark civil rights verdict against the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office that later earned Trial of the Year recognition from the Consumer Attorneys of California.In this After Action Review, trial lawyers Craig Peters, Joseph May, and Brian Geringer walk through how they built and won the $11 million verdict. The discussion focuses not on violence, but on dignity, narrative clarity, and truth. They break down wrongful detention, biased policing, trial preparation, jury impact, Monell claims, qualified immunity, and post-trial strategy, offering a rare look at how a quiet injustice was turned into a national message, and how accountability was achieved down to the penny.Full episode here: Youtube: https://youtu.be/QzFba9ZWUmASpotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0myl0qZopyoASLaG4OChoe?si=VM4K2VuyRFyVjKmpLlg8aQApple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/coopers-code/id1679622653?i=1000715124275We’ll be back with new episodes next year. Until then, thank you for listening and for doing justice wherever you are.***We are now on video as well. You can watch the episodes on our Youtube channel!Hosted by Miles Cooper Produced by Mauro Serra | Kenji Productions Recorded & Co-produced by Zach Morvant | www.zmorvant.comMusic by The Sure Fire Soul EnsembleRate/Leave a review on Spotify and Apple Podcasts Questions, comments, feedback and suggestion? Email us at: podcast@coopers.lawRead Coopers' Code & articles and publications
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