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Cleared by a Jury, Reno Man Takes Police to Federal Court Over Force Claims

By Matthias Binder May 10, 2026
Reno man acquitted of charges alleges excessive force in federal lawsuit
Reno man acquitted of charges alleges excessive force in federal lawsuit - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)
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Reno man acquitted of charges alleges excessive force in federal lawsuit

Contents
The Path From Arrest to AcquittalClaims Raised in the Federal FilingWhy the Distinction Between Criminal and Civil Outcomes Matters

Reno man acquitted of charges alleges excessive force in federal lawsuit – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)

Reno, Nevada – A local resident who walked free after a jury cleared him of every criminal charge has now turned to federal court to seek accountability from the officers who arrested him. Kevin Dusek filed suit against the city and two Reno police officers, alleging that the force used during the 2024 encounter crossed the line into excessive conduct. The civil action revives questions about how police interactions are reviewed once criminal cases end without conviction.

The Path From Arrest to Acquittal

Dusek’s criminal case concluded with a complete acquittal, meaning the prosecution could not prove its allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. That outcome left the door open for a separate civil proceeding, which operates under a lower standard of proof and focuses on whether officers violated constitutional rights rather than criminal statutes.

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Acquittals in such matters often prompt renewed scrutiny of the arrest itself. In this instance, the federal complaint centers on the physical actions taken by the two officers during the encounter, framing them as disproportionate to any threat or resistance described in court records.

Claims Raised in the Federal Filing

The lawsuit names the City of Reno and the two individual officers as defendants. It seeks damages for alleged violations of Dusek’s civil rights, a common avenue when state criminal proceedings do not result in convictions yet the individual believes harm occurred.

Federal courts handle these matters because they involve constitutional questions under the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable seizures. The complaint does not detail every moment of the arrest but asserts that the level of force applied exceeded what was objectively reasonable under the circumstances.

City officials have not yet filed a formal response in the civil case. Such suits typically move through discovery and possible settlement discussions before reaching trial, a process that can stretch over many months.

Why the Distinction Between Criminal and Civil Outcomes Matters

Legal observers note that an acquittal does not automatically validate or invalidate claims of excessive force. The two systems serve different purposes: one determines guilt or innocence under criminal law, while the other examines whether government actors should compensate an individual for alleged harm.

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In Nevada, similar filings have prompted departments to review training protocols and use-of-force policies. Whether this particular case leads to policy changes remains to be seen, but it adds to ongoing public discussion about transparency in police encounters that end without criminal convictions.

The suit underscores a recurring tension in law-enforcement accountability: once a jury has spoken in criminal court, civil litigation becomes one of the few remaining avenues for individuals to pursue redress. How the federal court weighs the evidence will determine whether Dusek receives any compensation or whether the city successfully defends the officers’ actions.

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