This kind of immunity invites selective denial of a core public service with little fear of civil accountability, eroding our ability to vindicate basic rights when government actors target individuals. On these facts, the conduct allegedâdeliberate, potentially racially motivated nondeliveryâcould implicate federal civil-rights crimes such as 18 U.S.C. § 242 if proven willful, but this ruling forecloses a key civil damages path against the Postal Service itself. Even when criminal prosecution is theoretically available, the loss of an accessible civil remedy normalizes impunity and weakens the everyday enforcement mechanisms that keep public power answerable to the people.