[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
United States News Title: The Perverse Ingenuity, and Routine Lawlessness, of Law Enforcers Police officers in Berlin, Connecticut who conducted a warrantless search of an apartment complex using a drug-detecting dog violated the Fourth Amendment, acknowledged a December 22nd ruling from that states highest appellate court. The Fourth Amendments definition of a reasonable search refers to a particular description of the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized; this language was designed to forbid the kind of general warrants that were commonly used by British military and customs officials in the years immediately prior to the colonial rebellion. By getting the owners of the apartment complex to authorize a warrantless search waiving the rights of dozens of people to be secure in their individual domiciles -- the Berlin Police behaved less like their British forebears than their antecedents in Communist East Germany. The trial court threw out the evidence seized in that search as the product of a Fourth Amendment violation. The State of Connecticut appealed the case to the state Supreme Court, which upheld the trial courts decision. The ruling cited a long string of federal judicial precedents including a recent ruling in a very similar case from Florida describing the use of warrantless canine sniffs as a violation of common law property rights and the un-enumerated right to personal privacy. Given that dozens or scores of SWAT raids occur, on average, every day in the American Soyuz, its clear that Americans cannot look upon their homes as a refuge from government abuse. They are at even greater risk when exercising their freedom of movement, given the predatory conduct of opportunistic police agencies empowered to seize cash and other property in the name of drug prohibition. Gerald Cleverly was a passenger in a pickup truck driven by his friend Chris Jones when El Dorado, Kansas Police officer Brent Michael Buckley stopped them for not wearing seat belts. Buckley would later admit that he had executed a pretext stop for the purpose of arranging a consensual search of the vehicle and its occupants. Both Jones and Cleverly submitted to a pat-down search which they were not legally required to do and nothing was found. The purpose of what Desert Snow operatives call the Roadside Conversation tactic is to elicit potentially incriminating details from drivers who are ignorant of the fact that they have no legal responsibility to tell the officer anything. This also extends the traffic stop beyond its constitutionally permissible limit, allowing the officer to devise an articulable suspicion of criminal activity that will supposedly justify a drug sweep by a conveniently available K-9 handler. This charade inevitably ends with the dog alerting on something suspicious, which provides an excuse for a hands-on search of the vehicle. This script was followed by El Dorado PD officers Buckley and Sam Huming, with the minor adaptation that a K-9 unit wasnt necessary. A search of the interior of Joness vehicle turned up no evidence of contraband. Since the driver had consented on behalf of his passenger, Cleverly was ordered out of the car and subjected to a second pat-down search. He was told that he was not free to leave and forbidden to use his cell phone, which means that he was in police custody, despite the officers subsequent claims to the contrary. A search of a cigarette package found a small amount of methamphetamine. The rights protected by the Fourth Amendment and its state equivalent, wrote the courts majority, belong to the individual and are not merely inconvenient technicalities designed to irritate government agents. Furthermore, A driver of a vehicle subjected to a traffic stop does not have the authority, as a matter of law, to waive the Fourth Amendment rights of passengers in the stopped vehicle. Judicial rulings of this kind, while welcome, have little practical impact on the conduct of police and the prosecutors who eagerly exploit routine police lawlessness. In her June, 2011 UC-Davis Law Review essay The Police Gamesmanship Dilemma in Criminal Procedure, Professor Mary D. Fan of the University of Washington School of Law points out that police departments are adept at finding ways to slide around the rules and can always develop tactics that undermine the purpose of rules established by the judiciary. It is for this reason that most of the criminal misconduct that occurs on Americas thoroughfares is committed by people engaged in what Fan calls the competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime where crime is described as violations of government edicts that have nothing to do with the protection of persons and property. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread |
||||
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|