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Thread: Supreme Court Cuts Back Officers’ Searches of Vehicles

  1. #1

    Thumbs up Supreme Court Cuts Back Officers’ Searches of Vehicles

    April 22, 2009
    Supreme Court Cuts Back Officers’ Searches of Vehicles

    By ADAM LIPTAK

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/us/22scotus.html?_r=1

    WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday significantly cut back the ability of the police to search the cars of people they arrest.

    Police officers have for a generation understood themselves to be free to search vehicles based on nothing more than the fact that they had just arrested an occupant.

    That principle, Justice John Paul Stevens acknowledged in his majority opinion, “has been widely taught in police academies” and “law enforcement officers have relied on the rule in conducting vehicle searches during the past 28 years.”

    The majority replaced that bright-line rule with a more nuanced one, and law enforcement officials greeted it with dismay.

    “It’s just terrible,” William J. Johnson, the executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, said of the decision.

    “It’s certainly going to result in less drug and weapons cases being made.”

    In a dissent, four justices said the majority had effectively overruled an important and straightforward Fourth Amendment precedent established by the court in a 1981 decision, New York v. Belton.

    Justice Stevens denied that.

    The precedent of Belton had often been applied too broadly, he said. Vehicle searches should be allowed only in two situations, he wrote: when the person being arrested is close enough to the car to reach in, possibly to grab a weapon or tamper with evidence; or when the arresting officer reasonably believes that the car contains evidence pertinent to the very crime that prompted the arrest.

    In the case decided Tuesday, Rodney J. Gant, an Arizona man, was arrested on an outstanding warrant for driving with a suspended license.

    He was handcuffed in the back of a patrol car while his car was searched.

    The police found cocaine and a gun, and Mr. Gant was convicted on drug charges and sentenced to three years.

    The Arizona Supreme Court ruled that the search of Mr. Gant’s car had violated the Fourth Amendment’s ban on unreasonable searches and suppressed the evidence against him.

    The United States Supreme Court affirmed that decision on Tuesday.
    Justice Stevens, joined by the unusual alliance of Justices Antonin Scalia, David H. Souter, Clarence Thomas and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, said the court had agreed to hear the case because the conventional view of the Belton decision had been widely criticized.

    “The chorus that has called for us to revisit Belton,” Justice Stevens wrote, “includes courts, scholars and members of this court who have questioned that decision’s clarity and fidelity to Fourth Amendment principles.”

    Police officers and lower courts, Justice Stevens wrote, had failed to take adequate account of the two rationales that animated Belton: protecting the safety of arresting officers and safeguarding evidence of crimes.

    Those rationales only make sense, he said, “when the arrestee is unsecured and within reaching distance” of the car.

    At the same time, the majority announced a new justification for a search in connection with an arrest, one drawing on a 2004 concurrence questioning Belton from Justice Scalia. Searches of vehicles are permissible, Justice Stevens said, “when it is reasonable to believe evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle.”

    As a practical matter, that means many arrests for traffic offenses will not by themselves allow police officers to search vehicles.

    Arrests for other kinds of crimes, though, may well supply a basis for a search.

    The decision, Arizona v. Gant, No. 07-542, was the last to be issued from among the cases the court heard in its October sitting, and it was marked by an uneasy compromise that probably explains the delay.

    Justice Scalia said he would have overruled Belton outright and substituted a rule that allowed searches of vehicles in connection with arrests only where the search seeks evidence of the crime for which the arrest was made or another one for which there is probable cause.

    He added that he joined the majority opinion to avoid a 4-1-4 decision “that leaves the governing rule uncertain.”

    Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., joined in full by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Anthony M. Kennedy and for the most part by Justice Stephen G. Breyer, said the broad Belton rule was sensible and easy to apply.

    On the other hand, the new rule allowing searches for evidence of the crime that prompted the arrest, Justice Alito said, “is virtually certain to confuse law enforcement officers and judges for some time to come.”

    And the part of the majority opinion allowing searches only when the person arrested can reach the car “may endanger arresting officers,” Justice Alito wrote.

    Mr. Johnson of the police association explained the problem.

    “The case creates a temptation,” he said, “for police to leave the occupant of a vehicle unsecured in the belief that they are now operating within the Fourth Amendment in terms of being able to search the vehicle.”

    Though Justice Stevens did not concede that Tuesday’s decision overruled Belton, he did say that fidelity to precedent was no reason to allow constitutional violations to continue.

    “Countless individuals guilty of nothing more serious that a traffic violation,” he wrote, “have had their constitutional right to the security of their private effects violated” by the broad rule struck down on Tuesday.



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  3. #2
    wow
    "He's talkin' to his gut like it's a person!!" -me
    "dumpster diving isn't professional." - angelatc
    "You don't need a medical degree to spot obvious bullshit, that's actually a separate skill." -Scott Adams
    "When you are divided, and angry, and controlled, you target those 'different' from you, not those responsible [controllers]" -Q

    "Each of us must choose which course of action we should take: education, conventional political action, or even peaceful civil disobedience to bring about necessary changes. But let it not be said that we did nothing." - Ron Paul

    "Paul said "the wave of the future" is a coalition of anti-authoritarian progressive Democrats and libertarian Republicans in Congress opposed to domestic surveillance, opposed to starting new wars and in favor of ending the so-called War on Drugs."

  4. #3
    This is good.

    Very good. Remember, if you have to get out of your car, take your keys and lock it. And don't get out unless they make you.

  5. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Kylie View Post
    This is good.

    Very good. Remember, if you have to get out of your car, take your keys and lock it. And don't get out unless they make you.
    Correct. This is a turning back of the clock to a better time.

    If possible, pull into a parking lot (private property) before you stop. Tell the officer you didn't want him or her getting run over. And if you get out, do indeed lock it behind you. That way, they can't even have it towed without either a warrant or the property owner's permission. On the street they can tow it and disassemble it at their will.
    Quote Originally Posted by Swordsmyth View Post
    You only want the freedoms that will undermine the nation and lead to the destruction of liberty.

  6. #5
    “The chorus that has called for us to revisit Belton,” Justice Stevens wrote, “includes courts, scholars and members of this court who have questioned that decision’s clarity and fidelity to Fourth Amendment principles.”
    The moral of this story is to challenge challenge, challenge every constitutional abuse possible. Even in the face of precedent. Also we need to get the word out to the scholars. Ratchet up the outrage over Commerce Clause abuses.

  7. #6

    Lightbulb

    Quote Originally Posted by jm1776 View Post
    the moral of this story is to challenge challenge, challenge every constitutional abuse possible. Even in the face of precedent.
    qft!

  8. #7



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