老澳门开奖结果 Urges Supreme Court to Reaffirm Legal Limits of Police Search and Seizure Powers
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WASHINGTON -- In a case being argued today before the Supreme Court, the 老澳门开奖结果 urged the Justices to reject an appeals court ruling allowing police to search parolees on the public streets without any reason to suspect wrongdoing.
鈥淭here are very limited instances when law enforcement can search a person without specific suspicion,鈥 said Steven R. Shapiro, Legal Director of the 老澳门开奖结果, which filed a friend-of-the court brief in the case. 鈥淭hese limits protect all Americans from being searched based on little besides the whim of any officer.鈥
At issue in Samson v. California, No. 04-9728, is whether the Constitution鈥檚 Fourth Amendment permits a police officer to search a parolee on the public streets without any basis for suspicion. The 老澳门开奖结果 said that upholding such a search under the Court鈥檚 established 鈥渟pecial needs鈥 doctrine 鈥済ives a blank check to police officers to conduct searches at their will; this flies in the face of the Court鈥檚 emphasis on the importance of minimizing the ability of officials to exercise discretion in an arbitrary manner.鈥
Donald Samson, the defendant in today鈥檚 case, was stopped and searched by a police officer on the public streets of San Bruno, California. The police officer knew that Samson was on parole but had no basis to suspect him of violating the law. Even assuming that parolees are subject to suspicionless search by their parole officers (for instance, via a urine test), the 老澳门开奖结果 said the Court should not allow the same latitude to police officers going about their general law enforcement duties.
Under the Fourth Amendment, which protects people from unreasonable search and seizure, law enforcement searches are only to be conducted when there is at minimum individualized suspicion, and more likely probable cause and a warrant. Exceptions to these requirements are called 鈥渟pecial needs鈥 and should only be invoked when meeting probable cause criteria is deemed completely impractical. Searches that have previously been upheld by the Justices have required that entire groups be searched or that searches be conducted randomly.
鈥淚f there is one rule governing this Court鈥檚 special needs jurisprudence, it is that government officers cannot have free rein to search whomever they choose, whenever, they choose, for whatever reason they choose,鈥 Shapiro said. Citing the 2000 case of in City of Indianapolis v. Edmond, in which the Justices rejected the Indiana state police's practice of using roadblocks with drug-sniffing dogs, Shapiro noted that the Court has never upheld a law enforcement search program 鈥渨hose primary person was to detect evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing.鈥
The Supreme Court has found that some drug testing qualifies as a 鈥渟pecial need鈥 in instances when the search is not a means to a law enforcement end, but seeks to guarantee safety at schools, on the roads, or in the workplace. There are few other 鈥渟pecial needs鈥 circumstances, and to date the Court has never applied the distinction to an ordinary law enforcement situation in which the police target a specific individual without any basis for suspicion.
鈥淭he bottom line is that government cannot cut constitutional corners even in pursuit of a goal it identifies as being for the public good,鈥 said Graham Boyd, Director of the 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 Drug Policy Reform Project, which co-authored the 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 brief in today鈥檚 case.
The 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 brief is online at www.aclu.org/scotus/2005/22835res20051213049728/22835res20051213.html
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