Title: Controlling Police Behavior: The Law of Search & Seizure
1Controlling Police Behavior The Law of Search
Seizure
2Controlling Police Behavior An Introduction
- Police officers are required to perform in ways
that conform to the US Constitution, legislative
statutes (Congressional and State) and court
interpretations of both. - Three police practices arrest, search seizure
and interrogation are especially structured to
ensure that the rights of citizens are protected. - 4th Amendment prohibits unreasonable search
seizure - 5th Amendment protects citizens from
self-incrimination - 6th Amendment provides a right to counsel
- Police must not soil its hands by profiting from
its own abuses of the law. Court rules are
designed to deter police from acting improperly
by excluding any evidence they collect if they do
so.
3The 4th Amendment
- The right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
and particularly describing the place to be
searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
4The 5th Amendment
- No person shall be held to answer for a capital,
or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a
presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except
nor shall any person be subject for the same
offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or
limb nor shall be compelled in any criminal case
to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived
of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law nor shall private property be
taken for public use, without just compensation.
5The 6th Amendment
- In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by
an impartial jury of the State and district
wherein the crime shall have been committed,
which district shall have been previously
ascertained by law, and to be informed of the
nature and cause of the accusation to be
confronted with the witnesses against him to
have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses
in his favor, and to have the Assistance of
Counsel for his defense.
6The Law of SEARCH SEIZURE
- Arrest Warrants are not required. Search
Warrants usually are. - The prevailing rule is that searches and seizures
are reasonable only if conducted under a
judicially issued warrant. Warrantless searches
are per se unreasonable. - Judges issue warrants only when presented with
evidence of probable cause, supported by
testimony under sworn oath or affirmation, that a
crime has been committed and a specific
individual and place are associated with that
crime. This testimony and the warrant issued
must describe the place to be searched, and the
persons or things to be seized.
7The Law of SEARCH SEIZURE
- The common exceptions
- Consent
- Search pursuant to a lawful arrest
- Within plain view (Open fields)
- Hot Pursuit
- The Automobile exception
- Other exceptions
- Closely regulated industries
- Frisks
- Customs
- Immigration
- Private citizen intrusion
8Recent Change in Search Seizure Law Hudson v.
Michigan (2006)
- Detroit police officers had a warrant to search
for drugs and firearms in the home of Booker
Hudson. They called out their presence and, after
three to five seconds, entered through an
unlocked front door. - Hudsons lawyers tried unsuccessfully to suppress
the evidence (rock cocaine) that police found
and Hudson was subsequently convicted of drug
possession. In his appeal, he argued that unless
tainted evidence is suppressed, police will not
be deterred from barging into homes without
cause. - In making this argument, Hudson relied on a rule
based on a centuries-old idea of home privacy and
the Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable searches. It requires police to
knock, announce themselves and wait a
"reasonable" time, which justices noted can be
about 20 seconds, before entering.
9Recent Change in Search Seizure Law Hudson v.
Michigan (2006)
- The U.S. Supreme Court disagreed.
- Their 5-4 decision found the exclusionary rule
need not apply. The decision also offers a sign
that the court might be more apt to strengthen
the hand of police with Justice Samuel Alito in
the place of retired justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
10At The Supreme Court
- Justice O'Connor, who was on the court when the
case was first argued in January 2006, was
sympathetic to Hudsons arguments and had worried
about "the sanctity of the home." But she retired
before the Court announced a decision. The eight
remaining justices were deadlocked. - The case was re-argued in May 2006 with Alito on
the court. His vote gave produced a majority with
Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin
Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Anthony Kennedy. - Justice Scalia's majority opinion emphasized that
tossing out evidence acquired in violation of the
knock-and-announce rule but with a valid
warrant could mean "releasing dangerous
criminals. "Resort to the massive remedy of
suppression of evidence of guilt is unjustified,"
Scalia wrote.
11The dissenters
- In his dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer called the
decision "doubly troubling. - "It represents a significant departure from the
court's precedents," he wrote. "It weakens,
perhaps destroys, much of the practical value of
the Constitution's knock-and-announce
protection." - Breyer was joined by John Paul Stevens, David
Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
12Charles A. ReichPolice Questioning of
Law-Abiding Citizens
- The Debate
- 1. Police have a right to stop anyone vs.
Citizens have a right not to be stopped. - 2. What questions can police ask?
- 3. What questions must citizens answer?
- 4. What actions can the officer take if the
citizen refuses to answer? - 5. What can the citizen do in response to officer
actions?
13Reichs Solutions
- Police must have a reason to believe an
individual has committed a crime. - The officer must identify himself and explain why
he stopped the citizen. - A person may be questioned but not required to
answer - A person may be asked for ID but not required to
produce it. - The officer must treat the citizen as an equal.
- The officer may search a citizen only if (a) he
believes himself to be in danger or (b) he has
probable cause - The officer may not detain a citizen who wishes
to leave unless he has probable cause for
arrest.
14The Court Rulings
- Terry v. Ohio (1968)
- Pennsylvania v Simms (1977)
- Brown v Texas (1979)
- US v Hensley
- Delaware v. Prouse
- Chavez v. Martinez (2003)
- Hiibel v. 6th Judicial District Court (2004)
15Terry v. Ohio
- Officer McFadden (w 49 years of experience in
plainclothes) is in downtown Cleveland and
observes 2 men (Terry Chilton) who make 12
trips back and forth past a store window. In
court he testifies They didnt look right to
me. - McFadden followed, stopped and patted down both
suspects and a third person they meet. He finds
and removes guns as a result of the frisk. He
then arrests the men for carrying illegally
concealed weapons. - Q Does probable cause exist for an arrest? Did
it exist before the pat down?
16Terry v. Ohio II
- The Ohio Trial Court says NO, But
- No probable cause exists initially but the
officers action to stop and frisk the suspects
is necessary to protect the police officer. The
Court insists that it is important to distinguish
between a frisk and a full search and between
a stop for investigatory purposes and an
arrest - The US Supreme Court takes the case on appeal to
answer the question Is stop frisk a minor
inconvenience which can be properly imposed on a
citizen in the interests of effective law
enforcement?
17Terry v. Ohio III
- CJ Earl Warren for the Court
- Decision for the police officer
- There must be a narrowly drawn authority to
permit a reasonable search for a weapon for the
protection of the police officer where he has
reason to believe that he is dealing with an
armed and dangerous individual regardless of
whether he has probable cause to arrest the
individual for a crime. - Justice Douglas in dissent
- The constitutional requirement of probable
cause is not the same thing as reasonable
suspicion. The officer had no basis for
believing Terry was carrying a concealed weapon.
18Brown v. Texas
- El Paso, Texas
- A patrol car containing officers Venegas Sotelo
pass 2 men walking in opposite directions. - The officers stop one of the men (Brown) because
- the situation looked suspicious
- The citizen had not been seen in this area before
- The area was a high drug trafficking neighborhood
- Officers later admitted that
- They did not suspect specific misconduct
- They did not have any reason to believe the
citizens was armed.
19Brown v. Texas II
- What happened?
- The officers asked the suspect to identify
himself and explain what he was doing in the
neighborhood. - The suspect refused and asserted that the
officers had no right to stop him. - Officers frisked the suspect and involved him it
was a high crime area. - After a 2nd refusal to identify himself, the
suspect was arrested under the Texas Penal Code
that defined the refusal to give a name and
address to a police officer who had lawfully
stopped a citizen to be a criminal act.
20Brown v. Texas III
- The legal questions Did the officers lawfully
stop the suspect? Is Texas law contrary to the
US Constitution? - The US Supreme Court in an opinion authored by CJ
Warren Burger again attempted to define
reasonableness requirement of the 4th Amendment. - The individuals right to personal security must
be free from arbitrary interference by law
officers. - Seizures must be based on specific objective
facts.
21Crime File Search Seizure
- Mike Ferrell Ed Sperlock James McComas
- US Attorney Police Officer Defense Atty
- Scenario 1.
- Traffic Stop
- Episode 1 NO w/qual YES NO
- No License Plate
- Episode 2 YES YES YES
- Shells in Briefcase
- Episode 3 YES YES YES
- Trunk Search
22Crime File Search Seizure
- Mike Ferrell Ed Sperlock James McComas
- US Attorney Police Officer Defense Atty
- Scenario 2.
- Suspicious Persons
- in Neighborhood
- Episode 1 NO NO NO
- Black Men in Alley
- Episode 2 NO NO NO
- Report of Burglary
- Episode 3 YES YES NO
- Briefcase Search
23Crime File Search Seizure
- Mike Ferrell Ed Sperlock James McComas
- US Attorney Police Officer Defense Atty
- Scenario 3.
- The Domestic Dispute
- Episode 1 YES YES NO
- Invited In by Woman
- Episode 2 YES YES, but
NO - Coat/Bedroom Search
24Hiibel v. 6th Judicial District Court
- Police officer arrived at the scene of Larry
Hiibels truck parked at the side of a road in
Nevada. - The officer asks Hiibel for his ID.
- Hiibel refuses, insisting he has done nothing
wrong, and asks to be left alone. - Ultimately Hiibel is arrested for failure ot
identify himself to an officer conducting an
investigation.
25Hiibel v. 6th Judicial District Court
- Justice Kennedy writing for the Court
- Obtaining a suspects name in the course of a
Terry stop serves important government
interests. - Justice Stevens in dissent insisted that Hiibel
acted well within his rights when he opted to
stand mute - Liberals and libertarians were quick to condemn
the ruling. - The government can turn silence into a criminal
offense. - Ordinary Americans will be hopelessly confused
about when they can assert their right to
remain silent without being jailed.
26What do all of these cases (Terry v. Ohio, Brown
v. Texas, Hiibel v. 6th JD) represent?
- Attempts by the court system to provide guidance
to police as to what is appropriate behavior. - Absent court system involvement, who polices the
police?
27THE ACLU Response
- What should YOU do if stopped by a police office?
- The ACLU answer