Pubdate: Tue, 16 Apr 2002
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2002 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author:  Warren Richey

A BUS RIDE TESTS LIMITS OF POLICE SEARCHES

High Court Hears Case Today on Whether Authorities Can Frisk Passengers for 
Drugs.

WASHINGTON - A Greyhound bus traveling from Fort Lauderdale to Detroit 
makes a scheduled stop in Tallahassee, Fla. When passengers reboard, they 
are not alone.

Two police officers dressed in civilian clothes move through the bus, 
asking riders about their travel plans and luggage. They say they're 
looking for drugs and illegal weapons. A third officer remains at the 
front, watching.

Near the back of the bus, the officers encounter two men wearing heavy 
jackets on a warm day. The police ask for permission to search their 
luggage and then ask to pat them down for weapons.

One says, "Sure." The other raises his hands a few inches to facilitate a 
frisk. That's when the officers discover packages taped to their thighs 
with more than a pound and a half of cocaine.

Does this operation amount to an unreasonable search in violation of the 
Fourth Amendment, or is it an acceptable tactic for police in the war on drugs?

That's the question the US Supreme Court will consider this morning, when 
the justices take up a case exploring how far police may go in inducing bus 
riders to consent to searches.

The case is also important because it arises amid an expanding war on 
terrorism, with the nation debating how best to balance the need for 
security against traditional civil-liberties protections.

"The worst thing the terrorists could do to us would be that ... their 
actions would deprive us of our fundamental freedoms," says Jeffrey Green, 
a Washington, D.C., lawyer and member of the defense team representing the 
bus riders. "One among [those freedoms] is the right to say no to a police 
officer who approaches us without a warrant and without reasonable suspicion."

Permission - or Coercion?

At the center of the case is the question of to what extent police must 
make it clear to a bus passenger that he has a constitutional right to 
refuse a police request to search his luggage or to search him.

The Fourth Amendment requires that police first obtain a warrant or have 
reasonable suspicion that a crime is under way before they invade a 
person's privacy by searching him or his luggage. But neither a warrant nor 
reasonable suspicion is required when a person voluntarily permits a search.

The critical question in the case of Christopher Drayton and Clifton Brown 
Jr., the two men found smuggling cocaine on the bus, is whether their grant 
of permission to police was truly voluntary - or whether they were 
intimidated by a show of force.

After their arrests, both men were indicted by a federal grand jury for 
possession with intent to distribute cocaine.

But the indictment was thrown out by a three-judge panel of the 11th US 
Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta. It ruled that the police operation 
failed to adequately communicate to passengers that they were free to 
decline any search request.

"The only issue before this court is ... whether the consent given by each 
defendant for the search was 'uncoerced and legally voluntary' under the 
Fourth Amendment," Judge Ed Carnes wrote for the appeals-court panel. "We 
are compelled ... to hold that these defendants' consent was not 
sufficiently free of coercion to serve as a basis for a search."

Weighing Circumstances

The US Supreme Court last addressed the police-bus-search issue in a 1991 
case, Florida v. Bostick. In that case, the court ruled 6 to 3 that courts 
examining possible Fourth Amendment violations must take into account all 
the circumstances surrounding the encounters between police and individuals 
in making determinations about whether a reasonable passenger would feel 
free to refuse a police officer's request for cooperation.

Some legal analysts say the 11th Circuit's decision misapplied this 
"totality of the circumstances" standard by giving too much weight to a 
single precedent, rather than considering all facts unique to the Drayton case.

A 'Polite Interaction'?

US Solicitor General Theodore Olson, in his brief to the court, says the 
ruling, if upheld, would require police to verbally warn passengers that 
they are not required to submit to a search. He says the Florida bus search 
was a "polite interaction" between police and bus riders, and that no 
warnings were necessary.

Lawyers for Mr. Drayton and Mr. Brown counter that the search was not 
consensual,in that their clients were intimidated into complying with the 
police requests. "The officers chose and exploited a coercive environment 
in which they knew they were most likely to get the consent they sought," 
write Gwendolyn Spivey and Steven Seliger in their brief to the court. "If 
officers truly want to conduct 'voluntary' searches, of passengers seated 
in the cramped confines of a bus, they should ask for volunteers. Looking 
at the issue in this light makes clear that no reasonable person would 
volunteer, or make a free choice, to have his groin area searched by a 
stranger, police officer or not."

A decision in the case, US v. Drayton, is expected by late June.
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