Pubdate: Thu, 11 Nov 2004
Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA)
Copyright: 2004 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Contact:  http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/408
Author: Mark Helm, Seattle Post-Intelligencer Washington Bureau
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

COURT CONSIDERS IF A SNIFF IS A SEARCH

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court yesterday appeared ready to give police 
officers the right to use drug-sniffing dogs during routine traffic stops 
in order to find out whether drivers have illegal narcotics aboard.

The Constitution forbids "unreasonable searches" by the police, and the 
high court in the past has said officers may not search a car for drugs 
unless they have reason to suspect the motorist is breaking the law. But 
the court's early rulings neglected a key question: Is a sniff the same as 
a search?

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, a key swing vote on the court, insisted that a 
"sniff is not a search." She said that as long as the canine remains 
outside the vehicle, the officer is not searching the car.

"If a sniff doesn't constitute a search, the officer hasn't violated a 
person's rights," she said during an oral argument before the justices 
yesterday.

But Ralph Meczyk, a lawyer representing a motorist whose car was sniffed by 
a drug-sniffing dog after he was stopped for speeding on Interstate 80 near 
Chicago, said the police's use of a dog to detect drugs inside the car 
amount to an unconstitutional search of his vehicle.

"For a minor offense, anyone could be subjected to a humiliating search of 
their car without any evidence they've done something other than speed," he 
said. "This could happen to anyone."

Justice Antonin Scalia replied that police often use their senses, such as 
sight and smell, to look for illegal activity.

"Is anything I observe a search?" he asked. "If I'm a police officer and 
I'm looking for someone with a nervous twitch on their face, is that a search?"

Meczyk argued that police officers using their own senses to search for 
illegal activity didn't amount to a search, but that the use of special 
tools, such as thermal-imaging machines or dogs, to uncover activities 
inside a person's home or car did amount to a search.

"Those tools allow the police to see or smell what's going on inside a 
person's house or car, violating their privacy," he said.

But Justice Anthony Kennedy said odors emanating from a car or home were 
"out in the open" where privacy could not be expected.

Several justices, however, expressed concern that allowing police to use 
dogs without probable cause could give law enforcement officers overly 
broad powers.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg asked Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan 
whether such a ruling would allow police to "walk up and down streets with 
a drug-sniffing dog sniffing the foundations and doors of every house?"

Madigan answered that it would be allowed but noted that the dogs are only 
trained to find illegal contraband, such as drugs and explosives. She added 
that the public would not feel intimidated by the dogs.

Ginsburg snapped back that "these dogs can be frightening and humiliating."

The case in question began on Nov. 12, 1998, when Roy Caballes was pulled 
over by an Illinois State Police trooper for driving 71 mph in a 65-mph 
zone on Interstate 80. As the trooper checked Caballes' license and 
registration, another trooper arrived on the scene with a drug dog.

The first trooper informed Caballes that he was only issuing a warning for 
speeding. But before he could finish writing the warning summons, the drug 
dog alerted to the presence of narcotics in Caballes' trunk. The trooper 
then searched the trunk and found marijuana.
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