US Supreme Court to Hear Case on Warrantless Vehicle Searches

phr

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Search and Seizure: US Supreme Court to Hear Case on Warrantless Vehicle Searches
The Drug War Chronicle
2.29.08



The US Supreme Court agreed Monday to rule on whether police may search a parked vehicle whenever they arrest a driver or passenger. Since a 1981 Supreme Court decision that held that police may search a vehicle for weapons when they arrest an occupant, most courts have held that police have ample authority to search vehicles after an arrest.

But in a case from Tucson, the Arizona Supreme Court disagreed in the case of Rodney Gant. Police surveilling a suspected drug house arrested him on an outstanding warrant for driving without a license after he pulled up in his car. Gant was handcuffed and placed in the back of a police car. Officers then searched his vehicle and found a gun and a bag of cocaine.

In a 3-2 decision, the Arizona Supreme Court threw out the evidence, saying that the post-arrest search of his car violated the Fourth Amendment's ban on unreasonable searches and seizures. With Gant handcuffed in the back of a squad car, police faced no danger from any weapons hidden in the vehicle, the majority said. Because police did not initiate contact with Gant before he got out of his vehicle, the search of his vehicle was not incidental arrest and thus unconstitutional. Police could have obtained a search warrant if they could convince a magistrate they had probable cause, the court noted.

Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard appealed to the US Supreme Court last fall, arguing that the Arizona Supreme Court decision sets "an unworkable and dangerous test" that would confuse police, prosecutors, and judges. He was backed by other law enforcement agencies and associations, including the Los Angeles district attorney's office and the National Association of Police Organizations.

The case, Arizona v. Gant, will be argued this fall.

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it's cases like this that show a glimmer of hope in the dark world of the war on drugs. I hope for the best, and wish luck to Mr. Gant in his case. His success would inevitably create a precedent in our judicial system to our benefit. Any case where the defendant is standing up for our ever eroding constitutional rights is a step in the right direction.
 
drew345 said:
There gonna rule against him I will put money on it.
for sure. it would have been better had a different case, perhaps one not involving a gun, been the one to go to the supreme court on this issue.
 
I hope he wins i hate cops having so much goddamn authority and noone questions it. People always say oh they are cops so they must be right no matter how many civil rights they break. They are upholding the law so the hardworking men and women of law enforcement couldnt possibly ever be wrong in anything they do. God i hate that shit.

I don't think they should be able to search a vehicle just on suspicion thats just bullshit. They always make up something about how a vehicle looks suspicious. I don't know what the laws are in canada but im pretty sure the cops have more restraints on them here. If people are picking up a large amount of drugs around here they always put the stuff in the trunk. The cops can't search the trunk without a warrant i don't think.
 
As much as we would all like to see this decision go to Gant, I don't have enough faith in our Supreme Court to look at this completely subjectively. The fact that this case even made it out of state into the Supreme Court gives me a little bit of hope. Wouldn't put my money on it though.
 
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