Today I’d like to talk about legal traffic stops and
road side checkpoints. There’s line in
the sand, or in this case, a line in the road which separates a lawful traffic
stop and something which goes beyond; but that line keeps moving. The 4th Amendment included in the
Bill of Rights states:
“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.”
The Bill of Rights was written by our founders with the idea
individuals were not to be stopped by agents of the government for any reason
without probable cause. Randomly stopping
individuals has been properly equated with oppression and tyranny; something
the King of England had been inflicting on the colonies in order to bring them
into subjugation.
Cars hadn’t been invented at the time and it has been
left up to us to figure out what constitutes an encroachment of the 4th Amendment upon the driver of
a vehicle under modern conditions; but I can tell you this, individuals drive
cars and are under the same protection as any other individual when it
comes to oppression and tyranny.
Having stopped many vehicles for traffic violations while
serving as a police officer it was a requirement under the law to have Observed
a violation prior to stopping any vehicle.
Once a violation had been Observed the driver of the vehicle could then
be required to pull over and present a valid drivers license. If another violation came to light during
that legally Observed traffic stop, such as a strong odor of alcohol indicating
the possibility that the driver might be intoxicated, at that time further
investigation was permitted under the law.
There’s an article by Adam W. Lasker about the legality of DUI traffic stops in the State of
Illinois
which caught my attention as it brought up subtle changes in language which are
important in understanding how government is able to award itself powers never
delegated to it by We The People.
‘“Reasonable suspicion,” not the more exacting “probable
cause,” is threshold requirement for an investigatory traffic stop, the
Illinois Supreme Court held in a recent DUI ruling.”
In
the case brought before the courts the police officer Observed the suspect’s
vehicle cross the line which raised the officer’s suspicions that the driver
might be intoxicated. Rather than call
such an observation Probable Cause the state decided to call it Reasonable
Suspicion and so a crack was created in which common sense might later be laid aside
or worse, a power grab by the state by lowering a long established requirement
or standard.
You’d
think the requirements for a proper traffic stop would be held to the same
standard in all 50 states; but you’d be wrong.
Some states work on the principle that if you’re driving on a public
road then the 4th Amendment doesn’t apply because the safety of the
public trumps any presumed individual right or protection from being randomly
stopped, questioned or searched.
Another
writer who goes under the handle, Fake Consultant, posted an intriguing
article, On Traffic Checkpoints, Part Two, Or, When Does Safety Become Siege?, addressing the ever increasing distance our
government has placed between the 4th Amendment’s intent and the
application of it as pertain to police traffic stops.
Fake
Consultant set the tone with a history of Border Patrol stops and searches
referenced in United
States v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. 543, in which the Supreme Court
determined Probable Cause was NOT required in Border Patrol searches and United States v. Ortiz,
422 U.S. 891, which basically found the 4th Amendment
irrelevant. In the end our Supreme Court
came to the conclusion:
“The Government had argued that it was impractical to find
probable cause before conducting this type of search; therefore they were
justified in ignoring the Fourth Amendment and establishing this checkpoint.
The Court agreed, and justified this conclusion by deciding
that the searches were not "unreasonable", and therefore a warrant
was not required. Justices Brennan and Marshall, in dissent, reminded the
majority that the inconvenience of the Government was no excuse for ignoring
the clear language of the Constitution.”
Were
these decisions limited strictly to the true borders of our United States
then perhaps We The People might recognize that our best interests were at the
heart of the matter; however, as with most encroachments upon individual
liberties, usurpation of power leads to expansion of power, oppression and
tyranny.
Homeland
Security has declared the true borders of our United States go far beyond the
actual crossing points between our nation and others; so much so that anything within 100 miles of the actual crossing constitutes the
‘border’.
In
this article blatant usurpations of power by our government come into focus.
* “…searches
can take place even in the absence of any reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing.”
*
‘“particularized suspicion” was not
required for a border search.”
* “…Limiting searches “would only reward those
individuals who, either because of the nature of their contraband or the
sophistication of their criminal enterprise, hide their contraband more
cleverly or would be inclined to seek entry at more vulnerable points less
equipped to discover them.”
That
brings us back to my original question regarding Traffic Checkpoint Stops for
the sole purpose of removing DWI/DUI suspects under the Supreme Court’s ruling
that such stops don’t violate an individual’s free movement in society and are
therefore within the limits of the 4th Amendment.
In
a Michigan case brought before the Supreme Court of the United States it was
argued that random traffic checkpoints were ineffective and “subjectively” too
intrusive to be justified under the Fourth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the US Constitution.”
“The Majority Opinion notes that the average motorist stop
was 25 seconds, which they felt was a minimal degree of “objective” intrusion
(an opinion shared by the State Court)...but they found no substantial “subjective”
intrusion.
This is because, in their opinion, the average motorist
should have no “fear or surprise” regarding a checkpoint. An examination of the
ruling shows no recognition of any other factor as contributing to a subjective
intrusion, including motorist annoyance or resentment.”
Did
you feel that slap in the face? “Hey, it’s no big deal…We’re saying it’s okay
for the police to violate your rights because it’s only a few seconds; get over
it!” I guess that same logic could be
applied to rape victims, “Hey, it’s no big deal, it only lasted for a little
while, get over it!”
I
have news for the members of the Supreme Court, any stop, regardless of the duration of that stop, without probable cause,
or perhaps the less stringent application of “reasonable suspicion” is an unacceptable
infringement upon our inalienable right to be free from unwarranted searches
and seizures.
Without an Observed
violation of law Any traffic stop becomes an infringement and no altering of
the English language justifies marginalization of the original intent to
prevent government from oppressing individuals for any reason.
As
these decisions are applied in unison the intent of the Bill of Rights to
protect individuals from oppression and tyranny dissolves before our very
eyes.
The courts have created powers never
intended or permitted under our constitutional republican form of government by
stretching the meaning and definitions of words, words which at one time held
limited meaning. Tyranny is
unacceptable, even when done under the guise of protecting society from sexual
perverts or drunk drivers.
The
courts have crossed the line and need to be pulled over for usurpation of
powers never granted them by We The People.
This article has been cross posted to
The Moral Liberal, a publication whose banner reads, “Defending The
Judeo-Christian Ethic, Limited Government, & The American Constitution”.