Andy Barniskis
adbco@netaxs.com
Legislative Chairman
Bucks County Sportsmen's
Coalition (Pennsylvania)
April 25, 2001
Most people have not yet comprehended what a sweeping, anti- Fourth Amendment
decision the recent Supreme Court decision [decision,
news
report] supporting arrests for summary offenses will prove to be. It's true
purpose is to permit physical searches of people stopped, on foot or in their
cars, for any of the dozens of imaginary petty offenses police have at the ready
for such purposes.
Formerly,
it was held that if an offense was a non-custodial, summary offense, police
needed to show reasonable cause for searching a defendant. However, for
custodial offenses, for which arrests are permitted under codified law, searches
could be conducted for the safety of the arresting officers.
We have experience with this issue in Pennsylvania. About two years ago our
General Assembly passed legislation permitting custodial arrests for a handful
of petty, summary offenses, such as "blocking the roadway" or
"obstructing traffic" (read, "walking in the street.") This
followed several cases -- including, notably, firearms possession cases -- where
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had overturned convictions because the defendants
had initially been stopped for summary offenses. The state court held that since
the defendants could not be taken into custody for the crime of which they were
accused, there were no reasonable causes shown for performing the searches that
had exposed the evidence of other crimes.
In the cases that I am aware of, the defendants really were bad guys who
apparently "got off on a technicality." One of these involved a case
where an under-21 "usual suspect" was stopped by the police, charged
with underage drinking when he was found to have beer on his breath, and then
searched. The search exposed a gun he had stolen from a truck only minutes
before. The Supreme Court overturned the convictions for burglary and illegal
weapon possession on the grounds that there had existed no reasonable cause for
a physical search of the defendant.
While this seems an egregious example of a "criminal getting off on a
technicality," our Supreme Court (which, to their credit, is far more
rigorous and respectful regarding constitutional rights than the U.S. Supreme
Court) held correctly that Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution
(equivalent to the Fourth Amendment of the federal Bill of Rights) did not
permit arbitrary stopping and searching of people simply because they "fit
a profile" or were among a class of "usual suspects."
To their discredit, our General Assembly responded by providing an end-run
around the state constitution and Supreme Court for the police, by making a
handful of petty but convenient summary offenses, into custodial offenses. Still
more to their shame, they did so while pretending that offenses such as
"obstructing traffic" really were offenses of some crisis proportion,
requiring "laws with teeth," and denying the pressure from law
enforcement to provide a freer hand with random searches.
There is one ray of hope in all of this, and that is that in the few states
where Supreme Courts have been more defensive of human rights than the U.S.
Supreme Court has proven to be, those courts are still free to interpret their
own states' equivalents to the Bill of Rights with full vigour; they are not
required to lower their standards to those of the federal courts. A state can
have a more rigorous standard regarding civil liberties than the federal
constitution, but not a less rigourous standard.
This also brings up another threat that is quietly afoot; pressure by
national police organizations for states to enact amendments to their
constitutions that would specify that state courts must adhere to liberal
federal standards regarding individual civil liberty issues, and not their own.
While anyone who has not encountered such proposals may find the idea of a
coordinated effort in support of them too "conspiratorial" sounding to
be true, we did have several such bills for such constitutional changes
introduced in Pennsylvania several years ago. Fortunately, the worst of them,
including one stating that state judges must adhere to federal Supreme Court
standards regarding reasonable search and seizure, were defeated, thanks largely
to grass-roots resistance among gun rights advocates in coalition with civil
liberties organizations. The outcome would have been to render whole portions of
our state constitution meaningless window-dressing, subservient to the whims of
the U.S. Supreme Court.
In Pennsylvania, the legislature's limited effort to provide some extra
wiggle-room for the police continued with laws such as the conversion of some
summary offenses into custodial offense. I now anticipate a battle wherein local
police nationwide will argue that the U.S. Supreme Court has empowered them to
make all offenses custodial, and thus subject of search; while some state
Supreme Courts (I hope) continue to hold that liberal federal standards are
irrelevant to their interpretation of their state constitutions, which should be
their first masters. Hopefully, there will result another round of rediscovery
of the Tenth Amendment of the federal Bill of Rights.