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[FEDERAL CASE SUMMARY PAGE]
Federal Court Cases
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
No. 98-4124
James Edmond and Joell Palmer, on their own behalf
and on behalf of a class of those similarly
situated,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Stephen Goldsmith, in his official capacity as Mayor
of the City of Indianapolis, Indiana; City of
Indianapolis, Indiana; and Unknown Members
of the Indianapolis Police Department,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
No. 98 C 1400--Sarah Evans Barker, Chief Judge.
Argued April 12, 1999--Decided July 7, 1999
Before Posner, Chief Judge, and Easterbrook and Diane P. Wood, Circuit
Judges.
Posner, Chief Judge. A class action has been brought to enjoin the
City of Indianapolis
from setting up roadblocks to catch drug offenders, a practice that
the plaintiffs claim violates the Fourth Amendment. The plaintiffs'
motion for a preliminary injunction was denied on the ground that the
City's practice is lawful, precipitating this interlocutory appeal under
28 U.S.C. sec. 1292(a)(1). The legality of drug roadblocks has divided
the other courts that have been asked to decide the issue. Compare United
States v. Huguenin, 154 F.3d 547, 554-55 (6th Cir. 1998); United
States v. Morales-Zamora, 974 F.2d 149 (10th Cir. 1992); Galberth
v. United States, 590 A.2d 990 (D.C. 1991), and Wilson v. Commonwealth,
509 S.E.2d 540 (Va. App. 1999), which held them illegal, with Merrett
v. Moore, 58 F.3d 1547 (11th Cir. 1995), and State v. Damask, 936 S.W.2d
565 (Mo. 1996), which held them legal. This is our first case. Because
it was decided by the district court on a very skimpy stipulation of
facts, our ruling on the legality of the City's program is necessarily
tentative.
Six times between August and November of last year, the City's police
department set up roadblocks on Indianapolis streets to catch drug offenders.
A total of 1,161 cars were stopped at these roadblocks--for how long
is unclear but the police endeavor to operate the checkpoints in such
a manner that the stop does not exceed five minutes. During the stop,
the police demand the driver's license and car registration, peer through
the car's windows into its interior, and lead a drug-sniffing dog around
the car. The stopping of the 1,161 vehicles resulted in 55 drug-related
arrests, meaning that 5 percent of the total number of stops resulted
in successful drug "hits," and 49 arrests for conduct unrelated to drugs,
such as driving with an expired driver's license, for an overall hit
rate of 9 percent. The City is continuing the program.
Stopping a car at a roadblock is a seizure within the meaning of the
Fourth Amendment, Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 809-10 (1996);
Michigan Dept. of State Police v.
Sitz, 496 U.S. 444, 450 (1990), even though the sequel--the peering
into the car windows and the sniffing of the car by the dog outside--does
not rise to the level of a search as that term of the amendment has
been interpreted by the Supreme Court. United States v. Place, 462 U.S.
696, 707 (1983); Texas v. Brown,
460 U.S. 730, 739-40 (1983); United States v. Ware, 914 F.2d 997, 1000
(7th Cir. 1990); United States v. Rodriguez-Morales, 929 F.2d 780, 788-89
(1st Cir. 1991). Whether the seizures effected by Indianapolis's drug
roadblocks are reasonable may depend on whether reasonableness is to
be assessed at the level of the entire program or of the individual
stop. If the former, these roadblocks probably are legal, given the
high "hit" rate and the only modestly intrusive character of the stops.
In many Fourth Amendment contexts, the reasonableness of a practice
is held to depend on the balance between its benefits (usually nonpecuniary)
and its costs (ditto). E.g., Wyoming v. Houghton, 119 S. Ct. 1297, 1300
(1999); Whren v. United States, supra, 517 U.S. at 817; Skinner v. Railway
Labor Executives' Ass'n, 489 U.S. 602, 619 (1989); Camara
v. Municipal Court, 387 U.S. 523, 536-37 (1967); Dimeo v. Griffin,
943 F.2d 679, 681 (7th Cir. 1991) (en banc). The benefits of a random
system of searches or seizures, such as vehicle stops pursuant to a
roadblock system, are a function of, first, the probability that the
stop will result in an arrest or a seizure of contraband or evidence
of crime, and, second, the gain to the achievement of a lawful governmental
goal that such an arrest or seizure will produce. The costs are a function
of the harm that the stop will cause to the property or privacy of the
people whose cars are stopped. In the case of Indianapolis's drug-roadblock
program, the probability of a "hit" is high (vastly higher than, for
example, the probability of a hit as a result of the screening of embarking
passengers and their luggage at airports, see National Treasury Employees
Union v. Von Raab, 489 U.S. 656, 675 n. 3 (1989)), and the deterrence
of drug offenses produced by these hits advances the strong national,
state, and local policy of discouraging the illegal use of controlled
substances. The cost--in delay, anxiety, and invasion of privacy--to
the drivers and passengers stopped for five minutes at a roadblock and
subjected to a visual inspection of the interior and a sniff by a dog
is small, though it is greater than the cost of the normal airport screening
and (like that screening) is incurred in all stops while the benefit
from the program is obtained only when there is a hit.
But courts do not usually assess reasonableness at the program level
when they are dealing with searches related to general criminal law
enforcement, see, e.g., Whren v. United States, supra, 517 U.S. at 810,
rather than to primarily civil regulatory programs for the protection
of health, safety, and the integrity of our borders. E.g., Michigan
v. Tyler, 436 U.S. 499, 504-06 (1978); United
States v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. 543 (1976); Camara
v. Municipal Court, supra; Platteville Area Apartment Ass'n v. City
of Platteville, No. 98-3070, 1999 WL 436477 (7th Cir. June 18, 1999).
Because it is infeasible to quantify the benefits and costs of most
law enforcement programs, the program approach might well permit deep
inroads into privacy. In highcrime areas of America's cities it might
justify methods of policing that are associated with totalitarian nations.
Cf. Brown v. Texas, 443 U.S.
47 (1979). One can imagine an argument that it would be reasonable in
a drug-infested neighborhood to administer drug tests randomly to drivers
and pedestrians. Although there is nothing in the text of the Fourth
Amendment to prevent dragnet searches (read literally, the text requires
only that searches and seizures be "reasonable" and confines the requirement
of "probable cause" to searches or seizures made pursuant to warrant),
the Supreme Court has insisted that "to be reasonable under the Fourth
Amendment, a search ordinarily must be based on individualized suspicion
of wrongdoing," save in cases of "special need" based on "concerns other
than crime detection." Chandler v. Miller, 520 U.S. 305, 313-14
(1997) (emphasis added); see also Vernonia School District 47J v. Acton,
515 U.S. 646, 653 (1995); United
States v. MartinezFuerte, supra, 428 U.S. at 560-61; Terry
v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 27 (1968). Program-level justifications for
searches in support of specific regulatory programs do not carry over
to general criminal law enforcement. See, e.g., Chandler v. Miller,
supra, 520 U.S. at 313-14; New York v. Burger, 482 U.S. 691, 716 n.
27 (1987); Michigan v. Tyler, supra, 436 U.S. at 508; Donovan v. Dewey,
452 U.S. 594, 598 n. 6 (1981); Abel v. United States, 362 U.S. 217,
226 (1960); Michigan v. Clifford, 464 U.S. 287, 294 (1984) (plurality
opinion); United States v. $124,570 U.S. Currency, 873 F.2d 1240, 1244
(9th Cir. 1989).
The qualification in "ordinarily" must not be overlooked. When the
police establish a roadblock on a route that they know or strongly suspect
is being used by a dangerous criminal to escape, the probability is
high not only of apprehending the criminal but also of preventing him
from engaging in further criminal, or otherwise hazardous, activity
incidental to his escape. See, e.g., United States v. Harper, 617 F.2d
35, 40-41 (4th Cir. 1980). So the roadblock is allowed even though it
is likely to "seize" some individuals who are not suspected of wrongdoing.
But here the roadblock is meant to intercept a completely random sample
of drivers; there is neither probable cause nor articulable suspicion
to stop any given driver. Even so, we can imagine cases in which,
although the police do not suspect anyone, a roadblock or other dragnet
method of criminal law enforcement would be reasonable. We may assume
that if the Indianapolis police had a credible tip that a car loaded
with dynamite and driven by an unidentified terrorist was en route to
downtown Indianapolis, they would not be violating the Constitution
if they blocked all the roads to the downtown area even though this
would amount to stopping thousands of drivers without suspecting any
one of them of criminal activity. See Maxwell v. City of New York, 102
F.3d 664 (2d Cir. 1996); Norwood v. Bain, 143 F.3d 843, 845-50 (4th
Cir. 1998), aff'd (so far as pertinent), 166 F.3d 243, 245 (4th Cir.
1999) (en banc) (per curiam); United States v. Williams, 372 F. Supp.
65 (D. S. Dak. 1974); Brinegar v. United States, 338 U.S. 160, 183 (1949)
(Jackson, J., dissenting); 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A
Treatise on the Fourth Amendment sec. 9.6(a) (3d ed. 1996); American
Law Institute, A Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure sec. 110.2(2)
(1975). When urgent considerations of the public safety require compromise
with the normal principles constraining law enforcement, the normal
principles may have to bend. The Constitution is not a suicide pact.
But no such urgency has been shown here.
The Supreme Court has upheld the validity of roadblocks in less extreme
cases, however, and it is on these that the City pitches its defense
of its program. The Court upheld sobriety checkpoints--roadblocks at
which drivers are checked for being under the influence of alcohol or
(other) mind-altering drugs--in Michigan
Dept. of State Police v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444 (1990), and roadblocks
designed to intercept illegal immigrants, in United
States v. Martinez-Fuerte, supra. The Court has not, however, ever
held or stated that all roadblock programs (even those not vulnerable
to a charge of delegating too much discretion to individual police officers)
are consistent with the Fourth Amendment. On the contrary, the amendment
would be violated if "the roadblock was a pretext whereby evidence of
narcotics violation might be uncovered in 'plain view' in the course
of a check for driver's licenses." Texas
v. Brown, supra, 460 U.S. at 743 (plurality opinion); see also United
States v. Ortiz, 422 U.S. 891 (1975).
Randomized search programs have been upheld that involved the compelled
provision of urine samples for drug testing of law enforcement officers,
jockeys, railroad workers, and other classes of employee, e.g., Vernonia
School District 47J v. Acton, supra; National Treasury Employees Union
v. Von Raab, supra, 489 U.S. at 665-66; Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives'
Ass'n, supra; Dimeo v. Griffin, supra, as well as administrative searches
conducted without any basis to suspect any particular individual of
wrongdoing, but rather pursuant to a program of inspections incidental
to a general scheme of licensing or other regulation. E.g., New York
v. Burger, supra; Michigan v. Tyler, supra; Camara v. Municipal Court,
supra; In re Establishment Inspection of Skil Corp., 846 F.2d 1127 (7th
Cir. 1988). But again the Court has not granted carte blanche.
Many of the cases we have cited do involve criminal prosecutions,
however, and we must consider how they can be squared with the principle
that the requirement of individualized suspicion is to be relaxed only
on the basis of (as the Supreme Court said in the Chandler case, an
example of a systematic search program that did not pass constitutional
muster) "concerns other than crime detection." The answer is
that the concern which lies behind the randomized or comprehensive systems
of inspections or searches that have survived challenge under the Fourth
Amendment is not primarily with catching crooks, but rather with securing
the safety or efficiency of the activity in which the people who are
searched are engaged. Consider employment drug tests for transport workers,
as in the Skinner case. The employee who uses drugs will perform badly
in his work, to the detriment of fellow employees or the general public;
and the most effective preventive measure may be to test all or a random
selection of applicants or employees. Similar are sobriety checkpoints,
which are designed to protect other users of the road from the dangers
posed by drunk drivers; administrative searches that are ancillary to
concededly lawful systems of inspection; and the use of metal detectors
and x-ray machines to screen entrants to government buildings and embarking
air travelers. United States v. Herzbrun, 723 F.2d 773, 775-76 (11th
Cir. 1984); United States v. Edwards, 498 F.2d 496 (2d Cir. 1974) (Friendly,
J.); United States v. Davis, 482 F.2d 893, 908-10 (9th Cir. 1973). These
cases rest on the commonsense principle that employers and other proprietors
(such as the state as the owner of public roads), including the quasiproprietor
that is the government in heavily regulated industries, see, e.g., United
States v. Biswell, 406 U.S. 311, 316-17 (1972), have a right to take
reasonable measures to protect the safety and efficiency of their operations.
These measures, moreover, usually make only limited inroads into privacy,
because a person can avoid being searched or seized by avoiding the
regulated activity, though we hesitate to put much weight on this point;
people are unlikely to feel they can afford to "ground" themselves in
order to avoid airport searches.
Indianapolis does not claim to be concerned with protecting highway
safety against drivers high on drugs. Its program of drug roadblocks
belongs to the genre of general programs of surveillance which invade
privacy wholesale in order to discover evidence of crime. Imagine if
the government set up a metal detector outside each person's home and
required the person to step through it whenever he entered or left,
in order to determine whether he was carrying a gun for which he lacked
a permit. A principle that justified a drug roadblock would justify
such surveillance.
We mentioned cases that allow the police or the Border Patrol to set
up roadblocks to intercept illegal immigrants, a form of "contraband"
to which illegal drugs might be analogized. Other cases allow custom
searches of the luggage of people entering the United States. For examples
of both types of case, see United States v. Montoya de Hernandez, 473
U.S. 531, 537 (1985); United States
v. Martinez-Fuerte, supra; United States v. Ramsey, 431 U.S. 606,
616-19 (1977); United States v. Johnson, 991 F.2d 1287, 1290-92 (7th
Cir. 1993). But such cases depend ultimately on sovereign powers over
foreign relations, foreign commerce, citizenship, and immigration (see,
e.g., Harisiades v. Shaughnessy, 342 U.S. 580, 586-89 (1952) (Jackson,
J.)) that states and cities do not possess. Martinez-Fuerte involved
searches well inland from the border, but the Court emphasized the infeasibility
of preventing illegal immigration by border checks alone. 428 U.S. at
552.
We are mindful of the paradoxical implication that the Fourth Amendment,
though originally limited to federal law enforcement, may pinch the
states more tightly. But the paradox need not detain us. Indianapolis
makes no attempt to defend its roadblocks on the basis that it is trying
to exclude a harmful substance or dangerous persons. Though that may
be the ultimate aim, the City concedes that its proximate goal is to
catch drug offenders in the hope of incapacitating them, and deterring
others, by criminal prosecution. The program has no regulatory purpose
that might be compared to that of the immigration laws, which seek to
exclude and deport illegal immigrants rather than just to prosecute
them for criminal violations of the immigration laws.
It is true that in the course of looking for drugs in vehicles stopped
at its drug roadblocks, the Indianapolis police often discover violations
of the traffic laws. If the purpose of the roadblock program were to
discover such violations, and if a program having such a purpose could
be justified under the cases that allow searches and seizures without
individualized suspicion of wrongdoing, then the seizure, in the course
of such searches, of drugs that were in plain view would be lawful.
Texas v. Brown, supra; United
States v. Trevino, 60 F.3d 333, 336 (7th Cir. 1995). But the first "if"
has not been shown. It is necessary in this regard to distinguish between
two kinds of purpose, that of the program's designers and that of the
police officers manning the roadblocks. The test for the lawfulness
of a particular search or seizure is an objective one; the motives of
the officer carrying out the search or seizure are irrelevant. Whren
v. United States, supra, 517 U.S. at 811-13; United States v. VillamonteMarquez,
462 U.S. 579, 584 n. 3 (1983); Scott v. United States, 436 U.S. 128,
138 (1978); cf. Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 397 (1989). But the
purpose behind the program is critical to its legality. The program
must be a bona fide effort to implement an authorized regulatory policy
rather than a pretext for a dragnet search for criminals. New York v.
Burger, supra, 482 U.S. at 716 n. 27. "[T]he exemption from the need
for probable cause (and warrant), which is accorded to searches made
for the purpose of inventory or administrative regulation, is not accorded
to searches that are not made for those purposes." Whren v. United
States, supra, 517 U.S. at 811-12 (emphasis in original); see also Texas
v. Brown, supra, 460 U.S. at 743 (plurality opinion). Leading a
drug-sniffing dog around a car cannot be justified by reference to a
desire to detect traffic violations, and so the use of the dog at the
City's roadblocks shows--what is anyway not contested--that the purpose
of the roadblocks is to catch drug offenders. We are not asked to decide
whether, if the primary purpose were to detect drunken drivers, the
dog could be added to the roadblock scenario on the theory that since
a sniff is not a search, the incremental invasion of privacy would be
negligible, or at least would not violate the Fourth Amendment.
It can be objected that requiring consideration of purpose injects
too large an element of uncertainty into the interpretation of the amendment,
and that purpose may be difficult to determine when it is corporate
in nature. But law like politics is the art of the possible and often
requires imperfect compromises. Inquiry into purpose is one method of
identifying and banning the most flagrantly abusive governmental conduct
without handcuffing government altogether. The alternative would be
to rule that either all roadblocks are illegal or none are, which would
be akin to punishing all killings identically because the "objective"
fact is that someone has died.
To summarize, we have identified four exceptions to the principle
that a search or seizure is forbidden by the Fourth Amendment unless
there is a basis for believing that a particular search or seizure,
as distinct from a program of universal or randomized searches or seizures,
will yield evidence or fruits or instrumentalities of crime. The first
exception, illustrated by the roadblock set up to catch a fleeing criminal,
is where there is a suspect--the police have identified the criminal
and have only to find him--but it is infeasible to avoid an indiscriminate
search or seizure of other persons, persons not suspected of crime,
as well. The second exception, illustrated by the hypothetical dynamite
case, is where no specific person is under suspicion but the circumstances
make it impossible to prevent a crime without an indiscriminate search.
The third exception is the regulatory search, the objective of which
is to protect a specific activity rather than to operate as an adjunct
to general criminal law enforcement. The last exception is the prevention
of illegal importation whether of persons (a power limited to the federal
government, Saenz v. Roe, 119 S. Ct. 1518 (1999)) or of goods. On the
basis of the record compiled in the preliminary-injunction proceedings--a
record essentially limited to the parties' stipulation of facts--the
Indianapolis roadblock program has not been shown to fit any of these
exceptions, and thus the lawfulness of the program has not, as the district
judge believed, been established. As that was the only ground on which
she denied the preliminary injunction, her order cannot stand.
Whether there may be other grounds for denying the preliminary injunction,
or whether on a fuller record the Indianapolis program might pass Fourth
Amendment muster, are issues for the district court to decide in the
first instance. We are not enthusiastic about the use of the Constitution
to squelch experiments in dealing with serious social problems. The
high hit rate of Indianapolis's roadblock scheme suggests that Indianapolis
has placed the roadblocks in areas of the city in which drug use approaches
epidemic proportions; and if so the roadblocks might be justified by
reference to the second exception, as illustrated by such cases as Maxwell
(involving a flurry of drive-by shootings), Norwood (threat of violence
at a rally of motorcycle gangs), and Williams (Indian insurrection).
But this is not argued either.
Reversed.
Easterbrook, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Roadblocks in Indianapolis
check for both driving and drug offenses. Someone driving a car without
a license, or with drugs, can expect arrest. The program is spectacularly
successful as roadblocks go; 9.4% of those stopped are arrested, with
the reason equally divided between driving and drug crimes. Roadblocks
with much lower rates of success have been held consistent with the
fourth amendment. United States
v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. 543 (1976) (0.12% success rate); Michigan
Department of State Police v. Sitz,
496 U.S. 444 (1990) (1.6% success rate). Yet my colleagues declare that
the fourth amendment forbids what Indianapolis has done, because its
primary purpose is to enforce the criminal laws. Martinez-Fuerte approved
a roadblock to search for alien smuggling, a violation of a criminal
law; Sitz approved a roadblock to search for drunk driving, a violation
of a criminal law. So how can the fact that possessing drugs violates
the criminal laws doom this program? One would suppose that our case
is a fortiori from Sitz, because alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine all
are drugs, any of which can impair a driver's performance. If the Constitution
allows a roadblock to intercept alcohol users, how can it condemn a
roadblock to intercept marijuana and cocaine users?
My colleagues' answer is that everything depends on the "primary"
or "real" motive for the roadblock. Thus if Indianapolis set out to
find people driving without licenses and only later added a dog to sniff
for drugs (a step that does not entail a search or seizure of any kind,
see United States v. Place, 462 U.S. 696 (1983)) in cars that already
were stopped, then the program would pass constitutional muster. But
if the City first decides to search for drugs, then adds license checks
to make better use of the time while the dog does its work, then the
program is invalid. If a city starts a license + drug program, then
its validity depends on the primary motivation: if to search for people
not legally entitled to drive, the program is valid; if to search for
people not legally entitled to carry drugs, invalid. If a program is
designed primarily to search for people using drugs in the car,
and only secondarily to locate drugs in the trunk, then it is valid;
if it is designed primarily to search for carried drugs, and only secondarily
for ingested drugs, then it is invalid.
Why should the constitutionality of a roadblock program turn on what
its promoters think (or the order in which its components were approved),
rather than on what happens to the citizenry? Over and over, the Supreme
Court says that the reasonableness inquiry under the fourth amendment
is objective; it depends on what the police do, not on what they want
or think. Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 811-13 (1996); Graham
v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 397 (1989); Maryland v. Macon, 472 U.S. 463,
470-71 (1985); Scott v. United States, 436 U.S. 128, 136-38 (1978).
The majority believes that things are otherwise when a program's design
is in issue: "the purpose behind the program is critical to its
legality. The program must be a bona fide effort to implement an authorized
regulatory policy rather than a pretext for a dragnet search for criminals."
Slip op. 10 (emphasis in original). Where does "purpose" come into the
fourth amendment? Not from its text; reasonableness fairly screams an
objective inquiry. Not from its history; my colleagues do not mention
the amendment's genesis. Not from the Supreme Court's cases. None of
the opinions my colleagues cites requires a tour through the heads of
the programs' sponsors. None suggests that the Constitution blesses
a program in which a criminal-investigation component is added to a
regulatory-enforcement one, while condemning an identical program in
which the criminalinvestigation component comes first. When the Supreme
Court speaks of "regulatory" programs, such as the searches of business
premises in New York v. Burger, 482 U.S. 691 (1987), or Marshall v.
Barlow's, Inc., 436 U.S. 307 (1978), it asks what the programs do,
not what the sponsors of the programs had in mind. So far as
the fourth amendment is concerned, there is no difference between a
roadblock originally designed to catch drug peddlers and also used to
catch drunk drivers, and a roadblock originally designed to catch drunk
drivers and also used to catch drug peddlers. Only observable differences
in police behavior enter into the calculus of "reasonableness."
To be consistent, therefore, my colleagues should say that the fourth
amendment would not permit the Michigan Department of State Police to
add a drug-detection dog to the roadblock program sustained in Sitz.
That conclusion would be so jarring, given received doctrine that a
dog's sense of smell is not a search and requires no justification,
that it could not be sustained. Yet if a dog may be added to the program
sustained in Sitz, it can't matter to "reasonableness" whether some
of the program's sponsors thought the dog more important than the breathalyzer.
The trial envisaged by my colleagues--one at which officials of Indianapolis
will testify about their motivations in approving the roadblock program,
and the district judge must make credibility findings to resolve the
fourth amendment objection--has no relation to the objective standard
that a "reasonableness" benchmark demands.
What has led the majority to its search for the "primary purpose"
behind a program, and thus to the startling conclusion that a given
program may be constitutional or not today depending on what the Mayor
thought last year, is its belief that "[p]rogram-level justifications
for searches . . . do not carry over to general criminal law enforcement."
Slip op. 4-5. Indianapolis has adopted a program that is objectively
reasonable given its minimal intrusion and substantial success (slip
op. 3), but my colleagues say that only "regulatory" programs may be
justified in this manner. Without a distinction between criminal and
regulatory searches, it would be impossible to understand Camara v.
Municipal Court, 387 U.S. 523 (1967), which holds that a warrant may
be issued without probable cause, despite the text of the fourth amendment,
provided the government really isn't looking for anything in particular.
But none of the Supreme Court's cases equates "regulatory search" with
"regulatory purpose"; the Court's line is objective, while my
colleagues' is subjective.
For every statement suggesting that criminal law enforcement may not
be justified at the program level, it is easy to find another to the
contrary--often in the same opinion. For example, my colleagues quote
a few words from Chandler v. Miller, 520 U.S. 305, 313-14 (1997). That
very opinion contains this passage (id. at 308): "Searches conducted
without grounds for suspicion of particular individuals have been upheld,
however, in 'certain limited circumstances.' See Treasury Employees
v. Von Raab, 489 U.S. 656, 668 (1989). These circumstances include brief
stops for questioning or observation at a fixed Border Patrol checkpoint,
United States v. MartinezFuerte,
428 U.S. 543, 545-550, 566-567 (1976), or at a sobriety checkpoint,
Michigan Dept. of State Police v.
Sitz, 496 U.S. 444, 447, 455 (1990), and administrative inspections
in 'closely regulated' businesses, New York v. Burger, 482 U.S. 691,
703-704 (1987)." This treats the roadblock and regulatory cases as independent,
undermining the proposition that roadblocks are improper when they seek
evidence of crime. Consider what Brown
v. Texas, 443 U.S. 47, 51 (1979), had to say: "the Fourth Amendment
requires that a seizure must be based on specific, objective facts indicating
that society's legitimate interests require the seizure of the particular
individual, or that the seizure must be carried out pursuant
to a plan embodying explicit, neutral limitations on the conduct of
individual officers." (Emphasis added.) Lots of avowedly criminal searches
are justified at a program level. After making a custodial arrest, the
police may conduct a complete search of the person, including the contents
of any packages he may be carrying. United States v. Robinson, 414 U.S.
218 (1973). After entering a dwelling to make an arrest, police may
conduct a visual "protective sweep" of other rooms to ensure that armed
occupants there do not pose a risk. Maryland v. Buie, 494 U.S. 325 (1990).
The list of searches and seizures justified in the aggregate, without
regard to person-specific cause, is quite long. Roadblocks are just
another example. See Wayne R. LaFave, 4 Search and Seizure sec.sec.
9.4(j), 9.6(b) (3d ed. 1996).
Interpretation of the fourth amendment is not a model of intellectual
consistency. See Akhil Reed Amar, Fourth Amendment First Principles,
107 Harv. L. Rev. 757, 757-61 (1994). Cases create oodles of cubbyholes.
My colleagues want to take as a fundamental doctrine that criminal investigations
require person-specific cause, and conform all fourth amendment law
to it. I suppose one could go in a different direction and treat auto
searches or housing inspections as the paradigm. But our job as an inferior
court is not to pick favorite passages from the hundreds of fourth amendment
opinions the Supreme Court has issued, but to apply the principles devised
for the most closely analogous cases. This is a roadblock case. To figure
out how to handle a roadblock case, we must look at how the Supreme
Court has handled other roadblock cases.
Neither Sitz nor Martinez-Fuerte involved a regulatory inspection,
yet in each the Court assessed reasonableness at the program level.
Michigan searched for drunk driving and the United States for alien
smuggling. Because both programs were designed to enforce the criminal
laws, a simple criminal-regulatory distinction won't fly. This impels
my colleagues to proclaim a multivariate approach under which the reasonableness
of criminal investigations will be assessed at the program level if
some other condition holds--if there is a really pressing need
(the search for a terrorist), if the reason for the stop is closely
related to the dangers of driving (the search for drunk drivers), if
the stop is justified by some "special" governmental power. So much
for the organizing principle with which the majority begins. Why use
a principle that disintegrates at first application?
Neither Sitz nor Martinez-Fuerte uses the approach my colleagues devise.
Let's work through the line of reasoning that actually appears in these
opinions.
First, the privacy interest of drivers is diminished relative to the
interests of people at home or in the office. E.g., Wyoming v. Houghton,
119 S. Ct. 1297 (1999); Carroll v. United States, 267 U.S. 132 (1925).
Carroll is close to the mark, because there the Court sustained the
search of a vehicle for closed bottles of alcohol, which during Prohibition
was treated the same way marijuana and cocaine are treated today. Recognition
that drivers have a diminished expectation of privacy is missing from
my colleagues' opinion. Instead they analogize a roadblock to a program
under which "the government set up a metal detector outside each person's
home and required the person to step through it whenever he entered
or left, in order to determine whether he was carrying a gun for which
he lacked a permit. A principle that justified a drug roadblock would
justify such surveillance." Slip op. 8. No, it wouldn't; the special
treatment of automobiles provides a stopping point. One may question
this treatment as an original matter, but it is entrenched in the Supreme
Court's jurisprudence and is the key to analyzing roadblocks.
Second, the invasion of privacy at a roadblock is slight. Detention
is short, the search superficial. Indeed, the use of a dog is not a
"search" at all. A roadblock administered the way Indianapolis handles
its program is less intrusive than the search of one's person and belongings
at an airport, another familiar kind of "roadblock" (and one that, like
the Indianapolis program, is designed to find evidence of crime, such
as carrying weapons aboard an aircraft). Cases since Sitz and Martinez-Fuerte
describe roadblocks in these terms--as reasonable in light of the minimal
intrusion, not because they are "regulatory" or conducted with an approved
"motive." See, e.g., United States v. Villamonte-Marquez, 462 U.S. 579,
587-88 (1988), and the passages from Chandler and Brown quoted above.
Third, a small invasion can be justified by aggregate success. "Probable
cause," the level of suspicion adequate to support a custodial arrest
that may last for days, is something less than a 50% likelihood; "reasonable
suspicion," enough to support a frisk, means substantially less than
"probable cause," see United States v. Chaidez, 919 F.2d 1193 (7th Cir.
1990); and as a brief stop is less intrusive than a frisk, an even lower
probability of detecting crime suffices. Martinez-Fuerte holds a probability
under 1% will do for a roadblock, and in Indianapolis the probability
is much greater. (The probability of finding a bomb in an airport search
must be less than one in ten million, given the volume of air traffic,
but judges think this sufficient given the gravity of the evil being
detected. Can my colleagues believe that drugs are so harmless that
a 5% detection rate makes a search unreasonable even when the intrusion
is slight?)
Fourth, the principal risk in allowing stops of vehicles without person-specific
cause is that the officers will abuse the discretion thus conveyed.
Some officers will stop people for the "offense" of DWB ("driving while
black"); other officers, though pure of heart, may make stops at times
or in places that leave the drivers apprehensive about their safety.
Delaware v. Prouse, 440 U.S.
648 (1979), holds that the fourth amendment does not tolerate standardless
discretion in making stops, and the Court suggested that Delaware use
instead the roadblock or checkpoint approved in Martinez-Fuerte.
Cf. Chicago v. Morales, 67 U.S.L.W. 4415 (U.S. June 10, 1999). Indianapolis
was at pains to establish a rigorous protocol for its stops. Roadblocks
are fixed; the number of cars selected for inspection is fixed; the
procedure following a stop is fixed. So the concern that led to Prouse
is missing, and the first three considerations show that the roadblock
is reasonable.
Because Martinez-Fuerte so clearly involves criminal law enforcement,
the majority creates still another special rule: "such cases depend
ultimately on sovereign power over foreign relations, foreign commerce,
citizenship, and immigration". Slip op. 8. Any implication that the
Court in Martinez-Fuerte relied on such a special power would be incorrect.
The checkpoints were between 65 and 90 miles inland. The Court's point
was not that Congress has extra powers to conduct domestic searches
for aliens, but that "traffic-checking practices . . . appropriately
are subject to less stringent constitutional safeguards." 428 U.S. at
555. Although MartinezFuerte involved immigration, never did the Court
say that enforcement of this body of laws should be especially easy.
See particularly 428 U.S. at 561-62:
[Here] we deal neither with searches nor with the sanctity of private
dwellings, ordinarily afforded the most stringent Fourth Amendment
protection. See, e.g., McDonald v. United States, 335 U.S. 451 (1948).
As we have noted earlier, one's expectation of privacy in an automobile
and of freedom in its operation are significantly different from the
traditional expectation of privacy and freedom in one's residence.
United States v. Ortiz, 422
U.S., at 896 n. 2; see Cardwell v. Lewis, 417 U.S. 583, 590-591 (1974)
(plurality opinion). And the reasonableness of the procedures followed
in making these checkpoint stops makes the resulting intrusion on
the interests of motorists minimal. On the other hand, the purpose
of the stops is legitimate and in the public interest, and the need
for this enforcement technique is demonstrated by the records in the
cases before us. Accordingly, we hold that the stops and questioning
at issue may be made in the absence of any individualized suspicion
at reasonably located checkpoints.
Everything the Court wrote about the checkpoints in Martinez-Fuerte
can be said about the roadblocks in Indianapolis.
Treating Martinez-Fuerte as exemplifying a "border exception" or "immigration
exception" to normal fourth amendment principles turns that amendment
on its head. The fourth amendment reflects antipathy toward efforts
to enforce the customs laws by searching warehouses for dutiable goods.
See Leonard W. Levy, Original Intent and the Framers' Constitution 234-46
(1988); Telford Taylor, Search, Seizure and Surveillance, in Two Studies
in Constitutional Interpretation 23-44 (1969). Inland searches based
on the national government's power over immigration and importation
(Martinez-Fuerte was not a border search) should be evaluated
under the fourth amendment's normal "reasonableness" standard; instead
my colleagues treat the immigration power as a reason to reduce the
force of the fourth amendment. As a side effect, the national government,
the object of the fourth amendment, winds up with greater freedom to
conduct searches and seizures than state and local governments, which
have been brought within the fourth amendment only indirectly. Any approach
that carries this "paradoxical implication" (slip op. 9) must be rejected.
Giving the national government more leeway than the states to conduct
searches, and treating immigration and customs searches as especially
easy to justify, are so at war with the text and history of the Constitution
that they cannot be sustained.
Searches by the national government pose a serious threat to the citizenry;
searches by local governments pose less, because movement within the
country is easy. Some cities enforce their drug laws by heavy reliance
on spies, infiltrators, informers, turncoats, wiretaps, and nighttime
searches where battering rams smash through doors; others may substitute
more civil methods, such as roadblocks where the only imposition is
a five-minute wait with man's best friend outside. Which of these is
most like the "methods of policing that are associated with totalitarian
nations" (slip op. 4)? Police and prosecutors today ply people with
favors so that friends and family become informers; lying about their
identity, agents wheedle their way into strangers' confidences; they
search trash in the hope of finding an incriminating scrap. Scaling
back these tactics (none of which requires person-specific justification)
in favor of roadblocks would make enforcement of the drug laws a good
deal more reasonable. Or so at least the people may conclude.
One glory of a federal society is that the people may choose for themselves
not only laws but also law-enforcement methods. State A may employ extra
police to follow a high-probabilityof-detection and low-sentence approach;
State B may choose fewer police, fewer intrusions on privacy, but higher
sentences for those who are caught. Each may be reasonable. Indianapolis
selected a roadblock system, one that may catch any of its drivers.
If this strikes the wrong balance, the people may throw out of office
those who adopted it. Given the modest intrusion that roadblocks create
for personal privacy, this is a legitimate choice for the public to
make. The real threat to civil liberties comes from the national government,
not from law-enforcement variations that can be avoided by driving a
few miles to the east or west. Local governments should have more, not
less, leeway than does the national government to decide how the tradeoff
between privacy and effective law enforcement shall be handled.
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