cryptogon.com news – analysis – conspiracies

April 22nd, 2009

WOW! It’s Ripley’s Believe It Or Not on Cryptogon this morning. This is the best news I’ve posted in… Well, I’d pretty much forgotten about good news. It’s not all good (as you’ll read if you click through), but when the driving doom of Cryptogon lets up, even a little, it feels significant.

Of course, the Gestapo can still have its way with you in airports, steal you laptop, copy all the data, etc., and this is what happened to a pastor who tried out his knowledge of the Constitution at a border control checkpoint INSIDE the U.S.

Woops, I didn’t mean to ruin the happy-glow… I’ll stop now.

Via: New York Times:

The Supreme Court on Tuesday significantly cut back the ability of the police to search the cars of people they arrest.

Police officers have for a generation understood themselves to be free to search vehicles based on nothing more than the fact that they had just arrested an occupant. That principle, Justice John Paul Stevens acknowledged in his majority opinion, “has been widely taught in police academies” and “law enforcement officers have relied on the rule in conducting vehicle searches during the past 28 years.”

The majority replaced that bright-line rule with a more nuanced one, and law enforcement officials greeted it with dismay. “It’s just terrible,” William J. Johnson, the executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, said of the decision. “It’s certainly going to result in less drug and weapons cases being made.”

In a dissent, four justices said the majority had effectively overruled an important and straightforward Fourth Amendment precedent established by the court in a 1981 decision, New York v. Belton.

Justice Stevens denied that. The precedent of Belton had often been applied too broadly, he said. Vehicle searches should be allowed only in two situations, he wrote: when the person being arrested is close enough to the car to reach in, possibly to grab a weapon or tamper with evidence; or when the arresting officer reasonably believes that the car contains evidence pertinent to the very crime that prompted the arrest.

…

Though Justice Stevens did not concede that Tuesday’s decision overruled Belton, he did say that fidelity to precedent was no reason to allow constitutional violations to continue.

“Countless individuals guilty of nothing more serious that a traffic violation,” he wrote, “have had their constitutional right to the security of their private effects violated” by the broad rule struck down on Tuesday.