home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- November 1990
-
- SELECTED SUPREME COURT CASES:
- 1989-1990 TERM
-
- By
-
- William U. McCormack
- Special Agent & Legal Instructor
- FBI Academy
-
-
- During its 1989-1990 term, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on
- several cases that are of particular interest to law
- enforcement. Specifically, the Court decided cases involving
- the fourth amendment that clarified the scope of a protective
- sweep, ruled that inadvertence is not a requirement of a plain
- view seizure, and upheld the validity of a highway checkpoint
- designed to deter drunk driving. In other fourth amendment
- cases, the Court found that a search based on a police officer's
- reasonable belief in the apparent authority of a person to
- consent to the search is valid, ruled that an overnight guest in
- a residence has an expectation of privacy in that residence, and
- held that the fourth amendment does not apply to a search in a
- foreign country of the home of a foreign national being tried in
- the United States.
-
- In the fifth amendment area, the Court ruled that an
- incarcerated inmate's incriminating statements to an undercover
- police officer were admissible at trial, despite the lack of
- Miranda warnings, and that an illegal warrantless arrest of a
- suspect in his home does not require the suppression of an
- incriminating statement given by the suspect outside his home.
- The Court also decided cases involving first and sixth amendment
- issues, which upheld the criminal prosecution of child
- pornographers and the admission into evidence of child abuse
- victim-witness testimony in child abuse trials using a one-way,
- closed-circuit television system.
-
- These and other cases of particular interest to law
- enforcement officers are summarized below.
-
- FOURTH AMENDMENT
-
- Maryland v. Buie, 110 S.Ct. 1093 (1990)
-
- In Buie the Court ruled that police may conduct a
- protective sweep of closets and adjoining spaces of a home after
- an arrest in the home without any reason or suspicion to believe
- others are present who pose a threat. Also, according to this
- decision, police may conduct a protective sweep of other rooms
- or spaces in the home if they have reasonable suspicion someone
- is present who poses a threat.
-
- In the case, two men committed an armed robbery, one of
- whom was wearing a red running suit. Police obtained an arrest
- warrant for the defendant charging him with the robbery and went
- to his house to arrest him. Once inside the house, the police
- fanned out through the first and second floors, while one
- officer covered the basement. The officer covering the basement
- twice shouted into the basement ordering anyone down there to
- come up. After the defendant eventually answered, he emerged
- from the basement and was arrested. Thereafter, another officer
- went down into the basement to see if there was anyone else
- there. While in the basement, the officer saw a red running
- suit in plain view, which he seized. The Maryland trial court
- admitted the running suit into evidence, but the Court of
- Appeals of Maryland overturned that ruling, concluding that the
- police needed probable cause to believe there was someone posing
- a danger before they could lawfully enter the basement. The
- U.S. Supreme Court reversed.
-
- The Court ruled first that incident to an in-home arrest,
- the police may look in closets and other spaces immediately
- adjoining the place of arrest without probable cause or
- reasonable suspicion that anyone is in those spaces. Beyond the
- adjoining spaces, however, the Court ruled that there must be
- articulable facts that would warrant a reasonably prudent police
- officer in believing that the area to be swept harbors an
- individual posing a danger to those on the arrest scene. In
- addition, the Court noted that the sweep may only be a cursory
- inspection and may last no longer than it takes to dispel the
- reasonable suspicion of danger.
-
- Horton v. California, 110 S.Ct. 2301 (1990)
-
- In Horton the Court ruled that the fourth amendment does
- not prohibit the warrantless seizure of evidence in plain view,
- even though the discovery of the evidence is not inadvertent.
-
- In the case, the defendant became a suspect in an armed
- robbery of a coin dealer. The police obtained a warrant to
- search only for the proceeds of the robbery, despite also having
- probable cause to search for weapons used during the robbery.
- During the course of the search, the police seized weapons
- located in plain view, which they believed were used during the
- robbery. The trial court refused to suppress the weapons seized
- in plain view, even though their discovery was not inadvertent.
- The Supreme Court upheld the trial court's decision.
-
- The Court stated that a plain view seizure of evidence only
- serves to supplement a prior legitimate reason for being in a
- particular location, and police have little or no reason to
- intentionally omit items from a search warrant when they have
- probable cause to believe the items are in a particular
- location. Thus, inadvertence is not a requirement of a plain
- view seizure.
-
- Michigan Department of State Police v. Sitz, 110 S.Ct. 2481
- (1990)
-
- In Sitz the Court ruled that the fourth amendment does not
- forbid the initial stop and brief detention of all motorists
- passing through a highway checkpoint established to detect and
- deter drunk driving.
-
- In the case, the Michigan State Police established a
- sobriety checkpoint program in which all vehicles passing
- through a checkpoint would be stopped and their drivers briefly
- examined for signs of intoxication. Sitz and others filed a
- lawsuit seeking declaratory and injunctive relief from potential
- subjection to the checkpoints, and the Michigan courts held that
- the program violated the fourth amendment. The Supreme Court
- reversed.
-
- The Court stated that the balancing analysis appropriate
- for determining the legality of highway checkpoints should
- consider the magnitude of the drunk driving problem and the
- slight intrusion on motorists caused by such checkpoints.
- Balancing these factors with the fact the checkpoints reasonably
- advanced Michigan's interest in preventing drunk driving, the
- Court held that the checkpoints were consistent with the fourth
- amendment.
-
- Illinois v. Rodriguez, 110 S.Ct. 2793 (1990)
-
- In Rodriguez the Court ruled that a warrantless entry into
- a residence based upon the consent of a third party is legal if
- police, at the time of entry, reasonably believe that the third
- party possesses common authority over the premises, even if the
- third party in fact does not.
-
- In the case, a woman advised police that she was severely
- beaten by the defendant earlier that day in an apartment where
- the defendant was then sleeping. During her conversation with
- police, she referred to the apartment as "our" apartment and
- said that she had clothes and furniture there. She consented to
- travel to the apartment with police and unlock the door with her
- key so the defendant could be arrested. Based on her consent,
- police entered the apartment without an arrest or search warrant
- and observed drugs and drug paraphernalia in plain view and
- arrested the defendant. The trial court concluded that this
- woman did not have common authority over the apartment and
- suppressed the drug evidence.
-
- The U.S. Supreme Court reversed and ruled that for consent
- searches to be reasonable, the authority of a person to consent
- to a search must be judged against an objective standard; that
- is, would the facts available to the officer at the moment of
- the consent cause someone of reasonable caution to believe that
- the consenting party had authority over the premises. The Court
- remanded the case to determine if, at the time of the entry, the
- officers had established facts supporting a reasonable belief
- that the woman had authority to consent.
-
- Minnesota v. Olson, 110 S.Ct. 1684 (1990)
-
- In Olson the Court ruled that overnight guests in a
- residence have an expectation of privacy and are protected by
- the fourth amendment against warrantless police intrusions into
- that residence.
-
- In the case, police had identified the defendant as a
- suspect in an armed robbery and received a telephone call from a
- woman who stated that he had been involved in the robbery and
- was planning to leave town. The woman called again and told
- police that the defendant had told two other women who resided
- at a particular address about his participation in the armed
- robbery. The police went to that residence and determined that
- the two women lived in the upper unit. Another woman who
- resided in the lower unit told police the defendant had been
- staying in the upper unit, and she promised to call police when
- he returned. The defendant was arrested in the residence
- without a warrant. An hour later, at police headquarters, he
- provided an inculpatory statement that the Minnesota courts
- ruled inadmissible as the fruit of an illegal arrest. The
- Supreme Court affirmed.
-
- The Court found that the defendant's status as an overnight
- guest in another's home was, standing alone, enough to show he
- had an expectation of privacy in the home that society is
- prepared to accept as reasonable. Moreover, the warrantless
- entry to arrest was not justified by exigent circumstances
- because, as the State court correctly noted, even though the
- crime was serious, the residence was surrounded by police, there
- was no suggestion that others in the dwelling were in danger,
- and it was evident that the defendant was going nowhere.
-
- United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 110 S.Ct. 1056 (1990)
-
- In Verdugo-Urquidez the Court ruled that the fourth
- amendment does not apply to the search and seizure by U. S.
- agents of property owned by a nonresident alien which is located
- in a foreign country.
-
- In the case, the defendant, a resident and citizen of
- Mexico, was arrested on drug charges by U.S. Marshals, after
- which DEA agents and Mexican police conducted searches of his
- residences in Mexico. Certain documents that were seized in
- those searches were suppressed at the defendant's trial in U.S.
- district court, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed.
- The Supreme Court reversed.
-
- The Court first looked at the text of the fourth amendment
- and concluded that its reach extends only to "the people."
- The Court then determined that "the people" is a term of art
- employed in the Constitution to mean persons who are part of a
- national community or who have otherwise developed sufficient
- connection with the United States to be considered part of that
- community. The Court found that the defendant did not have any
- substantial connection with this country when the search of his
- residences in Mexico took place, such that he would be
- considered part of "the people" as used in the fourth
- amendment. The Court concluded that the fourth amendment does
- not apply in a situation such as this, where at the time of the
- searches in Mexico, the defendant was a resident and citizen of
- Mexico with no voluntary attachment to the United States.
-
- Alabama v. White, 110 S.Ct. 2412 (1990)
-
- In White the Court ruled that an anonymous tip, which is
- corroborated by independent police work, can in some cases
- exhibit sufficient indicia of reliability to provide reasonable
- suspicion for an investigatory stop.
-
- In the case, a police officer received an anonymous call
- that the defendant would be leaving a certain apartment at a
- particular time in a brown Plymouth station wagon with the right
- taillight lens broken and that she would be going to a
- particular motel with cocaine inside a brown attache case. The
- police observed the defendant leave that apartment without an
- attache case and enter a brown Plymouth station wagon with a
- broken right taillight. The police followed that car as it
- travelled the most direct route to the motel. Just before the
- defendant arrived at the motel, police stopped the car, obtained
- consent to search, and found in the car a brown attache case
- containing marijuana and also cocaine in the defendant's purse.
- The Alabama courts suppressed this drug evidence holding that
- the officers did not have sufficient reasonable suspicion to
- stop the defendant. The Supreme Court reversed.
-
- The Court stated that reasonable suspicion to temporarily
- detain a person must be established based on the totality of the
- circumstances and held that sufficient indicia of reliability
- were established by the police verifying the information
- provided by the anonymous caller. The Court stated that because
- only a small number of people are generally privy to an
- individual's itinerary, it is reasonable for police to believe
- that a person with access to such information is likely to also
- have access to reliable information about the individual's
- illegal activities.
-
- Florida v. Wells, 110 S.Ct. 1632 (1990)
-
- In Wells the Court held that the opening of a closed
- container by a Florida Highway Patrol trooper for inventory
- purposes was illegal, because the Florida Highway Patrol had no
- policy concerning the opening of closed containers encountered
- during an inventory search.
-
- In the case, a Florida Highway Patrol trooper stopped the
- defendant for speeding, and after smelling alcohol on his
- breath, arrested him for driving under the influence. The
- defendant's car was later impounded, and an inventory turned up
- two marijuana cigarettes in the ashtray and a locked suitcase in
- the trunk. The locked suitcase was opened, and a garbage bag
- with marijuana was found. The Florida Supreme Court ruled that
- the trial court erred in not suppressing the evidence found in
- the locked suitcase. The Supreme Court affirmed.
-
- The Court ruled that standardized criteria or an
- established routine must regulate the opening of containers
- found during inventory searches, and because the Florida Highway
- Patrol had no policy whatsoever concerning the opening of closed
- containers encountered during an inventory search, the search of
- the suitcase violated the fourth amendment. The Court added
- that it is not necessary for an inventory policy concerning
- closed containers to be all or nothing and that a department
- policy may allow a police officer sufficient latitude to
- determine whether a particular container should be opened in
- light of the nature of the search and characteristics of the
- container.
-
- FIFTH AMENDMENT
-
- Illinois v. Perkins, 110 S.Ct. 2394 (1990)
-
- In Perkins the Court ruled that an undercover law
- enforcement officer posing as a fellow inmate need not give
- Miranda warnings to an incarcerated suspect before asking
- questions that may elicit an incriminating response.
-
- In the case, the defendant was incarcerated pending trial
- on an aggravated assault charge. Police suspected him of a
- murder and placed an undercover police officer in his cellblock
- who suggested to the defendant that they escape, promised to be
- responsible for any murder that occurred during that escape, and
- then asked the defendant if he had ever "done" anybody. The
- defendant replied that he had and then proceeded to describe at
- length the events of the murder for which he was a suspect. The
- Illinois courts suppressed this confession given to the
- undercover officer. The Supreme Court reversed.
-
- The Court concluded that Miranda warnings were designed to
- preserve an individual's fifth amendment right against compelled
- self-incrimination during questioning in a "police-dominated
- atmosphere" and that the essential ingredients of a
- "police-dominated atmosphere" and compulsion are not present
- when an incarcerated person voluntarily speaks to a fellow
- inmate. The Court, therefore, held that the statement given by
- the defendant to a person he thought was a fellow inmate was not
- in violation of Miranda and should be admissible at trial.
-
- New York v. Harris, 110 S.Ct. 1640 (1990)
-
- In Harris the Court ruled that an illegal warrantless
- arrest of a suspect in his home does not require the suppression
- of an incriminating statement given by the suspect outside his
- home.
-
- In the case, police developed probable cause to arrest the
- defendant for murder, but then arrested him in his apartment
- without an arrest warrant. After officers read him his Miranda
- rights, he admitted to the murder and was taken to the station
- house where he was again informed of his Miranda rights, which
- he waived, and then signed an inculpatory statement. The New
- York Court of Appeals ruled that this second statement was a
- fruit of the illegal entry into the defendant's apartment, and
- therefore, should have been suppressed. The U.S. Supreme Court
- reversed.
-
- The Court ruled that even if the warrantless arrest of the
- defendant in his home was illegal, his continued custody at the
- station house was lawful, and the second statement was not the
- fruit of the fact the defendant was arrested in his house rather
- than someplace else. The Court noted that any evidence seized
- or statements obtained from a defendant in his home after an
- illegal arrest will be inadmissible.
-
- James v. Illinois, 110 S.Ct. 648 (1990)
-
- In James the Court held that the impeachment exception to
- the exclusionary rule, which allows the prosecution to introduce
- illegally obtained evidence to impeach the defendant's
- testimony, should not be extended to allow impeachment of all
- defense witnesses.
-
- In the case, police arrested the defendant for murder and
- questioned him about a suspected change in his hair color, and
- he admitted to changing it to a different color from the color
- the previous evening when the murder was committed. These
- statements about his hair color were later ruled inadmissible as
- the fruit of a fourth amendment violation because the detectives
- lacked probable cause to arrest. However, the trial court
- permitted the prosecution to use these illegally obtained
- statements to impeach the credibility of a defense witness,
- which the Illinois Supreme Court affirmed. The U.S. Supreme
- Court reversed.
-
- The Court concluded that expanding the impeachment
- exception to the exclusionary rule to include all defense
- witnesses would chill some defendants from presenting their best
- defense through the testimony of others and would significantly
- weaken the exclusionary rule's deterrent effect on police
- misconduct. The Court determined that the current exception,
- which allows impeachment of the defendant's own testimony with
- illegally obtained evidence, should remain unchanged.
-
- Pennsylvania v. Muniz, 110 S.Ct. 2638 (1990)
-
- In Muniz the Court ruled that videotaped evidence of an
- arrestee's slurred speech in response to routine booking
- questions and of his performance of sobriety tests is
- nontestimonial and not within the scope of the fifth amendment
- privilege against compelled self-incrimination.
-
- In the case, the defendant was arrested for driving while
- intoxicated, and while at the police station, his actions and
- words were recorded by videotape, including his slurred speech
- in response to routine booking questions and his performance of
- various sobriety tests. During the course of taking the
- sobriety tests, he made several unsolicited incriminating
- statements, but was not advised of his Miranda rights until
- after he answered the routine booking questions and took the
- sobriety tests.
-
- The Supreme Court held that all of the defendant's
- videotaped words and actions at the police station were
- admissible at trial, except his response to a question during
- booking concerning the date of his sixth birthday. The Court
- stated that while his inability to articulate words in a clear
- manner in response to routine booking questions was not
- testimonial, his response to the sixth birthday question was
- testimonial because from the content of the response, it could
- be inferred that his mental state was confused. The Court also
- found that his performance of the sobriety tests was
- nontestimonial and that the incriminating statements he made
- while performing the tests were not elicited in response to
- interrogation.
-
- SIXTH AMENDMENT
-
- Michigan v. Harvey, 110 S.Ct. 1176 (1990)
-
- In Harvey the Court held that the prosecution may use a
- defendant's statement to impeach the defendant's testimony at
- trial, even when the statement is taken in violation of the
- defendant's sixth amendment right to counsel.
-
- In the case, the defendant was arrested for first-degree
- criminal sexual conduct in connection with a rape. On the day
- of his arrest, he made a statement to police and was later
- arraigned and had counsel appointed for him. More than 2 months
- later, he told a police officer he wanted to make a statement,
- but did not know whether he should talk to his lawyer. The
- officer told him that he did not need to speak with his
- attorney, because his attorney would get a copy of the statement
- anyway. After being advised of his Miranda rights, he gave a
- statement concerning his version of the alleged rape. The trial
- court allowed this statement to be used to impeach the
- defendant's testimony, but the Michigan Court of Appeals
- reversed. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed the Michigan Court of
- Appeals.
-
- The Court concluded that there was no reason to treat a
- sixth amendment violation of the right to counsel differently
- than a fifth amendment Miranda violation. The Court ruled that
- if a statement is taken voluntarily, it may be used for
- impeachment purposes.
-
- Maryland v. Craig, 110 S.Ct. 3157 (1990)
-
- In Craig the Court ruled that the sixth amendment does not
- invariably require face-to-face confrontation between a
- defendant and a child abuse victim-witness at trial, if the
- child abuse victim-witness will suffer emotional trauma by
- testifying in the presence of the defendant. The case involved
- child sexual abuse offenses in which the trial court permitted
- testimony of child abuse victims outside the presence of the
- defendant through the use of a one-way, closed-circuit
- television.
-
- The Supreme Court held that the right to face-to-face
- confrontation with witnesses who testify against an accused is
- not absolute and may be denied when necessary to further an
- important public policy and where the reliability of the
- testimony is otherwise assured. The Court held that if a State
- makes an adequate showing of necessity, the State's interest in
- protecting child witnesses from the trauma of testifying in a
- child abuse case is sufficiently important to justify the use of
- a special procedure that permits a child witness in such cases
- to testify at trial against the defendant in the absence of a
- face-to-face confrontation with defendant.
-
- Idaho v. Wright, 110 S.Ct. 3139 (1990)
-
- In Wright the Court held that an out-of-court statement by
- an alleged victim of child sexual abuse did not possess
- sufficient guarantees of trustworthiness to be admitted at
- trial, but ruled that an out-of-court statement may be admitted
- if it is determined that the child making the statement was
- particularly likely to be telling the truth when the statement
- was made.
-
- In the case, a 2 1/2-year-old girl was interviewed by a
- pediatrician after it was alleged that the girl was being
- sexually abused. Incriminating statements made by the victim
- about the defendants were introduced at trial through the
- testimony of the pediatrician. The Supreme Court of Idaho held
- that the admission of the hearsay testimony of the pediatrician
- at trial violated the defendants' sixth amendment right to
- confront the witnesses against them. The U.S. Supreme Court
- affirmed.
-
- The Court held that for hearsay testimony of this nature to
- be admitted, "particularized guarantees of trustworthiness"
- must be shown from the totality of circumstances. The Court
- ruled that hearsay statements by a child witness in a child
- abuse case may be admitted at trial if the child was
- particularly likely to be telling the truth when the statement
- was made. The Court concluded that because the pediatrician in
- this case conducted the interview of the 2 1/2-year-old child
- abuse victim in a suggestive and unreliable manner, the hearsay
- testimony should not be admitted.
-
- FIRST AMENDMENT
-
- Osborne v. Ohio, 110 S.Ct. 1691 (1990)
-
- In Osborne the Court held that an Ohio statute prohibiting
- the possession and viewing of child pornography does not violate
- the first amendment.
-
- In the case, the defendant was convicted of violating an
- Ohio statute designed to combat child pornography. The
- conviction was based on photographs depicting a nude male
- adolescent posed in a sexually explicit position, which were
- seized from the defendant's home.
-
- The Court distinguished this case from its earlier decision
- in Stanley v. Georgia, 394 U.S. 557 (1969), which struck down a
- law outlawing the private possession of obscene material. The
- Court ruled that States' interests in prohibiting the possession
- of child pornography are compelling and that States may
- constitutionally proscribe the possession and viewing of child
- pornography without violating the first amendment.