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February 2, 2012

GPS Tracking Shut Down By Supremes

In a unanimous but confusing decision issued by the United States Supreme Court last week - the justices held that a 28 day use of a GPS tracking device paced on a suspects vehicle without the benefit of a search warrant - is unconsitutional.

The confusing part? Scalia did not hold that a warrant was always necessary. Walter Dellinger, who represented the Defendant Antoine Jones at the Supreme Court, said the decision means that any use of GPS technology by law enforcement without a warrant "would be a risky undertaking."

Justice Antonin Scalia wrote majority opinion stating that it was the attachment of the device that violated the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures.

"We hold that the government's installation of a GPS device on a target's vehicle, and its use of that device to monitor the vehicle's movements, constitutes a 'search,' " Scalia wrote.

This issue now is the future -- the Court limited it's holding to the fact of the case and refused to write a clear rule that law enforcement could use for guidance under different circumstances.

The justices - raising clear questions of other technologies equally intrusive wrote in separate opinions, of the sweeping changes technology has brought to society that do not involve government intrusions.

"In the course of carrying out mundane tasks," Sotomayor wrote, Americans disclose the phone numbers they dial, the URLs they visit, "the books, groceries and medications they purchase."

Alito wrote of toll booths that record a motorist's travels, cars that come ready to broadcast their locations and 322 million wireless devices in use nationally.

H. Michael's Take

What is most certainly going to happen at this point is that the States -- picking up on the Court's reasoning will most likely find that the long term use of survelliance devices - of any kind - are suspect - and that the actions of law enforcement in tracking citizens using these kinds of technologies will be presumed unconstitutional.

December 14, 2011

2010 Changes to Colorado Criminal Law - Police Must Now Advise You of Your Right To Refuse a Search NOT Based on Probable Cause


A little known law that was quietly signed by the Governor of Colorado in 2010 requires some attention. Here is how it applies. In the past, if a police officer who has NO evidence that you have committed a crime, asks for your permission to conduct a search of your person or your car, he or she did NOT have to advise you that you have the right to refuse said search.

The new law requires the police officer to advise you that you have the right to refuse the search and he - she must obtain your oral or written consent to the search. Furthermore, this new law is critically important as it counters what I would term "the natural intimidation factor" when a police officer requests - based on no evidence - to search you or your car.

Here is a summary of the new law:

HB 1201: Concerning Duties Related to Peace Officer Contacts

Status: Passed the House (37-28) and Senate (35-0) and signed into law on April 29, 2010. It was made effective April 29, 2010

Description: This new law requires that prior to conducting a consensual search of a person, personal effects, or vehicle a peace officer must get either oral or written consent for the search after advising the person that they may refuse.

This new law does not apply to a valid search incident to a lawful arrest or to a search for which there is a legal basis which includes, but is not limited to, searches in correctional facilities, jails, community corrections facilities, mental health facilities or searches of a person on probation or parole by a probation or parole officer when such searches are a condition of supervision.

December 27, 2010

Police - Citizen Encounters: New Law in Colorado for 2010 Creates Right to be Advised of Search and Seizure Constitutional Protections Under the Fourth Amendment

Colorado Change in Criminal Law 2010: Citizen Police Contact - New Protections!

Colorado is one of the first states in the nation to enact a requirement be placed on police officers in citizen - police contacts. Unlike the Miranda decision that was decided under the Fifth Amendment to the US and Colorado constitution, and which requires the police advise a person of their so called Miranda Rights prior to questioning following an arrest,

.. The Fourth Amendment has no such requirement to advise the citizen of their right to refuse to be searched or to have their automobile searched. This new law - enacted in 2010 - creates such a requirement. Here is a summary of the law followed by the actual law itself.

Restated, this new law requires that prior to conducting a consensual search of a person, personal effects, or vehicle a peace officer must get either oral or written consent for the search after advising the person that they may refuse. This new law does not apply to a valid search incident to a lawful arrest or to a search for which there is a legal basis which includes, but is not limited to, searches in correctional facilities, jails, community corrections facilities, mental health facilities or searches of a person on probation or parole by a probation or parole officer when such searches are a condition of supervision

The Bill was called H.B. 10-1201 Consensual searches - person, automobile, or effects - advisement - consent before search - remedy for violation - applicability.

Before conducting a consensual search of a person, the person's effects, or a car, a peace officer is required to articulate the factors related to the search to the person and obtain the person's consent to the search.

If a defendant is searched in violation of the act and moves to suppress the evidence obtained in the search, the court shall consider the failure to comply with the statute as a factor in determining the voluntariness of the consent.

The provisions of the act apply only to searches for which there is otherwise no legal basis

Here is the actual law itself:

16-3-310. Oral advisement and written consent prior to search of a vehicle or a person during a police contact.

(1) (a) Prior to conducting a consensual search of a person who is not under arrest, the person's effects, or a vehicle, a peace officer shall comply with paragraph (b) of this subsection (1).

(b) A peace officer may conduct a consensual search only after articulating the following factors to, and subsequently receiving consent from, the person subject to the search or the person with the apparent or actual authority to provide permission to search the vehicle or effects. The factors are:

(I) The person is being asked to voluntarily consent to a search; and

(II) The person has the right to refuse the request to search.

(c) After providing the advisement required in paragraph (b) of this subsection (1), a peace officer may conduct the requested search only if the person subject to the search voluntarily provides verbal or written consent. Other evidence of knowing and voluntary consent may be acceptable, if the person is unable to provide written or verbal consent.

(2) A peace officer providing the advisement required pursuant to subsection (1) of this section need not provide a specific recitation of the advisement; substantial compliance with the substance of the factors is sufficient to comply with the requirement.

(3) If a defendant moves to suppress any evidence obtained in the course of the search, the court shall consider the failure to comply with the requirements of this section as a factor in determining the voluntariness of the consent.

(4) This section shall not apply to a search conducted pursuant to section 16-3-103, C.R.S., a valid search incident to or subsequent to a lawful arrest, or to a search for which there is a legal basis other than voluntary consent. This shall include, but not be limited to, a search in a correctional facility or on correctional facility property, a detention facility, county detention facility, custody facility, juvenile correctional facility or any mental health institute or mental health facility operated by or under a contract with the department of human services, a community corrections facility, or a jail or a search of a person subject to probation or parole by a community supervision or parole officer when the person has consented to search as a term and condition of any probation or parole.


H. Michael's Take

It is about time.. The people have a right to know their privacy rights - and the police should not be allowed to take advantage of their ignorance and to take advantage of the obvious circumstance of intimidation inherent in all police citizen encounters in Colorado.