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For the most part, police officers in the United States act in a professional manor. However, with more laws on the books that make each and every citizen a law breaker the minute they step out the door, we must realize that there will be some in this profession who will abuse their authority. If the justices--as in the past--trash the Constitution in favor of allowing law enforcement to force all to show identification upon request, I am in favor of mass sting operations against the lawmen who will most assuredly abuse this new power.

The Complaint Center, a non profit organization headed by Diop Kamau, uncovers overzealous cops with a hidden camera. He has angered pro-law enforcement bureaucracies all over America, including former LA Police Chief Daryl Gates--home of the Rampart Division--who referred to Kamau as a "jerk" by putting his good officer's 'high integrity' on the line.

1 posted on 03/23/2004 9:17:21 AM PST by Technoman
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To: Technoman
This will be henceforth known as the Citizen!! Your Papers Please!! decision, if the court rules in favor of the police.
2 posted on 03/23/2004 9:22:46 AM PST by coloradan (Hence, etc.)
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To: Technoman

Interesting topic.  The article doesn't say, but was Hiibel driving at the time?  If so, then yes, he should have to produce a Driver's License.

Beyond that, I suppose I favor the producing of ID to be a neutral act.  Certainly the added safety of getting perps off the streets outweighs the minor inconvenience of identifying ones self.  Although I can see where it could lead to retinal scans on street corners, this seems a long way from it.


Owl_Eagle

" WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
DIVERSITY IS STRENGTH"

3 posted on 03/23/2004 9:23:41 AM PST by End Times Sentinel (I AIN'T GOT TIME FO' YOUR JIBBA-JABBA, FOOL!!! ~Mr. T.)
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To: Technoman

4 posted on 03/23/2004 9:25:05 AM PST by agitator (...And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark)
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To: Technoman
The asinine part is the USSC will prolly agree. We'll have to prove we're documented citizens while it's unlawful for police to ask for ID from undocumented Illegaliens.

This is really messed up. < wagging my head >
6 posted on 03/23/2004 9:26:49 AM PST by azhenfud ("He who is always looking up seldom finds others' lost change...")
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To: Technoman
I think the police should be able to ask for ID, if they have probable cause.

That is if you are speeding, the police need to know who to write the ticket to.

If you are doing nothing, then the police should not be able to ask for ID, just because they feel like it.

Of course, there will be a grey area in what defines "probable cause".

10 posted on 03/23/2004 9:31:15 AM PST by staytrue
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To: Technoman
We absolutely can not allow unlimited powers to law enforcement.
As with anything it is a trade off. We could almost eliminate crime if we required permits to exit you own home; issued only for necessary things, and shot on sight anyone who violated this law. Problem is, I’m not willing to give up what I would have to give up in order to eliminate crime.

While most law enforcement officers are responsible, sensible, and professional we can not give them bad laws and then just depend on their good graces not to abuse them. Another thing to remember is that most are responsible, sensible, and professional because in general they are LOCAL and have to live in the communities that they police. This is becoming less and less the norm as the federal government assumes more and more of what should be local law enforcement.
11 posted on 03/23/2004 9:32:12 AM PST by GrandEagle
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To: Technoman
For the most part, police officers in the United States act in a professional manor.

Is that anything like a whorehouse? ;-)

12 posted on 03/23/2004 9:34:20 AM PST by Still Thinking
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To: Technoman
Reducto ad absurdum, right? If the state is entitled to your identity on a random basis, then the state could theoretically require you to identify yourself 24 hours/day.

The state could say that while it has no compelling interest at any given time of day, the need to identify individuals exists. And because it is not feasible to place a state official at every corner, in every hallway, in every field, it should be understood that individuals must adhere to some sort of universal identification system, tracked via GPS or some other neat technology.

On its face, it's ludicrous. That's what scares me.

14 posted on 03/23/2004 9:37:10 AM PST by Mr. Bird
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To: Technoman
if Hiibel loses, the government will be free to use its extensive databases to keep tabs on people.

You mean they don't already?

18 posted on 03/23/2004 10:06:15 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants (Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn't be, in its eyes, a slave.)
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To: Technoman
I can't recall the statute, but there is a federal law that requires a person who is a member of the federal government, to respond to a request for ID, when a request is given by a federal law enforcement agent.

A private citizen is not required to respond, when not on federal land.

Now, according to federal case law, a member of the federal government is required to respond to any request for ID; does not matter if the request is made by another member of the government or by a private citizen. Federal law enforcement agents in particular, MUST properly provide ID when requested, and the MUST be able to cite the federal statutes which authorize them as an agent, which authorize them to carry weapons, and which authorize them with arrest powers. Few citizens are aware of that, most, because they've never seen it in the movies. While several crooks are plenty aware of it, and they try to use what little L.E.O. "training" that they have "encountered" in order to force astray, due process.

Technically speaking, a federal law enforcement agent cannot arrest you without his or her clear understanding that you know who they are and what their authority is; but again, the courts have given officers the benefit of the doubt, and in almost all cases, all that federal agent has to do is mention their "name rank and serial no." so to speak, and then tap you on the shoulder, to which you may affect some reaction.

THAT reaction on your face, is all they have to provide as evidence to the federal magistrate.

At least, that's the way it used to be, before the hockey rules were warped for the benefit of lawyers and judges and their "ministry."

Prior to the present sad state of affairs, and contrary to the fantasies of socialist protesters, we used to play a clean game on ice, and thereby, we fulfilled our obligation to uphold the Constitution, in particular, its power and principles of enumeration: that government is limited.

That's the way it was, before the A.C.L.U. et al conjured up a new generation of people who have dismissed our history and what once worked.

There was once upon a time, an era of federal law enforcement agents, operating under very high standards.

The problem is not that "criminals have more rights." The problem is that lawyers have few worthy principles, in addition to holding the rule of law in disdain, because their is little financial profit in a legal system that actually works because the law is not slippery nor perforated with "wiggle room" nor the language of our laws, helplessly fluid to the point of being a game of Scrabble.

The law once stood for something, before lawyers rendered it meaning-less.

21 posted on 03/23/2004 10:15:15 AM PST by First_Salute (May God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary.)
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To: Technoman; All

This was just sent to me (I haven't read it all yet), gives more detail.  It is from The Slate, but I like this woman's writing.

supreme court dispatches

Hiibel Thumpers

The Supreme Court is suspicious.

By Dahlia Lithwick

Posted Monday, March 22, 2004, at 3:03 PM PT

The Supreme Court hears oral argument this morning in the "drunken cowboy" case, a privacy dispute that has the conspiracy nuts in a tailspin and me in trouble with my Civil Procedure professor. The issue in Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada is variously described by the amicus briefs and the editorialists as whether the police have the right to demand your "papers"; mandate national identity cards; and impede ordinary citizens' freedom to roam free. But as the justices on the Supreme Court weigh in today, it's clear most of them don't see the case this way. One after another dismisses the national ID card debate as not at issue here. One after another suggests—and to a rather frightening degree, at times—that this case has nothing to do with innocent people, or ordinary people. This case has to do with "suspicious" people, and—as you were no doubt aware—suspicious people are not like you or me.

Cowboy Dudley Hiibel is challenging a Nevada statute, NRS 171.123 (3), which says the police can require someone detained pursuant to a so-called "Terry stop" to identify themselves. The Terry stop—cooked up in a 1968 case, Terry v. Ohio—carved out an exception to the old Fourth Amendment requirement that people can't be searched and seized absent "probable cause" to believe they'd committed a crime. If "probable cause" signified the level of police commitment necessary for a meaningful relationship with a criminal defendant, Terry authorized the one-night-stand, giving cops the right to initiate quickie detentions—including a brief, unerotic frisk—of folks who are sort of suspicious but not suspicious enough to justify an arrest. Several concurring opinions in Terry said that cops could ask questions during these brief encounters, but suspects had no obligation to answer. But in several cases over the years, the high court hasn't squarely addressed that the rule. The Nevada law, on the other hand, says the failure to provide your name during these stops is illegal. So, here we are.

Nevada police, responding to a report of a man beating a woman in a truck, saw what they believed to be that truck on the side of the road. Hiibel was leaning on the passenger side having a smoke. His teenage daughter was in the cab. Hiibel seemed drunk. It was all captured on video, so you can play along at home. The crucial bit is where Hiibel is asked 11 times to identify himself, and—not knowing why the cop is asking—he refuses. The cops arrested him and charged him for that refusal. Hiibel challenged the law as unconstitutional. The Nevada Supreme Court voted 4-3 that there is nothing unconstitutional about a law forcing suspects in a Terry stop to provide their name, in light of the pressing government need to identify bad guys and the minimal privacy intrusion in sharing your name. Hiibel appealed that decision.

The court has two grounds on which to declare the Nevada law unconstitutional—the Fourth Amendment's guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures and the Fifth Amendment's guarantee against self-incrimination. Robert E. Dolan, Hiibel's public defender from Winnemucca, Nev., advances both. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wants to know why this is different from any traffic stop—where the police have the right to demand your license. The answer is that Hiibel wasn't driving—he was outside the truck, and the notion of implied consent ("We let you drive cars/ride airplanes/cross borders in exchange for the right to demand your ID") is not at issue here. O'Connor (and the rest of America) wants to know if the fact that Hiibel was drunk counts for anything. Dolan argues that there was never a court finding that he was driving drunk.

Justice Antonin Scalia betrays his wholehearted suspicion of dangerously "suspicious" people with a question about the whole purpose of Terry stops: "Can't you stop someone suspicious, to see what's going on?" he asks. Dolan says policemen may ask, but no one has to answer. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist asks if one has a similar right to refuse to be frisked by a policeman during a Terry stop (sort of an Antioch College rule for pat-downs). Dolan doesn't think so. Justice Anthony Kennedy then asks whether policemen have the right to demand the names of witnesses to, say, a fatal bank shooting. Dolan says no.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg similarly points out that it's a bit odd that the police can run the vehicle's license plates but not ask your name. Rehnquist adds: "You can ask if he's the registered owner of the car, but you can't ask his name?" All this just shows how complicated this case is, simply because Hiibel was leaning on a car, as opposed to walking down the street. We keep dancing along the edges of implied consent—which makes for complicated hypotheticals.

Scalia says that a rule allowing folks to refuse to identify themselves "assumes no responsibility on the part of citizens." Revealing his own take on the fundamental badness of generally suspicious people, he adds, "I can't imagine any responsible citizen who would object to giving his name." Scalia just hasn't spent enough time in Winnemucca, is all.

Ginsburg and Dolan exhibit confusion about whether Hiibel's daughter was in the passenger or driver's side of the truck. The Nevada Supreme Court indicated she was on the passenger side, suggesting that the drunk guy was driving. But Dolan insists she was driving and "slid over." Scalia then expresses amazement that a cop performing a Terry stop would have to "turn on his heel" and walk away if a suspect said, "I ain't talking," even if he was "hanging around a jewelry store at 2 a.m." Dolan helpfully suggests, "Maybe he was purchasing jewelry for his paramour and doesn't want his wife to know." Scalia shoots back that this is "possible but not probable." Heh heh.

Kennedy circles back to the Fifth Amendment claim, saying the rule should be that offering up one's name is not self-incriminatory because it's "not probing memory or perception," it's "just a fact."

The chief justice then wonders what happens when the police walk onto a murder scene, find eight or nine people there, and a body on the floor. "Can he ask for names?" asks Rehnquist. He can ask, but there is no obligation to respond. "How can the police ever solve a murder case?" he asks. Scalia again raises the Fifth Amendment. "Only guilty people have the right not to answer," he says. "Is it only the person beating the woman in the truck who has a right not to give his name?" he asks. And Justice David Souter jumps in: "If I was walking down the street and a cop turned and said 'Who are you?' would I have a Fifth Amendment right to refuse?" Dolan says he could refuse if there is a criminal punishment attached to the refusal.

Kennedy points out that this logic is "just circular." Then he asks whether people have some privacy interest in their name alone. Dolan says yes. "But your privacy is diminished if you are a witness to a crime," says Kennedy. "This is not the same as state demanding names from everyone." Again reinforcing today's theme: Suspicious people (including those who hang out near corpses) have fewer rights, just because they are so darned suspicious.

Conrad Hafen is the senior deputy attorney general from Nevada, and he has 20 minutes to defend the statute. He argues that providing one's name is a neutral, non-incriminating act. He and Justice Kennedy try to sort out the precedential value of California v. Byers, a 1971 case finding it constitutionally permissible to make drivers involved in accidents give up their names and addresses. Byers had no clear majority opinion on this issue, so it's not clear how much weight the court should accord it.

Ginsburg wants Hafen to explain what other facts about oneself are so "neutral" that the state might also demand them. Telephone numbers? E-mail addresses? She adds that it's not clear to her how being given the suspect's name (and taking the time to enter it into a computer and wait around for an answer) protects the safety of a police officer.

Stevens again worries whether doing that computer search and turning up the information that your suspect is a "bad guy" is enough to convert "reasonable suspicion" for a Terry stop into probable cause for an arrest. Hafen says not in and of itself. But Stevens is unpersuaded, so Scalia offers a scenario under which one's name might be sufficient to lead to his arrest: if the officer learns that "he's robbed the same jewelry store [that he is now casing] 10 previous times. That would elevate it to probable cause," he chortles.

Justice Stephen Breyer views the clutch of Supreme Court dicta (non-binding commentary) saying that you can't demand someone answer questions during a Terry stop as fairly weighty. He prefers this simple rule: "You can ask, and he can say no." He concedes that a name alone doesn't normally incriminate a person, "unless his name is Killer McGee."

Again, the justices try to sort out whether they should decide this on Fourth Amendment grounds or Fifth Amendment grounds. They seem to agree that the latter is the tougher one.

Finally, Sri Srinivasan has 10 minutes to defend the Nevada law on behalf of the United States government. He and Stevens do a little waltz over whether cops should ask for your name before or after patting you down. See, it really is just like a constitutional one-night-stand. And in a brief rebuttal, Dolan does some eleventh-hour privacy-nut stuff: warning about how giving up your name is "the key to unlock data that is endless, given modern technology." He adds that privacy will become some nice historical principle but no longer the right of every citizen. This is the kind of talk that gets them wailing over at the ACLU. But the court is mainly unmoved. "If you have reasonable suspicion that someone is committing a crime," says O'Connor, "why not let them check their computer records?"

We all seem to want to live in the world inhabited by most of the justices: where our names are private, and no one needs to incriminate themselves—unless some policeman decides they are suspicious. Then, there is a duty, a responsibility, a constitution-negating requirement that you come forward—to use Scalia's formulation—and cooperate. This idea that the "suspicious people" (read: dark-skinned, poor, urban etc.) have some heightened duty to cooperate with the police is utterly backward, in light of the police's historical treatment of them. It's a shame Justice Clarence Thomas doesn't speak today. One can imagine that he has at least some idea of what it means to hold "suspicious" people to a different constitutional standard.

Dahlia Lithwick is a Slate senior editor.


Owl_Eagle

" WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
DIVERSITY IS STRENGTH"

27 posted on 03/23/2004 10:37:06 AM PST by End Times Sentinel (I AIN'T GOT TIME FO' YOUR JIBBA-JABBA, FOOL!!! ~Mr. T.)
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To: Technoman
Anyone interested in seeing the incident itself as taped by the police car's camera can check it out here:

http://papersplease.org/hiibel/
31 posted on 03/23/2004 11:30:09 AM PST by NewRomeTacitus
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