Pubdate: Wed, 29 Nov 2000 Source: Morning Call (PA) Copyright: 2000 The Morning Call Inc. Contact: http://www.mcall.com/ COURT STRIKES DOWN DRUG CHECKPOINTS From staff and wire reports WASHINGTON -- In a significant ruling on the use of police power, the Supreme Court struck down random roadblocks intended for drug searches, saying they are an unreasonable invasion of privacy under the Constitution. Law enforcement in and of itself is not a good enough reason to stop innocent motorists, the majority concluded Tuesday in the first major ruling of the new term. "Because the checkpoint program's primary purpose is indistinguishable from the general interest in crime control, the checkpoints contravened the Fourth Amendment," which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote. The court's three most conservative justices dissented, saying the roadblocks Indianapolis set up in high-crime neighborhoods served valuable public safety and crime-fighting goals. Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas dissented. "Efforts to enforce the law on public highways used by millions of motorists are obviously necessary to our society," Rehnquist wrote. "The court's opinion today casts a shadow over what has been assumed ... to be a perfectly lawful activity." Thomas joined the entire nine-page dissent. Scalia agreed with Rehnquist only in part. Justice Anthony Kennedy, like O'Connor a sometime "swing vote" between the court's ideological poles, sided with her in the majority. The American Civil Liberties Union had sued on behalf of two detained motorists, and the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago eventually found the practice was probably unconstitutional. "Today's decision sends a clear message that even a conservative court is not willing to countenance the serious erosion of our basic constitutional rights," said Steven Shapiro, ACLU's legal director. O'Connor stressed that the high court ruling does not affect other police roadblocks such as border checks and drunken-driving checkpoints, which have already been found constitutional. But the reasoning behind those kinds of roadblocks -- chiefly that the benefit to the public outweighs the inconvenience -- cannot be applied broadly, O'Connor wrote. "If this case were to rest on such a high level of generality, there would be little check on the authorities' ability to construct roadblocks for almost any conceivable law enforcement purpose," the opinion said. During oral arguments in October, several justices seemed troubled by the notion that by unwittingly driving into the checkpoint, a motorist is open to a criminal investigation that presumably would not have happened otherwise. Drug searches of cars and buses traveling on Interstate 80 in the Poconos has been a hotly debated legal issue for years. The practice of looking for drugs on Greyhound buses at the Delaware Water Gap Toll Plaza was ruled unconstitutional in October by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The searches, which worked by putting police on the bus and questioning passengers about their trip and their luggage, had netted significant amounts of drugs. A 1995 search at the toll booth plaza snared a 26-pound shipment of crack cocaine, a national record at the time. That same year the strategy caught Belisario Polo, an Ohio man carrying 100 grams of crack cocaine in his luggage. Last month, the state's highest court agreed with Rosenblum that the search was unconstitutional. Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Stephan A. Zappala, writing for the majority, said "there was absolutely no justification for the intrusion" because "the stop of the bus was unsupported by reasonable suspicion or probably cause." Rosenblum said the message is simple: "You need to have probable cause to invade the privacy of any human being in a bus or a car." Staff writer Joe McDonald contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck