Pubdate: Fri, 29 Jun 2001 Source: Times Union (NY) Copyright: 2001 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452 Author: Cathy Woodruff; Staff Writer COURT RULING LIMITS BUS STATION SEARCHES Albany -- In Overturning Drug Conviction, Appeals Panel Rules Police Cannot Target Passengers Because Of Where Bus Originated In a decision that will limit the way sheriff's investigators can make drug arrests at the Albany bus terminal, New York's highest court ruled Thursday that police cannot stop and question bus passengers simply because they are traveling from New York City. In overturning the indictment and drug conviction of Rawle McIntosh of Nassau County, the Court of Appeals found that three investigators from the Albany County Sheriff's Department lacked sufficient reason to climb on a bus parked at the downtown Albany bus station at 3:30 a.m. on Jan. 23, 1997, and request that all 15 passengers show them their tickets and identification. "We have never held that a police encounter was justified by anything so general as knowledge that an entire city is a known source of drugs," Judge Victoria Graffeo wrote for a unanimous Court of Appeals. McIntosh, who was then 25, was arrested after investigators searched his bag and jacket and found cocaine. One of the investigators later testified that the reason for boarding the bus and addressing the passengers was that the bus originated in New York City, a frequent source of narcotics sold upstate. The court found that the investigators had no proper justification, such as a tip that drugs were being carried on that bus or an observation of suspicious behavior, for boarding the bus. In a concurring opinion, Court of Appeals Judge George Bundy Smith argued that the sheriff's investigators also violated state and federal constitutional restrictions against unreasonable search and seizure with their action. "Here, the sole reason for boarding the bus, confronting passengers and conducting this random suspicionless search was that the bus was coming from New York City, a locale where drugs exist and eight million people live," Smith wrote. The court ruled that the evidence against McIntosh seized on the bus should have been suppressed before his trial. McIntosh pleaded guilty to a drug possession charge as his trial was about to begin and was sentenced to 8 years to life in prison as a repeat felon. Sheriff James Campbell and the head of his Narcotics Unit downplayed the likely impact of the court's decision Thursday, saying that most arrests made at the bus station do result from tips and suspicious activity that the court said can be reasonable grounds for search and questioning. "It's not going to cramp our style too much," Campbell said. "In most cases, there are other signals that we look for." The Sheriff's Department logged 21 arrests at the bus station last year and more than 30 in 1999. But civil libertarians and Assistant Albany County Public Defender James Long, who represented McIntosh after his arrest, said the decision sends an important message about how law enforcement can carry out its future activities at the bus station. "It reminded me of what we heard happened in occupied Germany and France during the war," Long said of the bus stop that resulted in McIntosh's arrest. "I think the lasting effect of this decision is that if you're poor and a minority and using public transportation, you're free from somebody asking you to produce your papers." "It's refreshing to see that what some people consider the 'drug war exception' to the Bill of Rights is no longer absolute," said Louise Roback, director of the Capital Region chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union. Alice Green, executive director of the Center for Law & Justice and a longtime critic of bus station drug enforcement, described such bus interceptions as a covert type of racial profiling, the illegal targeting of minorities by law enforcement. "They (police) come armed with a particular stereotype of who comes from New York City on buses," Green said. "It's almost a code word for blacks or Hispanics." District Attorney Paul Clyne disputed the contention that there was any racial profiling at work. The fact that all riders on the bus were questioned and asked to produce identification shows that none were singled out based on race, he said. "The level of intrusion was minimal, and they didn't target anyone on the bus individually. Everyone on the bus was treated equally," said Clyne. Inspector John Burke, who heads narcotics enforcement for the department, said his unit has seldom used the bus-boarding approach in recent months because it mainly was used on the bus that McIntosh was traveling on, which no longer makes such stop-overs in Albany. The bus arrived in Albany around 3:30 a.m. on its way to other upstate cities, including Syracuse and Buffalo. Burke said investigators boarded that bus more regularly because they had little or no opportunity to observe behavior of passengers as they got on and off. Burke and Clyne argued that the procedure was not intrusive and was effective in intercepting drugs and weapons on their way upstate. "People have the right to refuse us," Burke said. "They didn't have to answer our questions." Frequently on such stops, passengers immediately caught the attention of police as investigators boarded the bus by throwing drug parcels on the floor or engaging in other suspicious behavior that sparked a legally proper search, Burke said. The Albany Police Department seldom makes drug arrests at the bus station, leaving much of the enforcement effort there to Burke's unit. "When we receive tips or other information that drugs are coming into the city on a bus, we'll react to that information," said Detective James Miller, a spokesman for the department. "But for the most part, the Sheriff's Department has served as the lead agency on drug enforcement at the bus station." McIntosh was represented on his appeal by then-Assistant Public Defender Shannon Geraty, now an assistant district attorney. Long was attempting to make arrangements for his release from prison on Thursday. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk