Pubdate: Fri, 06 Dec 2002 Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Copyright: 2002 St. Louis Post-Dispatch Contact: http://www.stltoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/418 Author: John O'Connor, Associated Press ILLINOIS HIGH COURT LIMITS USE OF DRUG-SNIFFING DOGS IN TRAFFIC STOPS SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - Police who pull over motorists for traffic violations must have solid reasons to suspect a crime before they can call in drug-sniffing dogs, a divided Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday. The court threw out a drug charge against a Wayne County woman police stopped for a traffic violation and on whom a drug dog found a small amount of marijuana. The head of a state police organization predicted the ruling will lead to challenges every time a drug-sniffing dog is used. The 4-3 ruling included a lengthy dissent that dog "sniffs" are not searches and that privacy rights aren't violated when the scent of drugs escapes from the car. The court also struck down a law prohibiting people from letting intoxicated minors leave their homes. In the drug-dog ruling, Justice Charles Freeman wrote that a Fairfield, Ill., police officer had no reason to summon a dog when he pulled over Anne F. Cox's car in 1998. It was a routine traffic stop that Freeman said Officer Matt McCormick expanded into a drug investigation, detaining Cox longer than the Constitution allows. "If we held that Officer McCormick was justified in calling the canine unit, we would clearly support the view that police officers can resort to the use of canine units at every traffic stop," Freeman wrote. But Justice Robert Thomas, joined in dissent by Justices Thomas Fitzgerald and Rita Garman, argued that the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that dog sniffs are not searches governed by the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Furthermore, he said, the Illinois Constitution is not more protective. "Because a canine sniff is not a search, we should reject the conclusion that the police need a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity before they may conduct a canine sniff of a lawfully detained vehicle," Thomas wrote. Cox's attorney, Dan Evers of the Office of the State Appellate Defender, said the decision should put a check on renegade officers who call out dogs with no justification. But Dave Weigand, president of the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police, said the ruling will leave conscientious officers hamstrung. In the drunken minor case, the court threw out a law that allowed the prosecution of party hosts who let young people leave their homes intoxicated. It was unconstitutional because it gave no guidance on how a host should prevent the minor's departure, Chief Justice Mary Ann McMorrow wrote in the opinion. Restraining someone could expose the host to a felony charge of unlawful restraint, she said. Brad Fralick of Mothers Against Drunk Driving said he called to state officials Thursday to begin working on rewriting the law. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth