Pubdate: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2002 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Section: National Author: Linda Greenhouse Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) JUSTICES HEAR ARGUMENTS ON SEARCHES OF BUS RIDERS WASHINGTON, April 16 -- A Supreme Court argument today considered the constitutional dimensions of an increasingly common law enforcement technique: police searches of long-distance bus passengers and their luggage in an effort to find drugs and weapons. Because such searches take place without a warrant and usually without any reason to suspect a particular passenger of wrongdoing, the police must obtain the passengers' consent, as they apparently did before patting down two passengers on a bus at the Greyhound Terminal in Tallahassee, Fla., in February 1999. The two men, wearing heavy, baggy clothing, were found to have packages of cocaine concealed beneath their undershorts. The question in the case is whether their acquiescence to the search amounted to consent under circumstances that a federal appeals court found, in overturning their convictions, to be inherently coercive. The United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, pointed to such factors as the presence of one of the three officers in the bus driver's seat, where he kneeled and kept the passengers in view as two other officers went from seat to seat requesting permission to search bags on the overhead rack. Those two officers displayed their badges and loomed over the seated passengers. A reasonable person would not have felt free to refuse or to leave the bus, the appeals court said. The federal government appealed to the Supreme Court on the ground that the appeals court had set too high a standard for the police, in effect requiring something close to Miranda warnings to advise passengers explicitly that they did not have to cooperate. Arguing for the government today, Deputy Attorney General Larry D. Thompson said that "buses in today's environment are vulnerable" and that the police needed flexibility to operate in "very difficult, unstructured, rapidly evolving situations." Mr. Thompson said the appeals court had ignored the Supreme Court's insistence on the "totality of the circumstances" in earlier cases in which police tactics were challenged under the Fourth Amendment's prohibition of unreasonable search and seizure. Making his first argument in a role usually reserved for lawyers in the office of the solicitor general, Mr. Thompson maintained a low-key manner but appeared to annoy several justices by holding doggedly to his position that "there is really nothing remarkable about the facts of this case" and that any detail of the incident that a justice mentioned was "irrelevant." "Wouldn't you agree that it's important to reconstruct the atmosphere?" Justice David H. Souter asked after Mr. Thompson had dismissed the relevance of the officer's position at the front of the bus. Justice Souter said the officer's presence in the driver's seat was "one graphic reminder" that "this bus isn't going anywhere until the police are satisfied." "It's a relevant fact," he added. "What it all adds up to is another matter." Whatever skepticism the court showed toward the government's position was more than matched by the justices' questioning of Gwendolyn Spivey, an assistant federal public defender from Tallahassee who was representing the two men, Christopher Drayton and Clifton Brown Jr. "The burden is on the government in every case to prove that an encounter is consensual," Ms. Spivey said in urging the court to affirm the appeals court's finding of coercion. Under the court's "totality of the circumstances" test, "any factor can tip the balance," she said. The defense lawyer said there was "something wrong" with legal rules under which criminal suspects in custody are advised of their legal rights, while innocent passengers on a bus receive no such advice. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said that since it was clear that people in the bus passengers' position do not have to cooperate, the underlying issue in the case, United States v. Drayton, No. 01-631, was the obligation of citizens to "know their rights and assert them." While "in an ideal world, people would know civics," Ms. Spivey said, the assumption "ignores the demographics" of bus travel. There was a slightly antic quality to parts of the argument. Justice Antonin Scalia announced that if he were a passenger, he would be happy to be searched, but that in any event, the passengers' heavy, baggy clothing gave the police probable cause to search them. There are "innocent reasons" for wearing baggy clothes, Ms. Spivey said. "In Tallahassee? In the summertime?" Justice Scalia demanded. His question incorporated a factual error that gave Ms. Spivey an opening, rare where Justice Scalia is concerned, for an effective come-back. "It was Feb. 4, 1999," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom