Pubdate: Sun, 09 Nov 2003 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2003 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Russ Rizzo TACTICS ANGER RESIDENTS GREENSBORO -- Six times this summer police officers knocked on Janet Washington's door. Each time, they asked to search her room for drugs. Each time, she agreed and officers went away with nothing. Officers returned twice in the past two weeks with the same request. Both times her answer was different. "I said no," Washington said. "I've decided not to let them do it anymore. I get upset when they come and harass me like that." What Washington calls harassment police call standard procedure. The tactic that agitates Washington and other residents of the Southgate Motor Inn on Randleman Road is commonly called a "knock-and-talk." Officers who are suspicious that illegal activity is happening in an apartment or house often ask the residents for permission to search the home rather than getting a written search warrant from a judge. "Knock-and-talks" are a quick way for officers to handle complaints of drug activity without the red tape, said Capt. Richard Hunt, who heads the patrol district that includes the Southgate Motor Inn. Last month Hunt headed an investigation into officer conduct at the Southgate Motor Inn, prompted by complaints filed by 17 residents at the hotel who said officers were violating their 4th Amendment rights by illegally searching their rooms. "They keep going to the same room, same room, same room, and they don't find nothing," said Southgate Motor Inn manager Jay Kumar, who helped write the letter of complaint. "We lose a lot of customers like that. Some people who have been here for 10 years have left because they don't like to be bothered." Officers interviewed 14 of the residents who complained -- three had moved out and couldn't be located -- and eight others they sought out looking for any sign of police misconduct. They found none, Hunt said. Rumors and speculation, along with misunderstanding of laws, contributed to many of the complaints, Hunt wrote in a report to Chief David Wray that cleared officers of any misconduct. He also found no one who "personally felt harassed or unfairly treated," according to the report. The Southgate Motor Inn, which rents rooms by the week, typically for $115 to $135, was a focal point of an extensive police crackdown on open-air drugs and prostitution in the Randleman Road area. The initiative, labeled Project 2400, netted about 200 criminal arrests from April through June, during the height of police efforts. Wray said the department was clear at the onset of Project 2400 that police would step up efforts and use many tactics to arrest drug dealers and prostitutes in the area targeted by the project. They also made it clear that the Southgate Motor Inn was an area of particular interest because of rampant prostitution and drug dealing, he said. "To me, police knocking on the door asking what's going on is a fairly slight intrusion on your life," Wray said. It's also legal. According to federal law, officers can knock on someone's door and ask to search the room. If the resident says no, the officer can't come in unless he has a search warrant. And the officer does not have to tell residents that they have the right to refuse a request. Hunt said officers often do not tell residents they have the right to refuse a search. "The law doesn't mandate that we do, so we don't," Hunt said. Joel Oakley, president of the Greensboro Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, said "knock-and-talks" are an unfair intrusion on people's lives. "Some people say it's a necessary means to fit the ends," Oakley said. "But I have a real problem with that. We wouldn't stand for it if it was in our neighborhoods. If law enforcement goes to Fisher Park saying 'We want to search your houses,' the brouhaha would never end." Alfonza Johnson agrees. Johnson said he let officers search his room at the Southgate Motor Inn twice in recent months. "I didn't have anything to hide," Johnson said. "To me it was (harassing). I wasn't doing anything." Court records show that some of the Southgate Motor Inn residents who signed the complaint did have something to hide in the past. Willie Joseph, who brought the idea of writing the letter to Kumar, was convicted on misdemeanor drug charges twice this year. And Washington was released from jail last November after serving about three years for selling and distributing crack. Washington was charged with soliciting an officer for prostitution in April, but that charge was dismissed. Wray said officers only request searches when they suspect illegal activity is going on. That suspicion can come from an informant's tip, complaints from neighbors or something an officer sees himself. "In each of those times, you have a responsibility to see what's up," Wray said. Wray said people can abuse this system, pointing to times when people have called police on people they simply don't like, and that the department is always working to strike a balance between protecting people's right to privacy and fighting crime. "We knock on a lot of doors, and none of that is fishing," Wray said. "We're acting on some information we have. We have to use our judgment based on that information. And we realize that people like to use us, too." Resident Kimberly Bostick signed the letter of complaint, although officers have not requested a search of her room. Though Bostick acknowledges police have "cleaned (the inn) up a lot," she said she is fed up with officers questioning friends who stop by for visits. "I know they need to be here," said Bostick, who lives in a single room with her children, ages 21/2 and 8 months. "But when the people they stop and question are not the people doing something wrong, it makes me mad." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens