Pubdate: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2004 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Author: Stephen Henderson, The Washington Post contributed to this report Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DRUG-SNIFFING DOGS DEBATED Searches Violate Privacy Rights, Lawyer In Illinois Case Says WASHINGTON - An hour of debate at the Supreme Court on Wednesday about the scope and limits of the Fourth Amendment and personal privacy boiled down to a five-word question: Is a sniff a search? Roy Caballes said it is, especially when police stop you for speeding, then have a canine unit sniff around your car for drugs. In Caballes' case, the dog found $256,000 worth of marijuana in the trunk. Police arrested Caballes, and he was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Caballes' lawyer told the high court Wednesday that the traffic stop did not give Illinois state troopers probable cause to search Caballes' car for drugs, so the dog's sharp nose was an infringement on Caballes' privacy rights. Illinois officials, backed by the Justice Department, told the justices that a sniffing dog is not a search, at least not as far as the Constitution is concerned. It is a reasonable investigative tool, they said, no different from the trooper's eyes or nose. Moreover, Caballes has no right of privacy when it comes to contraband, the officials said. "Dog sniffs are unique in that they only reveal the presence or absence of contraband," Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan told the justices. "And there's no privacy right for drugs." The case, one in a long line of search-and-seizure issues to reach the high court, allows the justices to continue refining the lines between personal liberty and police authority. The court generally has taken a broad view of these matters and given police a good bit of leeway to conduct reasonable investigations. The justices have allowed police executing search warrants to kick in a door after knocking and waiting 15 seconds. They also have said authorities have the right to arrest all the occupants of a car where drugs are found to determine whose they are. The high court also has said in the past that having dogs sniff airport luggage does not require probable cause because it is not intrusive and people have no reasonable expectation of privacy concerning the smells from their luggage. In Caballes' case, the Illinois Supreme Court said state police overstepped their bounds by expanding the scope of their investigation from a speeding matter to a drug search without good reason. Ralph Meczyk, Caballes' lawyer, urged the high court Wednesday to equate dog sniffs conducted during traffic stops with physical searches, which enjoy full Fourth Amendment protection, rather than with casual investigative observations. "It's a search. A limited one, but still a search," Meczyk said. "They invaded a private space where he had a reasonable expectation of privacy." Several justices took issue with that reasoning, however, and cornered Meczyk into admitting that dog sniffs seem not to raise constitutional issues in many similar contexts. There is no presumption of wrongdoing or probable cause when dogs sniff luggage at an airport, Justice Antonin Scalia pointed out, "but if I travel abroad, they have dogs at customs who sniff my bags, and according to you, that would be wrong, too." Meczyk had trouble Wednesday defending his position, with many justices - including those who typically lean toward protecting civil liberties - appearing skeptical of his case. For the sixth straight oral-argument session, Chief Justice William Rehnquist did not appear Wednesday, but Justice John Paul Stevens announced that Rehnquist would vote on the case. A ruling is expected by July. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek