Pubdate: Thu, 01 Apr 2004 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) 298410.xml Copyright: 2004 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Meghan Gordon DRUG DOG DIDN'T VIOLATE RIGHTS, COURT DECIDES A drug-sniffing dog's random inspection of a Slidell parking lot that led to the discovery of heroin, cocaine and marijuana didn't violate a motel guest's Fourth Amendment rights, a state judge ruled Wednesday. Judge Larry J. Green in Covington ruled against the motel guest's request to suppress evidence of drugs collected after a detective was tipped off by his dog as they walked through the lot last year. John Val Popoff, 42, of Midland, Mich., was later charged with possession of heroin and cocaine and possession with intent to deliver marijuana. On Aug. 20, Detective James McIntosh of the St. Tammany Parish Drug Task Force walked his drug-detecting dog, Lucy, next to cars parked outside the Comfort Inn, 2010 Old Spanish Trail. When the dog alerted on a red 2001 Ford Mustang, McIntosh determined the owner's name and asked motel management for his room number, police said. McIntosh knocked on Room 130, and Popoff agreed to let the detective search his room. McIntosh found heroin and cocaine in the room and marijuana in his car, police said. McIntosh testified during a Feb. 18 hearing that he learned of the technique at a law enforcement convention in El Paso, Texas. A seminar speaker advised police to consider hotels and motels prime spots to find stolen cars, prostitutes, runaway juveniles and drugs. Citing a 1983 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Green said the dog's actions didn't constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment, which protects "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures." In United States v. Place, the high court ruled that a canine's sniffing of an airline passenger's luggage didn't constitute a search, and Miami police weren't required to seek a search warrant before the inspection. "This decision has been followed by Louisiana state courts on numerous occasions," Green said. Defense attorney John Lindner argued in his motion to suppress evidence that the dog's actions constituted the first search of Popoff's car. He argued that McIntosh didn't have specific information to suspect the Comfort Inn was a center of illegal activity, and the motel didn't post signs that guests would be subject to police surveillance. "Det. McIntosh testified that he conducted this operation without even a hunch, much less a quantum of individualized suspicion, reasonable cause or probable cause of suspected criminal activity," Lindner wrote. Lindner compared the detective's sweep of the hotel parking lot to a police roadblock. In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Indianapolis v. Edmond that police violated two drivers' Fourth Amendment rights by walking drug dogs around their cars as they stopped for the roadblock. The court ruled that police must have "individualized suspicion" that a driver is committing a crime other than a traffic violation before using the drug-sniffing dogs. "If the court does not draw the line at this type of operation, the Fourth Amendment would do little to prevent such intrusions from being a routine part of American life," Lindner wrote. Assistant District Attorney Ronnie Gracianette argued in a written motion that a 1993 Supreme Court case, United States v. Ludwig, held that drug dogs' inspections aren't searches. "Since there is no search, the question of whether the defendant had an expectation of privacy in a motel parking lot is irrelevant," Gracianette wrote. Lindner said he will appeal the decision, but he speculated that an appellate court isn't likely to accept the writ until after a jury verdict. Popoff's trial is scheduled to start May 24. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh