Pubdate: Tue, 06 Apr 2004 Source: Collegiate Times (VA Edu) Copyright: 2004 Collegiate Times Contact: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699 SUPREME COURT MUST DEFINE POLICE DOG USE AS A SEARCH The U.S. Supreme Court decided yesterday to hear a case involving a driver charged with drug possession. The driver, Roy Caballes, was stopped for a routine speed violation when a canine unit searched his vehicle. $250,000 worth of marijuana was found in the vehicle and confiscated. The issue the Supreme Court will have to address is the legality of the search executed upon Caballes' property. Although he had declined to allow a search, a second officer arrived on scene with a canine unit just as the accused was about to be released. At this point, the officers led the dog on a search of the vehicle that indicated drugs were inside. Closer inspection yielded the large quantity of marijuana. Lower courts have been indecisive in determining the extent of the probable cause involved in Caballes' case. The police argue the trained canine units are acceptable as an indication of probable cause, as it only extends the sensory abilities of the officer. But surely, for that very reason, a dog is a method and tool of a search - not an identifying factor of probable cause. A typical police dog is not in any way comparable to a flashlight used by an officer to run over a car or through the windows. The dog extends a great deal beyond the natural sensory abilities of any human being and can be used de facto as a method to reveal otherwise undetectable evidence - as Caballes' case demonstrates. There is an unreasonable capacity for detection that exceeds any cursory inspection used to identify probable cause. The definitions of probable cause should extend no further than the personal ability of the officer. Any method that extends unreasonably beyond an officer's capability to identify clues implying incriminating activity constitutes a search. The officer is by definition seeking incriminating evidence without knowledge or suspicion of its presence - he is conducting a search. Our laws and courts have demanded police observe the premise of probable cause. It is a system of law developed in this nation to protect the rights of the individual from abuse by the law, and the police must operate within it. The law is the law, no matter how it inconveniences its own execution and implication. Because Caballes did not consent to be searched, the use of the canine unit to identify and locate his supply of illicit drugs in the absence of probable cause constitutes an unlawful search. The Supreme Court must protect the individual's rights against unreasonable searches and seizures and apply the process of probable cause to the use of canine units. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin