Pubdate: Fri, 19 May 2006
Source: Chicago Tribune (IL)
Copyright: 2006 Chicago Tribune Company
Contact:  http://www.chicagotribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82
Author: Charles Lane, The Washington Post

POLICE POWERS RULING EXPECTED TO HINGE ON ALITO

Justices Rehear Case On House-Search Rule

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court held a rare mid-May oral argument 
Thursday on the power of police to search private homes without 
knocking first--a major privacy-rights case likely to be decided by 
the vote of the court's newest member, Justice Samuel Alito.

At issue in Hudson vs. Michigan is the "knock and announce" rule 
rooted in the 4th Amendment to the Constitution and Anglo-American 
common law. The rule says that, in normal cases, police with a search 
warrant must first knock and state their purpose, then wait a 
reasonable period, before forcing their way in.

Most federal and state courts that have considered the question have 
said courts must exclude evidence seized by police who failed to 
follow the rule. But in recent years the Michigan Supreme Court has 
joined the minority that say no such "exclusionary rule" is required.

When the court first heard oral argument on Jan. 9, Justice Sandra 
Day O'Connor still was on the bench. But O'Connor stepped down in 
favor of Alito before the court could issue its opinion.

The court then announced it would hear arguments again. It gave no 
reason, but because it would have been able to issue a decision if 
there still were five votes for one side or the other without 
O'Connor, the most probable explanation is that the court was divided 
4-4 and needs Alito, a former prosecutor who built a strong 
pro-police record as a federal appeals judge, to break the tie.

Liberals on the court openly worried that Michigan's approach would 
carry the day--effectively gutting the knock and announce rule and, 
potentially, other restrictions on police searches as well.

Justice Stephen Breyer said that if the court rules in Michigan's 
favor, "we'd let a kind of computer virus loose in the 4th Amendment. 
I don't know what the consequences would be."

Michigan courts upheld the 2002 drug possession conviction of Booker 
Hudson, ruling that the officers who burst into his Detroit home 
three to five seconds after shouting "Police! Search warrant!" would 
have found crack cocaine in his jeans even if they had knocked and waited.

Under a 1999 Michigan Supreme Court ruling, defendants such as Hudson 
can prevail only if they show that the police's failure to knock on 
the door directly caused the discovery of the evidence.

Michigan does not deny that the officers technically violated the 
knock and announce rule. It argues rather that, because they had a 
warrant, their presence in the house was legal even if the way they 
got inside was not.