Pubdate: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2008 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 Author: Tim Smith, Capital Bureau Referenced: The ruling http://drugsense.org/url/XACJIyFC GREENVILLE DRUG EVIDENCE TOSSED OUT High Court Rules Seizure at Checkpoint Unconstitutional COLUMBIA -- The South Carolina Supreme Court has upheld the suppression of drug evidence found during a Greenville County roadblock after ruling the checkpoint was unconstitutional, violating the protection against unreasonable search and seizure. A lawyer for the defendant in the case said the ruling is the first in the state since U.S. Supreme Court decisions on roadblocks and could limit the discretion of law enforcement in making future checkpoints. But Chief Justice Jean Toal, dissenting, argued that she saw nothing wrong with the roadblock and would reverse the ruling of Circuit Judge D. Garrison Hill. At issue were two bags containing 13 ounces of cocaine found after a car driven by Eston Groome was stopped during a Greenville County sheriff's checkpoint, according to court records. Groome said he had smoked some marijuana but denied the cocaine was his, according to the Supreme Court's opinion. Hill ruled that the roadblock was for general crime control and Groome's Fourth Amendment rights were violated because of previous rulings that made general crime checkpoints unconstitutional. The judge said his decision was based upon the facts that the law enforcement unit involved dealt with crime suppression issues, a K-9 team assisted, and no evidence was presented as to the plan, procedures or duration of the roadblock. Also, according to Justice Costa Pleicones, who wrote for the majority, the state failed to prove one part of a three-part test to show how effective the roadblock was, something he said was also required by a previous appellate ruling. Toal disagreed, arguing the evidence shows the roadblock was to check driver's licenses, which is permitted under constitutional decisions. And she disagreed that the state had to produce evidence to show the roadblock was effective. "In my view, the balance of the public interest and the severity of the interference with individual liberty clearly weighs in favor of this checkpoint," she wrote. James H. Price III, one of Groome's lawyers, said law enforcement will now have to have a reason for any roadblock and then keep statistics to "justify why it was there." "Their discretion is not going to be as broad as they had before," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake