Pubdate: Thu, 11 Apr 2013 Source: Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ) Copyright: 2013 Newark Morning Ledger Co Contact: http://www.nj.com/starledger/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/424 Author: Salvador Rizzo POLICE CAN ARREST PEOPLE WHO ANSWER DOOR SMOKING MARIJUANA, COURT RULES TRENTON - Police officers who are greeted at the door by someone puffing marijuana can force their way in to make an arrest, the state Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. Four Newark cops, working on a tip from a confidential informant in 2008, were planning to go undercover to nab a drug dealer at the Riverview Court public housing projects. But they quickly blew their cover once the dealer, Rashad Walker, answered the door with a burning marijuana joint, according to the court record. "Defendant appeared at the door smoking a marijuana cigarette," the court said. "Thus, a disorderly persons offense was being committed in the presence of police officers in the hallway of a public housing building, where the officers have a right to be." The cops pushed their way in, arrested Walker and seized packs of marijuana, cocaine and "27 envelopes of heroin stamped 'Horsepower'" from the living room, according to the court record. Walker, who served half of his six-year sentence before being paroled last year, had argued that the Newark police trampled his rights under the state constitution and the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which protect people from "unreasonable search and seizure" of their homes. Police need to show "probable cause" and "exigent circumstances" - a high bar in most cases - to enter a home without a warrant. If ever there was a case that fit the bill, this was it, the state Supreme Court said in a 6-0 ruling, reversing an appellate decision that said a warrant was needed. "Our holding is limited to the precise facts before us," Judge Ariel Rodriguez, who is temporarily assigned to the court, wrote in the decision. "We do not suggest that, had no one come to the door, the mere smell of marijuana would have justified a forced entry into defendant's home." The tip from the confidential informant wasn't enough to get around the warrant requirement, the justices said. But since Walker tried to flee after being caught red-handed, the police had met the requirements to enter without a warrant, Rodriguez wrote. The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey said the ruling was worrisome, but mainly because it considers smoking marijuana to be a criminal offense, not because of the details of the case. "It should be a civil penalty, as it is in some places," said Alex Shalom, policy counsel at ACLU-NJ. "Should we be entitling police officers to enter a private home simply because they saw you committing a disorderly persons offense? I think that's troubling." Roseanne Scotti, state director for the Drug Policy Alliance, said the ruling "adds to a long line of state and federal jurisprudence which trashes the Fourth Amendment in the name of the war on drugs." "Like a majority of Americans, I agree that the war on drugs has been an abysmal failure," she said. The public defender's office, which represented Walker, now 29, declined to comment. The Attorney General's Office applauded the ruling but declined to take questions. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom