Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Published: March 25, 1997 News Pg. 1 Fax: 14142242047 DOYLE WANTS POLICE TO DECIDE ON ENTRY ATTORNEY GENERAL, OPPONENT ARGUE DRUG BUST CASE BEFORE JUSTICES by FRANK A. AUKOFER Copyright (c) 1997, Journal Sentinel Inc. Nobody can say for sure whether law officers engaged in a drug bust are in more danger when they knock and announce themselves or when they simply break in without warning, Wisconsin Attorney General James E. Doyle told the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday. That's why the officers themselves should be allowed to make the "strategic and tactical" decision on the spot, Doyle said. But Madison lawyer David R. Karpe said that would give police officers too much discretion, making them into "judge, jury and executioner" in deciding whether to violate the sanctity of someone's home. Doyle and Karpe were on opposite sides in oral arguments in an appeal from Wisconsin that could alter the future of the national war against illegal drugs. Under appeal is a decision of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which arose from a drug bust on Dec. 31, 1991, in Madison. The court held that when police executed valid search warrants issued by judges in felony drug cases, they had a blanket exemption from a socalled "knock and announce" rule. That decision ran counter to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in an Arkansas case in 1995, and the arguments Monday were held to help the justices reconcile the conflict. A decision is expected sometime before the end of the court's term on June 30. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist led off a lively session punctuated by laughter when he interrupted Karpe only seconds into his argument. Karpe was speaking of the Fourth Amendment's guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures and the sanctity of the home. "This fellow was in a motel, wasn't he?" Rehnquist said. Then he asked Karpe whether he could name any Supreme Court decision that gave a motel room equal stature with a home. Karpe said the definition of a home was not the structure but what took place inside. He said protecting the privacy of individuals and families in their homes was the core value of the Fourth Amendment. Doyle argued that drug dealing was a widespread, illicit form of commerce characterized by gangs, automatic weapons and the willingness to use those weapons. Forcing police officers to knock and announce themselves placed them in danger, he said, and allowed suspects to dispose of evidence by flushing it away. But Karpe said there was no evidence that officers were in more danger by knocking and announcing. He said the opposite could be true if they crashed in and the people inside thought they were defending themselves against burglars or other criminals. He said police could take other steps to prevent destruction of evidence, such as turning off the water or plugging sewers. At that, Justice Antonin Scalia evoked laughter when he said, "You shut off the water, you get one flush anyway." Doyle argued that there was little difference between a "knock and announce" drug bust or one in which the officers simply broke in. He said the time lapse between an announcement and breaking in was no more than 10 or 15 seconds, and that a videotape of either procedure would show little difference between them. In each case, he said, there is a lot of shouting as police enter with guns drawn and round up everyone, even children. Doyle said the Wisconsin Supreme Court had simply made a commonsense determination to allow the police on the scene to exercise their best judgment about what procedure to follow. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wanted to know why, if the court allowed a blanket exemption in drug cases, police should not be allowed the same exemption in domestic violence cases, in which far more officers are injured and killed. A Clinton administration representative who supported Doyle, Assistant Solicitor General Miguel Estrada, said those cases usually did not involve search warrants. Justice David H. Souter said he was concerned that if the high court allowed a blanket exemption in drug cases, it might be starting down a road of allowing blanket exemptions in other types of cases. The case started with the arrest of Steiney J. Richards, of Detroit, in the Ramada Inn. Officers, one of them posing as a maintenance man, went to the motel with a search warrant. The suspect opened the door a crack, then slammed it, broke a window and jumped out, naked from the waist up. Richards was arrested outside. Police found cocaine and $3,000 in cash in the room. Richards pleaded no contest to a felony charge of cocaine possession with intent to distribute and was sentenced to 13 years in prison. He is still serving his sentence.