Pubdate: 27 March 1999 Source: Economist, The (UK) Copyright: 1999. The Economist Newspaper Limited. Contact: http://www.economist.com/ YOU'RE UNDER ARREST, AND ON TV JERKY camera movements, shouts, cops rushing through a darkened doorway, guns drawn. It all makes great television. “Reality-based” programming has mushroomed in America and it is easy to see why. Almost everyone comes out a winner. The police look like heroes. Journalists get a great story. TV firms get an endless stream of cheap programmes. And audiences love such in-your-face entertainment. Perhaps the only loser is the person being searched or arrested in the full glare of publicity. What if the target turns out to be innocent? On March 24th the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in two cases which ask whether media “ride-alongs” with policemen executing search or arrest warrants is a breach of the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of “unreasonable searches and seizures”. If the court decides to ban or sharply restrict the practice, many local-news and tabloid TV shows will, at a stroke, be deprived of a staple subject. Lower courts have issued a series of contradictory rulings on the subject. In the two cases before the Supreme Court, for example, federal appeals courts came to diametrically opposite conclusions. In 1993 federal wildlife agents raided the Montana ranch of Paul and Erma Berger looking for evidence that Mr Berger was poisoning eagles to protect his livestock. The agents were accompanied by a CNN crew, which failed to identify itself but recorded the all-day search. In a subsequent criminal trial, Mr Berger was acquitted of violating endangered-species laws, but convicted on the lesser charge of misusing a pesticide. Nevertheless, CNN later used the footage in two environmental-news programmes. The Bergers sued the agents and CNN. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals let the lawsuit proceed, ruling that the Bergers’ Fourth Amendment rights had been violated because the search had been “designed to enhance its entertainment, rather than its law-enforcement, value.” In 1992 Charles and Geraldine Wilson were abruptly awakened early one morning by a team of US marshals and local policemen, accompanied by a Washington Post reporter and photographer. The police were looking for the Wilsons’ son, for whom there was an outstanding arrest warrant. An enraged Mr Wilson was wrestled to the ground in his underwear in front of the reporter and photographer. Their son was not in the house. Although the photographs were never published, the Wilsons later sued the police. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, by a 6-5 majority, granted the police officers immunity from the suit. Lawyers for the Bergers and Wilsons argue that media ride-alongs serve no useful law-enforcement purpose. Search and arrest warrants, they say, are licences limited to the police only, not a general permission for the press to observe and record freely on private property. Lawyers for the police, supported by an amicus brief from 26 media organisations, argue that ride-alongs can help law enforcement, and so should be allowed by the Fourth Amendment. By publicising the government’s efforts to fight crime, they help to deter it, as well as strengthening public confidence in the police. They also deter improper behaviour by the police themselves, a greater threat to both the targets of searches and the public than media exposure. Courts should judge the reasonableness of ride-alongs on a case-by-case basis, maintain the media firms. Any blanket restriction, they say, would clash with First Amendment press freedoms and make it difficult for the public to monitor what the police do on its behalf. In the recent past the Supreme Court has been reluctant to second-guess the police on how to execute warrants, giving them ever greater latitude. But media firms are nervous. The justices could decide that entertainment is not the same as edification, requiring viewers to settle, once again, for the pretend “busts” of shows like “NYPD Blue” rather than the real thing. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart