Pubdate: Tues, 25 May 1999 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 1999 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Jan Crawford Greenburg COURT BANS MEDIA FROM POLICE RAIDS IN HOMES WASHINGTON -- In a ruling emphasizing the sanctity of the home, the Supreme Court said Monday that police officers cannot bring the media along when they go inside a person's house to execute an warrant or make an arrest. The court unanimously ruled that law-enforcement authorities violate the Constitution when they allow the media to come inside. The practice is so intrusive, the court said, that it violates the 4th Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures. Law-enforcement authorities and media organizations had argued in favor of the practice. They maintained that it furthered police objectives by educating the public and was important for accurate reporting on police issues. They also argued that it could serve to minimize police abuses and to protect suspects. The practice of media ride-alongs has become increasingly popular in recent years. The television show "COPS," for example, is devoted exclusively to following police officers on the beat, and it has spawned several imitators. Monday's ruling will have an impact on those shows, but it won't kick them off the air. Lawyers noted that the camera can still go along, so long as it stops at the front door--or unless the residents give them permission to come inside. "This still means media ride-alongs with police will be permitted in the vast majority of circumstances--anytime you do an activity in public, and most drug arrests and raids occur in public places," said Richard Cordray, who represented federal law-enforcement officers in two cases before the court. "The only limit is if you go into a home, the media can't go in." Some issues remain unresolved. The court did not mention whether the media can go with police into an office building or an apartment building lobby. Those gray areas could lead some officers to turn down media ride-along requests, fearful of prompting new litigation, some lawyers said. But in the two cases before the Supreme Court, two couples said it was simply too intrusive. The first case concerned Charles and Geraldine Wilson, a Maryland couple roused from bed early one morning when police entered their home to arrest their son. He wasn't there, but, unbeknownst to the Wilsons, a reporter and photographer for The Washington Post were present with the officers. The other case involved Paul and Erma Berger, a Montana couple who sued officers of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service after the agents allowed a Cable News Network crew to come along during a search of their ranch. The federal agents were looking for evidence that Paul Berger poisoned bald eagles. The Bergers also sued CNN, and that suit is pending. The court said the same principles applied in both cases against the law-enforcement officers. It issued a summary ruling in the Berger case, even though the facts were slightly different. A federal agent, for example, entered the Bergers' home wearing a hidden CNN microphone that transmitted sound to a CNN technical crew. In siding with the two couples, the court said the police and media's concerns about the public interest simply weren't enough to justify such an invasion into a person's very private space. Police are justified in bringing third parties along, the court said, only when they are needed in executing the warrant. Where police enter a home with a warrant to search for stolen property, for example, a third person may be needed to identify the property, the court noted. In his majority opinion, Chief Justice William Rehnquist made several references to the sanctity of the home--an ideal that predates the Constitution, having been recognized by courts in England as early as 1604. "In 1604, an English court made the now-famous observation that `the house of every one is to him as his castle and fortress,' " Rehnquist noted. "The 4th Amendment embodies this centuries-old principle of respect for the privacy of the home." The 4th Amendment generally requires police to obtain a warrant before searching a home, unless they get the person's consent or have some type of emergency. It also requires that any police action inside be related to the objectives in the warrant. "Certainly the presence of reporters inside the home was not related to the objectives of the authorized intrusion," the court said. The court did not hold the officers liable in the two cases because the law was unsettled when they gave the media permission to accompany them. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake