Sunday, August 24, 2008

Louisiana Lawmen Play Fast and Loose with the Constitution

In its 2000 decision in Indianapolis v. Edmond, the US Supreme Court held that the city's effort to attack the drug trade by holding a checkpoint to look for drugs was an unconstitutional violation of the Fourth Amendment's protection of the right to be free from unwarranted searches and seizures. But in the years since then, a handful of departments across the county, usually in the South, have brazenly trumpeted their resort to drug checkpoints.

http://stopthedrugwar.org/files/checkpoint.jpg
nighttime driving checkpoint
The latest department to step into the breach was Louisiana's Beauregard Parish Sheriff's Office, which held such a checkpoint last Thursday night near the town of Starks. Following the lead of sheriff's deputies, the local newspaper was all over the story. "Narcotics checkpoint a success," blared the headline in Monday's Derrider Daily News story on the police action.

Know your rights. You can just say NO if they want to search your vehicle.

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