-Caveat Lector-

Think about what this means.  The police have the authority to stop you for
any violation real or imagined and can then take you to court/jail.  The
Gestapo is here, but maybe I'm just paranoid.
Regards,
Bob Stokes

Supreme Court Allows Minor Traffic Violation Arrests

By ANNE GEARAN
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (April 24) - Clarifying the extent of police power in roadside
stops, the Supreme Court held that officers can arrest and handcuff people
even for minor offenses punishable by a fine. The justices ruled against a
driver who was arrested and handcuffed for failing to wear a seat belt.

Such arrests do not violate the constitutional protection against
unreasonable search, the court declared Monday. In the 5-4 ruling, which
could affect anyone who drives a car, the justices said such an arrest does
not violate the Constitution's Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable seizures.

Police generally can arrest anyone they see breaking the law, the court said
as it barred a Texas woman from suing the officer who handcuffed her and took
her to jail.

The Fourth Amendment protects ``the right of the people to be secure ...
against unreasonable searches and seizures.'' A lower court had ruled that
Gail Atwater could not sue over her arrest because the officer did not
violate her constitutional rights.

Atwater was driving her two children home from soccer practice in 1997 in
Lago Vista, Texas, when she was stopped by a police officer who had noticed
the three were not wearing seat belts.

Texas law allows police to make arrests for routine traffic violations,
except for speeding. The officer arrested Atwater, handcuffed her hands
behind her back and took her to the city police station. A friend looked
after her children and her pickup truck was towed away.

Atwater's mug shot was taken and she was released after posting bond. She
later pleaded no contest to the seat belt offense and paid the maximum $50
fine.

Atwater and her husband, Michael Haas, sued the city and the police officer,
saying the arrest violated her constitutional rights.

The high court majority rejected her argument that police should not have
arrested her for a crime that would carry no jail time.

``The arrest and booking were inconvenient to Atwater, but not so
extraordinary as to violate the Fourth Amendment,'' Justice David H. Souter
wrote for the majority.

Souter was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Anthony
M. Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia.

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, John Paul Stevens and
Stephen Breyer dissented.

A lower federal judge had thrown out Atwater's lawsuit. A three-judge
appellate court reinstated it, but the full 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled she could not sue.

The appeals court said the arrest was reasonable because the officer had
reason to believe Atwater violated the law and the arrest was not carried out
in an ``extraordinary manner.''

The states have widely varying policies on whether police can arrest people
for minor offenses. Some states allow officers to arrest people for offenses
punishable only by a fine, while others prohibit it. Some states let officers
arrest someone they witness committing a misdemeanor offense only if the
offense is considered a breach of peace.

During arguments at the Supreme Court last December, Atwater's lawyer said
the Fourth Amendment restricts the use of arrest for minor offenses. The case
would be different if someone were stopped for drunken or reckless driving,
which could cause danger for others on the road if they were released, her
lawyer said.

O'Connor, writing for the minority, said Atwater's arrest was unreasonable
under the Fourth Amendment. It does not make sense for the majority to say
both that Atwater's arrest served no state purpose and also to say that it
passed constitutional muster, O'Connor wrote.

``Because the court's position is inconsistent with the explicit guarantee of
the Fourth Amendment, I dissent,'' she wrote.

The city's lawyer had argued that police are allowed to make an arrest if
they witness someone violating the law. Police often don't have enough
information to know if someone's actions are a misdemeanor or felony, the
lawyer said.

The case is Atwater v. Lago Vista, 99-1408.

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