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Supreme Court OKs Arrests for Minor Offenses 
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, April 25, 2001 
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Police may fully arrest someone, placing a suspect in 
handcuffs, for a violation that normally would require paying only a small 
fine, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in a landmark decision Tuesday.
The slim majority, led by a liberal who joined four conservatives, said such 
arrests without warrants did not violate the Constitution.

The case is an important one for determining how police routinely interact 
with the American public. At issue is how much power police are able to wield 
in tens of thousands of encounters with the public yearly, not just in 
traffic stops.

The facts in the Texas case that brought Tuesday's decision are simple. In 
Lago Vista, a police officer handcuffed a driver who was not wearing a seat 
belt, and took her to jail.

However, the case is more complicated than it seems at first glance.

Police officer Bart Turek stopped Gail Atwater in 1997 when he saw that she 
and her two children, ages 6 and 4, were not wearing seat belts.

The officer later told the courts that it was the second time in weeks he had 
stopped Atwater for the same traffic violation. This time, he told her he was 
charging her with failing to buckle up, driving without a license and failing 
to provide proof of insurance.

Atwater was handcuffed in front of her crying children, taken to jail and 
booked. She was later released on bond. The woman eventually pleaded guilty 
to the seat belt charge and paid a $50 fine. The other charges were dropped, 
as is usual when defendants produce a valid license and insurance card.

Atwater and her husband then sued Lago Vista and the officer, claiming her 
Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches and seizures was 
violated.

A federal judge ruled summarily for Lago Vista and Turek. A divided U.S. 
Circuit Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit affirmed.

The Supreme Court took the case to determine whether such an arrest is a 
possible constitutional violation, and whether Atwater has the right to a 
civil trial on that basis. The justices heard argument in December.

Tuesday, liberal Justice David Souter found himself in the unusual position 
of speaking for a narrow majority made up mostly of the court's conservative 
members. The majority upheld the lower court's decision.

"Atwater's arrest was surely 'humiliating,' as she says in her brief, but it 
was no more 'harmful to … privacy or … physical interests' than the normal 
custodial arrest," Souter said.

"… The arrest and booking were inconvenient and embarrassing to Atwater," he 
added later, "but not so extraordinary as to violate the Fourth Amendment" 
and its guarantees of due process.

Moderate conservative Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, joined by the court's 
remaining three liberals, dissented.

O'Connor cited "the recent debate over racial profiling," which she said 
"demonstrates all too clearly, a relatively minor traffic infraction may 
often serve as an excuse for stopping and harassing an individual. After 
today, the arsenal available to any officer extends to a full arrest and the 
searches permissible concomitant to that arrest."

The justice said it was not up to the Supreme Court to analyze an officer's 
motives to determine the "reasonableness" of a traffic stop. "But it is 
precisely because these motivations are beyond our purview," she said, "that 
we must vigilantly ensure that officers' post-stop actions, which are 
properly within our reach, comport with the Fourth Amendment's guarantee of 
reasonableness."

(No. 99-1408, Atwater vs. Lago Vista et al)

Copyright 2001 by United Press International.




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