Tag Archives: Cavity searches

Forced Blood Draws and Implied Consent Laws Make a Mockery of the Fourth Amendment, by John W. Whitehead

When they can take samples from your body without a warrant or consent, there is no Fourth Amendment left. From John W. Whitehead at rutherford.org:

“The Fourth Amendment was designed to stand between us and arbitrary governmental authority. For all practical purposes, that shield has been shattered, leaving our liberty and personal integrity subject to the whim of every cop on the beat, trooper on the highway and jail official.”—Herman Schwartz, The Nation

You think you’ve got rights? Think again.

All of those freedoms we cherish—the ones enshrined in the Constitution, the ones that affirm our right to free speech and assembly, due process, privacy, bodily integrity, the right to not have police seize our property without a warrant, or search and detain us without probable cause—amount to nothing when the government and its agents are allowed to disregard those prohibitions on government overreach at will.

This is the grim reality of life in the American police state.

Our so-called rights have been reduced to technicalities in the face of the government’s ongoing power grabs.

Consider a case before the U.S. Supreme Court (Mitchell vs. Wisconsin) in which Wisconsin police officers read an unconscious man his rights and then proceeded to forcibly and warrantlessly draw his blood while he was still unconscious in order to determine if he could be charged with a DUI.

To sanction this forced blood draw, the cops and the courts have hitched their wagon to state “implied consent” laws (all of the states have them), which suggest that merely driving on a state-owned road implies that a person has consented to police sobriety tests, breathalyzers and blood draws.

More than half of the states (29 states) allow police to do warrantless, forced blood draws on unconscious individuals whom they suspect of driving while intoxicated.

Seven state appeals courts have declared these warrantless blood draws when carried out on unconscious suspects are unconstitutional. Courts in seven other states have found that implied consent laws run afoul of the Fourth Amendment. And yet seven other states (including Wisconsin) have ruled that implied consent laws provide police with a free pass when it comes to the Fourth Amendment and forced blood draws.

With this much division among the state courts, a lot is riding on which way the U.S. Supreme Court rules in Mitchell and whether it allows state legislatures to use implied consent laws as a means of allowing police to bypass the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement in relation to forced blood draws and unconscious suspects.

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Video: Police Search Man’s Anus and Genitals for Non-Existent Weed, by Carey Wedler

Yes, you can be pulled over for a traffic violation, and if the police claim they smell marijuana, they can conduct a cavity search by the side of the road. That’s how far civil liberties have deteriorated in this country. From Carey Wedler at theantimedia.org:

New Jersey state troopers are facing a lawsuit after conducting an aggressive cavity search of a driver in Southampton in March of last year. Footage recorded by the officers’ body cameras shows the extent of the search, which the driver, Jack Levine, vocally opposed. The video was recently published after an open government advocate came across the case.

The video begins with Levine in back of state trooper Andrew Whitmore’s car, refusing to speak to them. Whitmore tells him the odor of cannabis gives them probable cause to search the vehicle.

The officer walks over to state trooper Joseph Drew, who is searching Levine’s car.

Smell anything in here? Negative?” Whitmore says. “Alright, because the dude that I removed, the driver, I moved him, I put him in the back of my vehicle, and my vehicle reeks.”

He adds:

He does reek, I think he may have something on him, he may have stashed it somewhere.”

That’s what I’m thinking,” Drew responds.

Whitmore says he thinks the cannabis is stashed somewhere they can’t easily access. “It’s not in his pockets,” he says.

Shortly after, Drew begins checking Levine’s waistband, and Levine mildly, vocally expresses his disapproval.

If you think that this is the worst thing I’m gonna do to you right now, you have another thing coming, my friend,” Drew says.

“This is ridiculous. This is like sexual assault. I don’t even have [anything] in my pants, what are you doing?” Levine eventually says.

“Definitely getting the odor when you open his pants. Smell that?” one officer says, as the other affirms.

Levine expresses his desire to resolve the incident:

“Alright, look, do you want me to take my boxers off right here so I don’t have to waste your time and go downtown ‘cause you think I got weed? Like what do you want me to do? Like seriously, I have to go to work. You want me to take my clothes off? I would be more than happy to, officers.”

 

To continue reading: Video: Police Search Man’s Anus and Genitals for Non-Existent Weed