Amendment IV

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


.........The Supreme Court has referred to its interpretation of probable cause as the "accumulated wisdom of precedent and experience."..........

 

PROBABLE CAUSE

    The Fourth Amendment has two clauses. The first states that people have a right to be protected from unreasonable searches and seizures, and the second states that no warrant shall issue except upon probable cause. The roots of the second clause -- the probable cause requirement -- lie in English and American colonial history. Prior to the framing of our Constitution by the founding fathers, the government had virtually unlimited power to believe, right or wrong, that any illegal items they were looking for would be found. In England, this all-purpose power took the form of what were called general warrants; in colonial America, they were called writs of assistance. To protect against the abuses inherent in this kind of power, the Framers added a probable cause requirement.

    The probable cause requirement is, in many ways, more important than the reasonableness clause. Not all search and seizures require warrants (e.g., automobile searches, arrest in a public place), but the Supreme Court has interpreted warrantless searches and seizures as unreasonable unless preceded by probable cause. This means that as a general rule, most searches and seizures require probable cause.

    It's an example of the procedural law's attempt to balance, or accommodate, competing interests. On the one hand, it protects from arbitrary intrusions into liberty and privacy, but on the other hand, it gives sufficient leeway to government officials by not being as strong of a standard as proof beyond a reasonable doubt. More leeway is granted to law enforcement under the standard of reasonable suspicion (see this Lecture on Stop & Frisk), and the standard of reasonableness under all circumstances used in school searches and sweeps.  The Supreme Court has indicated that any exceptions to the probable cause requirement will be few in number.  The Supreme Court has referred to its interpretation of probable cause as the "accumulated wisdom of precedent and experience."

DEFINITIONS

    The precise meaning of "probable cause" is somewhat uncertain. Most academic debates over the years have centered around the differences between "more probable than not" and "substantial possibility". The former involves the elements of certainty and technical knowledge. The latter involves the elements of fairness and common sense. There's more adherents of the latter approach, but how do you define common sense. Supreme Court case law has indicated that rumor, mere suspicion, and even "strong reason to suspect" are not equivalent to probable cause. Over the years, at least three definitions have emerged as the best statements:

  • Probable cause is where known facts and circumstances, of a reasonably trustworthy nature, are sufficient to justify a man of reasonable caution or prudence in the belief that a crime has been or is being committed. (reasonable man definition; common textbook definition; comes from Draper v. U.S. 1959)

  • Probable cause is what would lead a person of reasonable caution to believe that something connected with a crime is on the premises of a person or on persons themselves. (sometimes called the nexus definition; nexus is the connection between PC, the person's participation, and elements of criminal activity; determining nexus is the job of a judicial official, and it's almost always required in cases of search warrants, not arrest warrants)

  • Probable cause is the sum total of layers of information and synthesis of what police have heard, know, or observe as trained officers. (comes from Smith v. U.S. 1949 establishing the experienced police officer standard)

    There are of course, other definitions, and it's a fact of life in criminal justice that different judicial officials use different definitions. Judges will always have the last word on probable cause. Police will use whatever judicial official is available, preferred, or the court system may have a rotating duty roster for judges or magistrates to sit for nothing but warrants. The Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule protects the police to some degree in errors made by magistrates (where an appeals court rules that the magistrate signed off too leniently on probable cause). The Sixth Amendment also requires a person arrested without a warrant be brought before a magistrate without delay. This is called First Appearance, and it involves a judicial affirmation of probable cause. Many jurisdictions also still have something called the Preliminary Hearing, and it involves the determination of whether there are reasonable grounds to believe someone is guilty (not reasonable doubt, but jacked-up probable cause). Modernized court systems combine the First Appearance and Preliminary Hearing into one Probable Cause Hearing (eliminating the redundancy).

    There are a few things from other areas of the law that have relevance for the law of probable cause. One of these is the area of privacy. A "search" is in many ways a violation of privacy, a quest for something. Therefore, the Katz definition of privacy (expectation of privacy) prevails and in many ways supplements the particularity requirement (searches cannot be exploratory in hopes of finding something; they must be calculated, looking for something specific). Under Katz, only things a person clearly expects or deems private are protected; anything on display or in a public place is not protected. The area of electronic surveillance is also relevant. States cannot generally give their officers more power than the federal government allows when it comes to technology, but there are loosened restrictions on consent and different definitions of private (e.g., email) under wiretapping law. A "seizure" involves a dispossession of a person's exercise of dominion or control of a thing; the detaining of their body in the case of arrest. The only things that should be seized, as a general rule, are items within Plain View or under the immediate control of a suspect (the Chimel Rule), but in some cases (under conspiracy, racketeering, and asset forfeiture laws), a person can be dispossessed of things faraway and distant (like Swiss Bank Accounts) if the items are instrumentalities or proceeds of the crime. The law of seizure generally recognizes two precedent-setting cases:

  • Brinegar v. U.S. 338 US 160 (1949) -- (Probable Cause to Arrest) -- provides details on how to determine if a crime has been or is being committed

  • Carroll v. U.S. 267 US 132 (1925) -- (Probable Cause to Search) -- provides details on the belief that seizable property exists in a particular place or on a particular person.

SOURCES OF PROBABLE CAUSE

    The basic thrust of the law in this area is that there are some sources of probable cause that need to be supplemented by other sources, and then, there are some sources that are good enough by themselves. There's no need to adhere to a totality of circumstances test, or checklist format (e.g., 4 out of 10 possible sources equals probable cause). The law makes ample use of precedents set in other areas of procedural and evidence law.

Most of the sources can be categorized into four (4) groups:

  • Observation -- These are things that the police officer obtains knowledge of via the senses: sight, smell, hearing; but this category would also include the kinds of inferences to be made when the experienced police officer is able to detect a familiar pattern (of criminal activity) that contains a series of suspicious behaviors (e.g., circling the block twice around an armored car unloading at a bank).

  • Expertise -- These are the kinds of things that a police officer is specially trained at; such things as gang awareness and identification, recognition of burglar tools, the ability to read graffitti and tatoos, and various other techniques in the general direction of knowing when certain gestures, movements, or preparations tend to indicate impending criminal activity.

  • Circumstantial Evidence -- This is evidence that points the finger away from other suspects or an alibi, and by a process of elimination, the only probable conclusion to be drawn is that the person or things left behind is involved in crime.

  • Information -- This is a broad category which includes informants, statements by witnesses and victims, and announcements via police bulletins, broadcasts, and at roll call.

One can collapse these categories down to two (2) into direct and indirect:

I. Direct Sources of Probable Cause (Officer sources of knowledge)

FLIGHT -- Attempting to flee, evade or elude, is in evidence law a presumption of guilt. It's not by itself sufficient for probable cause, but it's surely going to result in a chase situation and custodial detention of some sort. The case of Wong Sun v. U.S. (1963) covered suspects who run out the side or back door as sufficient for probable cause, however, and there have been other cases in which suspicious behavior like dropping packages or using phones but not talking have held up.

FURTIVE MOVEMENTS -- "Furtive" means secretive or concealing, and the law requires a totality of circumstances here. The movement cannot possibly be construed as an innocent gesture (looking both ways before crossing the street). Nervousness alone is not sufficient as the law recognizes the right of people to be nervous or fearful around police. The movement cannot also be possibly the sign of a mental condition. There must be something secretive given the time, setting, weather, and audience. It would be best if the furtive movements were identifiable with a particular type of crime.

OBSERVATION OF REAL EVIDENCE -- "Real" evidence is demonstrative evidence (Exhibit A) that speaks for itself. Most of the time, these kinds of things are in plain view (binoculars and cameras are allowed as well as normal extensions of the senses, but you can't use a portable microscope to analyze the grass for fibers, e.g.). Fresh footprints is a good example, and the list includes: imprints, impressions, models, diagrams, sketches, photographs, video, and computer animation.

ADMITTED OWNERSHIP -- This involves, for example, a type of consent in which a person, say, accidentally empties the contents of their purse or pockets, and the police ask them if they own something, and they say "yes", and then the police look inside it and find contraband, they are said to have had probable cause for the search and seizure.

FALSE OR IMPROBABLE ANSWERS -- This is not normally a basis of probable cause alone, but it tends to trigger subsequent police inquiry or action. Examples might include a person being asked who the car belongs to, and they say "my cousin" but they don't know their cousin's name. Or, a girlfriend answers the door and says the apartment is rented under her boyfriend's name, but she doesn't know what kind of car her boyfriend drives.

PRESENCE AT A CRIME SCENE or IN A HIGH-CRIME AREA -- The two of these are actually somewhat different. Police have more powers at crime scenes to commandeer something, but in high-crime areas, this source of probable cause is definitely not sufficient by itself, and would probably be an example of nullification under the void-for-vagueness doctrine applicable to loitering. There are a couple of rules, however. The "joint possession" rule means that everyone in the house is subject to search and seizure if the drugs and/or contraband are in a prominent location. The totality of circumstances test applies in high-crime areas where (a) the neighborhood has to have a notorious reputation; (b) there's a typical sequence of events; (c) there's flight or attempted flight; and (d) furtive movements are present.

ASSOCIATION WITH KNOWN CRIMINALS -- This is not sufficient by itself for probable cause, except with some crimes, like conspiracies, counterfeiting, food stamp fraud, etc., where it's probable that others are involved or benefitting from the criminal activity. Association with a known drug dealer can also be incriminating in some cases. The most common case would involve somebody acting as security or a lookout for another, and this would be part of the experienced police officer standard.

PAST CRIMINAL CONDUCT -- An officer's personal knowledge of a suspect's past would be considered more likely to establish probable cause than just knowing they had a rap sheet. The officer would most likely have to know fairly intimate details of the person's life (perhaps by having previously arrested or interrogated them). In most cases, however, knowledge of this information is considered by the law to be relevant, but not sufficient.

FAILURE TO PROTEST -- This is, again, a presumption. Innocent people would react more strongly to various police actions that are incriminating. It definitely cannot be used alone as a basis of probable cause, but the interesting thing about it is that the police have it both ways. A person who is acting extremely submissive or extra "nice" might also be someone who has something to hide.

II. Indirect Sources of Probable Cause (Hearsay Evidence)

    Hearsay is any second-hand information. The most common situation involves informants. The history of Informant Law has evolved from:

  • Aguilar test (1964) -- A two-prong test requiring the affidavit spell out the underlying circumstances of how the informant gained their knowledge AND a statement of the informant's veracity, or record of truthfulness.

  • Spinelli test (1969) -- A three-prong test requiring all the elements of Aguilar plus an assessment of how accurate the information from the informant might be from a police perspective. Is it against the informant's best interests, for example, to tell the police?

  • Gates test (1983) -- This replaces both Aguilar-Spinelli tests with a totality of circumstances test, requiring the police to think both like an offender as well as a reasonable man (subjective and objective test). The totality of circumstances test is discussed under the Stop & Frisk lecture, so it's a much looser standard associated more with reasonable suspicion than probable cause.

INTERNET RESOURCES:
About.com Guide to Civil Liberties: Search & Seizure
CourtTV Transcripts on Search & Seizure
Legal Updates from the North Carolina Justice Academy
National Association of Criminal Defense Attorneys
Nolo Press Guide on How to Tell if an Arrest is Legal

PRINTED RESOURCES:
Klockars, C. (1991). "Getting Around the Fourth Amendment." in C. Klockars & S. Mastrofski,
Thinking About Police. NY: McGraw-Hill.
Shapiro, B. (1993).
Beyond Reasonable Doubt and Probable Cause: Historical Perspectives on the Anglo-American Law of Evidence. Sacramento: Univ.
Tetu, P. (1995).
Probable Cause: Between the Police Officer and the Magistrate. Springfield: Charles Thomas.

Last updated: 12/30/02
Lecture List for JUS 315
Lecture List for JUS 410
MegaLinks in Criminal Justice

Source: http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/315/315lect06.htm

 

According To Florida "Animal Fighting Act" The Life Of Your Gamefowl Will Depend On The.......

"accumulated wisdom of precedent and experience."

Your Property May Be Euthanized On AR............

"accumulated wisdom of precedent and experience."

 
Florida Senate Bill sb2350c1
 
 
10         (5)  If a court finds probable cause to believe that a

11  violation of this section or s. 828.12 has occurred, the court

12  shall order the seizure of any animals and equipment used in

13  committing the violation Whenever an indictment is returned or

14  an information is filed charging a violation of s. 828.12 or

15  of this section and, in the case of an information, a

16  magistrate finds probable cause that a violation has occurred,

17  the court shall order the animals seized and shall provide for

18  appropriate and humane care or disposition of the animals.

19  This subsection is not provision shall not be construed as a

20  limitation on the power to seize animals as evidence at the

21  time of arrest.
Source: http://www.flsenate.gov/cgi-bin/view_page.pl?Tab=session&Submenu=1&FT=D&File=sb2350c1.html&Directory=session/2003/Senate/bills/billtext/html/
 
 
PROBABLE CAUSE - Guilty Till Proven Innocent?
 

 
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letters@latimes.com
 
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/letters/
 
Creating - PROBABLE CAUSE - Based On AR Media Advertising?
Or
Working A Judicial And Legislative System By Means Of Opinion?
 
...........breeders know this, as do humane organizations..........
 
LETTERS
Most Gamecocks Are Raised to Fight
 
Michael Hiltzik got hoodwinked by self-described gamecock "breeder" Arlin Strange ("Future for Game Bird Breeder and His Roosters Nothing to Crow About," April 10).

The thousands of gamecock operations in existence throughout California are not producing birds for poultry shows, as the story claimed; the market for such shows isn't big enough to accommodate the hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of gamecocks raised.

Almost all of the gamecocks raised in California are knowingly bred and trained for the explicit purpose of cockfighting. The so-called breeders know this, as do humane organizations, but others who don't closely follow the issue are in the dark about the scale of illegal conduct occurring.

This pap about these birds being bred for show is nothing more than an elaborate ruse and a cover for illegal conduct.

Cockfighting has been banned in California since 1905. But because of lax enforcement and weak penalties, the underground cockfighting industry has metastasized, and it is this industry that appears to be responsible for the recent spread of exotic Newcastle disease in Southern California.

State Sen. Nell Soto, (D-Pomona) has introduced a bill, SB 732, in Sacramento to strengthen penalties for cockfighting. It deserves support, as does federal legislation recently introduced to upgrade penalties for interstate movement or export of fighting birds.

Cockfighting is a barbaric and widespread practice. Only strong laws, and vigorous enforcement, will cause this organized criminal industry to wither.

Wayne Pacelle

Senior Vice President

U.S. Humane Society

Washington
Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-letters4.3may04,1,1537171.story?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2Dbusiness
 

 
Probable Cause Versus First Amendment?
 
.......she could not comment on the case because the investigation is ongoing.........
 
.........the Humane Society and American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals officials say is a euphemism referring to dogs that are bred for fighting.........
 

 
 
Dogs May Have Their Day
Arrest of Alleged Publisher Could Lead to Crackdown on Dog Fighting

By Dean Schabner

April 29 — The arrest of the alleged publisher of a magazine devoted to dog fighting is being called a potential major break in the effort to combat the spread of the blood sport.
 
Animal welfare officials said the arrest of the alleged publisher of Sporting Dog Journal, James Fricchione, and information gathered at his Westtown, N.Y., home could lead to the arrests of hundreds of people involved in dog fighting across the country.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Office of the Inspector General, which took part in the raid last week, said she could not comment on the case because the investigation is ongoing.

Fricchione, 33, was arrested on animal fighting charges last week by New York State Police, accompanied by agents of the USDA's Office of the Inspector General. Humane Society of the United States dog handlers also participated, seizing 17 adult pit bulls and one puppy that were found at the home.

Sporting Dog Journal, the magazine Fricchione allegedly publishes, is an underground magazine about dog fighting that Humane Society officials said is used as a networking tool for people who participate in the illegal blood sport.

"Because Sporting Dog Journal is a critical resource for illegal dog fighters virtually everywhere, I believe it would be difficult to overstate the importance of this multi-jurisdictional series of well-coordinated actions by the New York State Police and other law enforcement agencies," said Samantha Mullen, program coordinator for the Humane Society's Mid-Atlantic regional office.

A Web site that provides information on where to get back issues of the magazine features pictures of dogs fighting, and it is linked from numerous Web sites about "game-bred" pit bulls, which the Humane Society and American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals officials say is a euphemism referring to dogs that are bred for fighting.

Most of the 18 dogs found at Fricchione's home had physical injuries that indicated they that had either been used for fights or were used to train other dogs for fighting, a Humane Society official said.

The arrest was the culmination of an eight-month undercover investigation, which also led to search warrants being served in Virginia and Georgia, including one on the alleged former publisher of Sporting Dog Journal, Jack Kelly.

"The wealth of intelligence garnered during these investigations could potentially facilitate the capture of hundreds of additional individuals throughout the country who are engaged in illegal dogfighting and associated crimes," said Eric Sakach, director of the Humane Society's West Coast regional office and one of the organization's experts on illegal animal fighting.

Fricchione was charged with animal cruelty and felonies under the New York State Agriculture and Markets Law banning animal fighting. He was released on $10,000 bail, but could not be reached for comment.

He faces up to six years in prison if convicted on all the charges against him.

A National Problem

A series of raids at the scene of dog fights in Ohio, Michigan and Louisiana earlier this year highlighted what law enforcement and animal welfare officials say is the growth of dog fighting over the past 15 years into a big-money blood sport.

Dogs with strong pedigrees can sell for as much as $10,000, and purses from betting on dog fights can be as high as $100,000 for the winners, according to police.

The Internet has become a major tool for connecting fighters and breeders for events whose atmosphere police involved in the arrests of dozens of people earlier this year described as similar to a professional boxing match, except that in many cases there are young children present.

Because of the scale of dog fighting, local police and animal welfare advocates say the participation of federal authorities is crucial to make a dent in the activity.

"The fact that there's a coalescence of local, state and federal law enforcement involved in this case is very gratifying," Mullen said after the arrest of Fricchione. "There's a very complex network of people involved in animal fighting, and it needs to be fought on many levels."

Dog fighting is illegal in all 50 states, and there are federal laws against transporting dogs across state lines to be used in fighting.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/Sports/dogfighting030429.html


PROBABLE CAUSE Or Promoting It For The Future?
 
.......what's to say that they couldn't progress into domesticated animals........
 
 
Police Investigate Opossum Beating
Prosecutor To Consider Case

POSTED: 11:32 p.m. EST May 1, 2003

Police say the Clinton County prosecutor will soon consider whether to file charges in the beating of an opossum.

Three people used rocks to pound the animal (pictured, left) early Wednesday on a road about a block away from the Clinton County courthouse (pictured, below), police said.

A woman told police about the beating, and an officer fatally shot the animal after seeing that it was severely wounded, police said.

Frankfort police said they're taking the matter seriously because studies have shown cruelty to animals can progress to violent acts against humans.

Other progressions also are possible, Deputy Chief Jeff Danner said.

"If they're willing to beat a poor, defenseless animal with rocks, what's to say that they couldn't progress into domesticated animals such as cats and dogs?" Danner told RTV6's Sy Jenkins Thursday.

Police say they have spoken with the suspects, but their names were not available.

Two officers took pictures of the opossum for use as possible court evidence, police said.

In an interview with police Thursday, one of the suspects said she and the two others threw items at the opossum because they wanted to remove it from the road, authorities said.

Jenkins spoke to some residents outside the courthouse Thursday. Some said they agreed with police that the matter was serious.

"I definitely believe they should be punished for it," said one person, Alberta Barker.

Others said the matter wasn't worth police attention.

"An opossum is basically a rodent anyway," Dick Cole said. "I live on the farm, of course, and we kill them out there because they're in the barn and whatever."

The case will be given to the Clinton County prosecutor in a couple of days, police said.

Source: http://www.theindychannel.com/news/2174105/detail.html


When Dealing With Probable Cause And The Judicial System Could There Also Be..........

.......opinion.........

........deep-rooted psychological problems.......

........hate mail and death threats.......

 

Jail Time Still Possible in Bird Torching

By Andrew Smith
STAFF WRITER

Because of a torrent of hate mail and death threats, the Suffolk district attorney's office said Friday it is willing to spare from jail a Shoreham teenager who torched his parakeet.

But Suffolk County Court Judge Louis Ohlig was so opposed to Timothy Guider, 18, serving no time in jail that he took himself off the case and passed it to Judge Randall Hinrichs.

"It is the opinion of this judge that your conduct in this incident was not only unwarranted, but that there are deep-rooted psychological problems," Ohlig told Guider during the court proceeding. "I want you to do jail time, to impress upon you what you did."

Guider has admitted that at a New Year's Eve party, he doused his family's pet parakeet with hairspray and lit it on fire. Then he posed for photographs with the roasted bird, which were posted for a time on the Internet.

Ohlig wanted Guider to serve 15 days in jail for aggravated cruelty to an animal, a felony.

The case has received widespread attention from several animal rights groups, which have deluged the district attorney's office with petitions and dozens of letters urging aggressive prosecution.

But the more extreme efforts of some may have backfired. Chief Assistant District Attorney John Buonora said the Guider family has been overwhelmed with hate mail.

Magazine subscriptions were mailed to the family's house in the name of "Timmy the Torturer."

"The people have gone through tremendous emotional and psychological torment," Buonora said of Guider and his family. "I understand the symbolism of jail time. But it's not appropriate here."

In court, Ohlig noted that Guider had received psychological tests while attending Shoreham-Wading River High School. "I suggest you go get examined again, this time while inebriated," Ohlig said.

Buonora would not comment on that suggestion. Guider's attorney, James McElhone of Miller Place, disagreed with Ohlig's belief that the incident showed Guider has serious emotional problems.

Guider will return to court May 22.
 
Source: http://www.newsday.com/news/printedition/longisland/ny-libird033266291may03,0,5845472.story?coll=ny-linews-print