Can Drug-Sniffing Dog Prompt Home Search?

SweetJane

Well-Known Member
This report was on NPR's Morning Edition this morning....

Can Drug-Sniffing Dog Prompt Home Search? : NPR

You can already hear all the likely jokes at the Supreme Court, about the justices going to the dogs. But the issue being argued Wednesday is deadly serious: whether police can take a trained drug-detection dog up to a house to smell for drugs inside, and if the dog alerts, use that to justify a search of the home.

In the case before the court, the four-legged cop was named Franky, and as a result of his nose, his human police partner charged Joelis Jardines with trafficking in more than 25 pounds of marijuana.

In the fall of 2006, police in Florida got an anonymous crime-stoppers tip that there was illegal drug activity at the Jardines home. A month later, police officers took Franky to the house and walked him up to the front porch. When the dog alerted for drugs, the police got a warrant, found marijuana growing inside and arrested Jardines. The Florida Supreme Court ruled that the dog sniff was an illegal search and thus could not justify a warrant. Now the state has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, and the case poses tricky issues for both law enforcement and privacy advocates.

Dog sniffs do have a history at the court. In the past, the justices have ruled that dog sniffs do not constitute a search. But those decisions involved cars that had been stopped for other reasons and luggage in public places, not homes.

"The entire history of the Fourth Amendment really is based on the fact that the home is different," says Jardines' lawyer, Howard Blumberg. "It goes all the way back to the early 1600s and the saying that a man's home is his castle."

Indeed, in 2001 the Supreme Court, in a decision written by conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, ruled that police could not use heat-detection devices outside a home to detect marijuana grow lights inside. Not only does the device violate the home dweller's expectation of privacy, said Scalia, but the technology could detect many other innocent details of the homeowner's life, like "the hour at which the lady of the house takes her bath."

Florida contends, however, that using drug-detection dogs is not analogous to technology because there is no constitutional right to possess contraband, and the state maintains that dogs trained to detect illegal drugs do not alert to other substances.

The police were doing nothing more than the postman or the trick-or-treater, says lawyer Gregory Garre, representing Florida. The police "did the same thing that millions of Americans will do on Halloween night, which is walk up to the front steps, knock on the door, and while they were there, they took in the air and the dog alerted to the smell of illegal narcotics."

Public defender Blumberg replies that the state's reasoning is pushing the envelope beyond the Constitution's ban on unwarranted searches. If a dog sniff at the front door is not deemed to be a search, he warns, the real-life consequences could be profound.

Police would be free "to walk up and down suburban neighborhoods, go up to each door, and see if the dog alerts to contraband." And they could do the same thing in apartment houses, checking out each apartment door "based on nothing, or on an anonymous tip, or because that's what they want to do that day."

That's just not a realistic scenario, according to the state. "They have far too many things to do than to waste their time with that sort of indiscriminate searching," says Garre.

The dog sniff case leads inevitably back to the question of how much technology the government can use to determine what is going on inside the home. If a dog sniff is permissible, why not develop some new and cheaper technology that does the same thing – a detection device that could easily be used, going home to home or apartment to apartment?

Florida asserts that there is a fundamental difference between a dog and a technological device. "We recognize that there are limits to one's God-given senses," says Garre, "whereas with technology there is always the possibility, as we've seen, of advances that would be tantamount to X-raying houses."

Last year the Supreme Court balked at technology like that, requiring a warrant if police place a GPS tracking device on the car of a criminal suspect.

The question here, at rock bottom, is whether walking a drug-detection dog up to a house is more acceptable, involving, as it does, man's best friend.
 
The comments section at the link are great and there is a pic of poor Franky the dog. Bless his heart, he knows not what he does (do?)
 
Yeah.... that was up north of me and I heard about that. Here's what happened this morning at the US Supreme court according to

Lyle Denniston

Where do we draw the line as to what LEO can and cannot do? I think the courts are on the side of the people as far as "inside" the home. Thank God

Police in Miami did not have a warrant when they took a dog named Franky up on the porch at the home of Joelis Jardines, where Franky "alerted" to the smell of marijuana coming from under the front door. Attorney Garre (a former U.S. Solicitor General who took this case on Florida's side to defend police dogs and their handlers) no doubt went to the lectern in a mood of optimism as he asked the Court to rule once again that such a tactic is not a search at all under the Fourth Amendment.

His first words recalled the Court's prior rulings "that a dog sniff is not a search," and emphasized the point that a police dog only detects something that is illegal, in which "no one" can claim they have a privacy right against police discovery. Justice Kennedy stopped him immediately: "That just can't be a proposition that we can accept across the board." To contend that no one has a privacy claim for contraband, Kennedy said, is "a circular argument" that "just doesn't work."

Although it was not yet clear whether Garre could try an alternative argument that might hold Kennedy's vote, the Justice had said enough to put Garre's case in doubt. It did not take much longer, though, for the woe to deepen for Garre. Some of the more liberal Justices set the scene by exploring whether Garre would concede any privacy rights to shield a home from a drug-sniffing dog, but it was Justice Scalia who was adamant about it. The Court had ruled in the past, he said, that police are "not entitled to go onto the curtilage of the house, inside the gate" to see what they could not from a distance using binoculars. "Why isn't it the same thing with the dog? This dog was brought right up to the door of the house."

Garre tried to recover, making the point (which the other side would later seek to refute) that it had been conceded in this case that the officer and the dog had a legal right to be on the porch. Scalia shot back that, if that had been conceded, then the Court should not have taken this case. "It seems to me crucial," he went on, "that this officer went onto the portion of the house, as to which there is privacy, and used a means of discerning what was in the house that should not have been available."

When Florida's lawyer then tried to argue that homeowners gave "implied consent" for others – such as trick-or-treaters – to come onto their porch, and could even bring a dog with them and expect the homeowner's consent, the more liberal Justices reinforced Scalia's point by saying that such consent could not be assumed for a police officer bringing a dog with the sole purpose of detecting criminal evidence. Soon, Scalia was back into the argument flow, once again emphasizing his view that when police go onto the private space of a home, with the purpose of conducting a search, "it's not permitted."

Garre was then subjected to sustained tough questioning by liberal Justices, stressing their perception that what had happened at Jardines' home was not just a fleeting smell sweep by the dog Franky, but – as Justice Elena Kagan put it – "a lengthy and obtrusive process."

Garre tried a digression, arguing that the air conditioners at Jardines' house were pushing out the smell of marijuana from inside the house, so anyone coming up close to the house could smell it without invading any private space at all. The dog sniff at the time, he said, "is not a physical invasion." Scalia was not persuaded: "It isn't just the sniffing in the abstract. It's the sniffing at a person's front door, right?"

Justice Kagan suggested that Franky's sense of smell was not just a substitute for human smell, but was more like an enhanced technology – perhaps like an imaginary "smell-a-matic" machine that would have the capacity to detect what was privately occurring in the home. She quoted from the Court's 2001 decision in Kyllo v. United States, declaring that police use of a heat-sensing device from outside a house was a search that required a warrant. Garre was arguing, she said, that the Court should not think of Franky as "kind of a sense-enhancing law enforcement technology," but rather "just like a guy." It was clear she did not accept that. Justice Sonia Sotomayor indicated she did not accept it, either.

An Assistant to the U.S. Solicitor General, Nicole A. Saharsky, had the same difficulty as Garre with the more liberal Justices, but she also managed to bring out more of Justice Kennedy's skepticism, too. In an attempt to counter what Justice Kagan had said about the Kyllo decision, Saharsky said that what made that case different from a dog sniff case is that one who has illegal drugs has no expectation of privacy in them. Kennedy promptly remarked: "This idea that, oh, well, if there is contraband, then all the rules go out the window, that's just circular, and it won't work for me, anyway." When Saharsky tried to rebut his point, Kennedy repeated it – several times.

When Jardines' lawyer, Miami attorney Howard K. Blumberg, went to the lectern, Justice Kennedy displayed a different kind of skepticism. Blumberg had opened with the comment that it was always a search under the First Amendment whenever police learn "any details inside a home which an individual seeks to keep private." Kennedy said that was "just too sweeping and wrong" because police often seek entirely innocent information about people in ordinary conversations with them, so to put every private detail beyond potential police discovery was a proposition that he could not accept..........


........The Court is expected to decide....... by next summer.
 
Damn, that's an awesome blog, thanks for the reply. They really go into the depth of the case. They must be lawyers. :) Really interesting...
 
Hey everyone I read this forum and was a little confused about something. It says that there was a court case about police using infrared cameras on a house without a warrant. How did that case turn out. I have been told that in my area that they use helicopter and infrared to discover your grow. Has this changed from 2001 or am I reading wrong??
 
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