by Marc Saggese. They go by a number of different names: DUI checkpoints, administrative roadblocks, mobile checkpoints, or as they are referred to by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, sobriety checkpoints. No matter the title, they all have the same effect: to allow the police to stop your vehicle for no articulable reason, ask ... MORE
Showing posts with label search and seizure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label search and seizure. Show all posts
'Tis The Season For Government Roadblocks In California
Warrantless searches to help spend $93 million grant. What to do if stopped by a cop. 'Tis the season for DUI checkpoints and the California Highway Patrol is reminding you to think twice while you're out late with your friends this holiday season. Between December and January, more than 200 law enforcement agencies are armed ... MORE
Labels:
checkpoints,
DUI,
government,
police state,
search and seizure,
spending,
warrantless search
Congress OKs Codification Of Warrantless Surveillance
Fourth Amendment fast becoming toothless. Congress last week quietly passed a bill to reauthorize funding for intelligence agencies, over objections that it gives the government "virtually unlimited access to the communications of every American", without warrant, and allows for indefinite storage of some intercepted material, including ... MORE
Appeals Court Rips California DNA-Collection Law
by William Dotinga. An arrest is not a conviction. For the second time in three years, a state appeals court in San Francisco found that a voter-approved mandate authorizing police to collect DNA from arrestees is unconstitutional. The 3-0 ruling by a panel of the First Appellate District stems from the arson conviction of Mark Buza, whom a jury ... MORE
Another Federal Grant To Fund Warrantless Searches
Cops get seed money to troll for violators. Taxpayers fund their own harassment. The California Highway Patrol (CHP) has received a federal “Reducing
Impaired Driving” grant, which will fund 150 sobriety checkpoints, 75
DUI task force operations, proactive DUI enforcement patrols through
September 30, 2015, and at least 100 safety ... MORE
Disapproving Judge Argues Against Warrantless Searches
UK Gun Owners Subject To Warrantless Home Searches
Previews of coming attractions? Registered gun owners in the United Kingdom are now subject to unannounced visits to their homes under new guidance that allows police to inspect firearms storage without a warrant. The new policy from the British Home Office went into effect Oct. 15, permitting police and constabularies to conduct surprise ... MORE
Labels:
government,
gun control,
gun rights,
NRA,
search and seizure,
tyranny,
UK,
warrantless search
Andrew Napolitano: The Government And Freedom
Don't trust your freedom to the government. Earlier this week, FBI Director James Comey gave an interview to "60 Minutes" during which he revealed a flawed understanding of personal freedom. He rightly distinguished what FBI agents do in their investigations of federal crimes from what the NSA does in its intelligence gathering, when the ... MORE
NSA's Parallel Reconstruction Trumps Fourth Amendment
by Andrew Napolitano. While the political commentators in the nation's capital are wrapped up in the debate over what to do about ISIS, and as one third of the Senate and nearly all members of the House campaign for re-election, the president's spies continue to capture massive amounts of personal information about hundreds of ... MORE
Mississippi Can Demand Bloodletting At DUI Checkpoints
by Steve Wilson. Your public servants at work. Vampire movies, books and TV series are all of the rage these days. Guess the Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol wanted to get in on the act. Over the long Labor Day weekend, the patrol ran a no-refusal DUI
checkpoint in Oxford, home of the University of Mississippi. In a
no-refusal checkpoint, a ... MORE
Cop Pulls Car Over for Nonexistent Traffic Violation, Then Tows It To Search For Evidence Of Nonexistent Crime
by Jacob Sullum. Drug war incentives strike Vermont. Last March, according to a
lawsuit filed this month by the ACLU of Vermont, a state
trooper pulled Gregory Zullo over for a nonexistent traffic
infraction, then towed his car away so it could be searched for
evidence of a nonexistent crime. Trooper Lewis Hatch stopped Zullo, a 21-year-old resident ... MORE
Jerry Davich: Do Sobriety Checks Trample On Our Rights?
“Those who sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither.” — Ben Franklin. Are police-conducted sobriety checkpoints a necessary law enforcement tool to remove drunken drivers from our roads? Or are they an unreasonable search of our property and an unconstitutional invasion of our rights and privacy? Hammond Police Department Lt. ... MORE
John W. Whitehead: The Death of Freedom in Our Schools
The final nail in the coffin. Young Alex Stone didn’t even make it past the first week of school before he became a victim of the police state. Directed by his teacher to do a creative writing assignment involving a series of fictional Facebook statuses, the 16-year-old wrote, “I killed my neighbor's pet dinosaur. I bought the gun to take care ... MORE
Never Consent To A Warrantless Search
from the Beaufort Observer. Most of our regular readers know that police must have probable cause to search and seize evidence. They cannot search just because they want to and then use what they find to charge a person for a crime. Or so that is the way it is supposed to be. But as we have reported often, there are some crooked cops among ... MORE
What Americans Need to Know About the History of Spying
Spying has always been used to crush dissent. Americans are told that we live in a “post-9/11 reality” that requires mass surveillance. But the NSA was already conducting mass surveillance prior to 9/11 … including surveillance on the 9/11 hijackers. And top security experts – including the highest-level government officials and the ... MORE
Labels:
dissent,
government,
NSA,
politics,
power,
search and seizure,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
Get A Warrant!: John Roberts Gives The Cops A Benchslap
by Damon Root. High Court decides police must obey the Fourth Amendment. The
Fourth Amendment protects our "persons, houses, papers, and
effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures." Today, in the
case of
Riley v. California, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
unanimously that this constitutional protection extends to ... MORE
Supreme Court Marches in Lockstep with the Police State
by John W. Whitehead. The U.S. Supreme Court was intended to be an institution established to
intervene and protect the people against the government and its agents
when they overstep their bounds. Yet as I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State,
Americans can no longer rely on the courts to ... MORE
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