‘We
the Prisoners’: The Demise of the Fourth Amendment
By John W.
Whitehead
“Our carceral state banishes American citizens
to a gray wasteland far beyond the promises and
protections the government grants its other
citizens… When the doors finally close and one
finds oneself facing
banishment to the carceral state—the years,
the walls, the rules, the guards, the
inmates—reactions vary. Some experience an
intense sickening feeling. Others, a strong
desire to sleep. Visions of suicide. A deep
shame. A rage directed toward guards and other
inmates. Utter disbelief. The incarcerated
attempt to hold on to family and old social ties
through phone calls and visitations. At first,
friends and family do their best to keep up. But
phone calls to prison are expensive, and many
prisons are located far from one’s hometown… As
the visits and phone calls diminish, the
incarcerated begins to adjust to the fact that
he or she is, indeed, a prisoner. New social
ties are cultivated. New rules must be
understood.”—Ta-Nehisi Coates, The
Atlantic
In a
carceral state—a.k.a. a prison state or a police
state—there is no Fourth Amendment to protect you
from the overreaches, abuses, searches and probing
eyes of government overlords.
In a
carceral state, there is no difference between the
treatment meted out to a law-abiding citizen and a
convicted felon: both are equally suspect and
treated as criminals, without any of the special
rights and privileges reserved for the governing
elite.
In a
carceral state, there are only two kinds of people:
the prisoners and the prison guards.
With every
new law enacted by federal and state legislatures,
every new ruling handed down by government courts,
and every new military weapon, invasive tactic and
egregious protocol employed by government agents,
“we the people”—the prisoners of the American police
state—are being pushed that much further into a
corner, our backs against the prison wall.
This
concept of a carceral state in which we possess no
rights except for that which the government grants
on an as-needed basis is the only way I can begin to
comprehend, let alone articulate, the irrational,
surreal, topsy-turvy, through-the-looking-glass
state of affairs that is being imposed upon us in
America today.
As I point
out in my book
Battlefield America: The
War on the American
People, we who pretend we are free are
no different from those who spend their lives behind
bars.
Indeed, we
are experiencing much the same phenomenon that
journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates ascribes to those who
are banished to a “gray
wasteland far beyond the promises and protections
the government grants its other citizens” : a
sickening feeling, a desire to sleep, hopelessness,
shame, rage, disbelief, clinginess to the past and
that which is familiar, and then eventually
resignation and acceptance of our new “normal.”
All that we
are experiencing—the sense of dread at what is
coming down the pike, the desperation, the apathy
about government corruption, the deeply divided
partisanship, the carnivalesque political
spectacles, the public displays of violence, the
nostalgia for the past—are part of the dying refrain
of an America that is fading fast.
No longer
must the government obey the law.
Likewise,
“we the people” are no longer shielded by the rule
of law.
While the
First Amendment—which gives us a voice—is being
muzzled, the Fourth Amendment—which protects us from
being bullied, badgered, beaten, broken and spied on
by government agents—is being disemboweled.
For
instance, in a recent
5-3 ruling in Utah v. Strieff,
the U.S. Supreme Court opened the door for police to
stop, arrest and search citizens without reasonable
suspicion or probable cause, effectively giving
police a green light to embark on a fishing
expedition of one’s person and property, rendering
Americans completely vulnerable to the whims of any
cop on the beat.
In a
blistering dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor blasted
the court for holding “that the
discovery of a warrant for an unpaid parking ticket
will forgive a police officer’s violation of your
Fourth Amendment rights.” Sotomayor
continued:
This
Court has allowed an officer to stop you for
whatever reason he wants—so long as he can point
to a pretextual justification after the fact.
That justification must provide specific reasons
why the officer suspected you were breaking the
law, but it may factor in your ethnicity, where
you live, what you were wearing, and how you
behaved.
The officer does not even need to know which law
you might have broken so long as he can
later point to any possible infraction—even one
that is minor, unrelated, or ambiguous.
The indignity of the stop is not
limited to an officer telling you that you look
like a criminal. The
officer may next ask for your “consent” to
inspect your bag or purse without telling you
that you can decline. Regardless of your answer,
he may order you to stand “helpless, perhaps
facing a wall with [your] hands raised.” If the
officer thinks you might be dangerous, he may
then “frisk” you for weapons. This involves more
than just a pat down. As onlookers pass by, the
officer may “‘feel with sensitive fingers every
portion of [your] body. A thorough search [may]
be made of [your] arms and armpits, waistline
and back, the groin and area about the
testicles, and entire surface of the legs down
to the feet.’”
If you
still can’t read the writing on the wall, Sotomayor
breaks it down further: “This case allows the police
to stop you on the street, demand your
identification, and check it for outstanding traffic
warrants—even
if you are doing nothing wrong… So long as the
target is one of the many millions of people in this
country with an outstanding arrest warrant, anything
the officer finds in a search is fair game for use
in a criminal prosecution. The officer’s incentive
to violate the Constitution thus increases...”
Just
consider some of the many other ways in which the
Fourth Amendment—which ensures that the government
can’t harass you, let alone even investigate you,
without probable cause—has been weakened and
undermined by the courts, the legislatures and
various government agencies and operatives.
Breath
tests, blood draws:
Americans have no protection against mandatory
breathalyzer tests at a police checkpoint, although
mandatory blood draws violate the Fourth Amendment (Birchfield
v. North Dakota).
Ignorance
of the law
is defensible
if you
work for the
government: Police officers who
violate the law can be granted qualified immunity if
they claim ignorance of the law (Heien
v. North Carolina). That rationale was
also applied to police who clearly used excessive
force when they repeatedly tasered a pregnant woman
during a routine traffic stop and were granted
immunity from prosecution (Brooks v.
City of Seattle).
High-speed
car chases: Police
officers can use lethal force in car chases without
fear of lawsuits (Plumhoff v. Rickard).
No-knock
raids: Police can perform a
“no-knock” as long as they have a reasonable
suspicion that knocking and announcing their
presence, under the particular circumstances, would
be dangerous or futile or give occupants a chance to
destroy evidence of a crime (Richards
v. Wisconsin). Legal ownership of a firearm is
also enough to justify a no-knock raid by police (Quinn
v. Texas).
Warrantless
searches by
police: Police can carry out
warrantless searches on our homes based on a
“reasonable” concern by police that a suspect (or
occupant) might be attempting to destroy evidence,
fleeing or hurt, even if it’s the wrong house (Kentucky
v. King). Police can also, without a
warrant, search anyone who has been lawfully
arrested (United States v.
Robinson) as well as their property post-arrest
(Colorado v. Bertine) and their
vehicle (New York v. Belton),
search a car they suspect might contain evidence of
a crime (Chambers v. Maroney), and
search a home when the arrest is made on its
premises (Maryland v. Buie).
Forced
DNA extractions:
Police can forcibly take your DNA, whether or not
you’ve been convicted of a crime. Innocent or not,
your DNA will then be stored in the national FBI
database (Maryland v. King).
Strip
searches: Police can subject
Americans to virtual strip searches, no matter the
“offense” (Florence v. Board
of Chosen Freeholders of
the County of
Burlington). This “license to probe” is now
being extended to roadside stops, as police officers
throughout the country have begun performing
roadside strip searches—some involving anal and
vaginal probes—without any evidence of wrongdoing
and without a warrant.
Seizures:
For all intents and purposes, you’re “seized” within
the meaning of the Fourth Amendment from the moment
an officer stops you (Brendlin v.
California).
Search
warrants on
a leash: Police
have free reign to use drug-sniffing dogs as “search
warrants on leashes,” justifying any and all police
searches of vehicles stopped on the roadside (Florida
v. Harris), but the use of a K-9 unit after
a reasonable amount of time has passed during a stop
does violate the Fourth Amendment (Rodriguez
v. United States).
Police
and DUI
Checkpoints: Police can conduct sobriety
and “information-seeking” checkpoints (Illinois
v. Lidster and Mich. Dep't of
State Police v. Sitz).
Interrogating
public transit
passengers: Police officers are
free to board a bus, question passengers, and ask
for consent to search without notifying them of
their right to refuse (U.S v. Drayton).
Warrantless
arrests for
minor criminal
offenses: Police can arrest you for
minor criminal offenses, such as a misdemeanor
seatbelt violation, punishable only by a fine (Atwater
v. City of Lago Vista).
Stop
and identify:
Refusing to answer when a policeman asks “What’s
your name?” can rightfully be considered a crime. No
longer do Americans, even those not charged with any
crime, have the right to remain altogether silent
when stopped and questioned by a police officer (Hiibel
v. Sixth Judicial District
Court of the State
of Nevada).
Traffic
stops: As long as police have
reasonable cause to believe that a traffic violation
occurred, they may stop any vehicle (Whren
v. U.S.). If probable cause justifies a
vehicle search, then every part of the vehicle can
be searched (U.S. v. Ross). A vehicle can
be stopped even if the driver has not committed a
traffic offense (U.S. v. Cortez).
Anonymous
tips, careful driving,
rigid posture and
acne: Police officers can stop cars
based only on “anonymous” tips (Navarette
v. California). Police can also pull you
over if you are driving too carefully, with a rigid
posture, taking a scenic route, and have acne (U.S.
v. Westhoven).
What many
Americans fail to understand is the devastating
amount of damage that can be done to one’s freedoms
long before a case ever makes its way to court by
government agents who are violating the Fourth
Amendment at every turn. This is how freedoms, long
undermined, can give way to tyranny through constant
erosion and become part of the fabric of the police
state through constant use.
Phone and
email surveillance, databases for dissidents, threat
assessments, terror watch lists, militarized police,
SWAT team raids, security checkpoints, lockdowns,
roadside strip searches: there was a time when any
one of these encroachments on our Fourth Amendment
rights would have roused the public to outrage.
Today, such violations are shrugged off
matter-of-factly by Americans who have been
assiduously groomed to accept the intrusions of the
police state into their private lives.
So when you
hear about the
FBI hacking into Americans’ computers without a
warrant with the blessing of the courts, or
states assembling and
making public terror watch lists containing the
names of those who are merely deemed suspicious, or
the
police knocking on the doors of activists in advance
of political gatherings to ascertain their plans
for future protests, or administrative government
agencies (such as the FDA, Small Business
Administration, Smithsonian, Social Security,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
U.S. Mint, and Department of Education)
spending millions on guns and ammunition, don’t
just matter-of-factly file it away in that part of
your brain reserved for things you may not like but
over which you have no control.
It’s true
that there may be little the average person can do
to push back against the police state on a national
level, but there remains some hope at the local
level as long as we retain a speck of our
independence and individuality—as long as we can
resist the defeatist sense of double-consciousness
(a phrase coined by W. E. B. Du Bois in which we
view ourselves as inferior through the prism of our
oppressors)—as long as we continue to cry out for
justice for ourselves and those around us—as long as
we refuse to be shackled and made prisoners—and as
long as we continue to recognize that the only way
the police state can truly acquire and retain power
is if we relinquish it through our negligence,
complacence and ignorance.
Unfortunately, we have been utterly brainwashed into
believing the government’s propaganda and lies.
Americans actually celebrate with perfect sincerity
the anniversary of our independence from Great
Britain without ever owning up to the fact that we
are as oppressed now—more so, perhaps, thanks to
advances in technology—than we ever were when
Redcoats stormed through doorways and subjected
colonists to the vagaries of a police state.
You see, by
gradually whittling away at our freedoms—free
speech, assembly, due process, privacy, etc.—the
government has, in effect, liberated itself from its
contractual agreement to respect our constitutional
rights while resetting the calendar back to a time
when we had no Bill of Rights to protect us from the
long arm of the government.
Aided and
abetted by the legislatures, the courts and
Corporate America, the government has been busily
rewriting the contract (a.k.a. the Constitution)
that establishes the citizenry as the masters and
agents of the government as the servants. We are now
only as good as we are useful, and our usefulness is
calculated on an economic scale by how much we are
worth—in terms of profit and resale value—to our
“owners.”
Under the
new terms of this one-sided agreement, the
government and its many operatives have all the
privileges and rights and “we the prisoners” have
none.
As
Sotomayor concluded in her ringing dissent in
Utah v. Strieff:
By
legitimizing the conduct that produces this
double consciousness, this case tells everyone,
white and black, guilty and innocent, that an
officer can verify your legal status at any
time. It says that your body is subject to
invasion while courts excuse the violation of
your rights. It implies that
you are not a citizen of a democracy but the
subject of a carceral state, just waiting to be
cataloged. We must not pretend that the
countless people who are routinely targeted by
police are “isolated.” They are the canaries in
the coal mine whose deaths, civil and literal,
warn us that no one can breathe in this
atmosphere. They are the ones who recognize that
unlawful police stops corrode all our civil
liberties and threaten all our lives. Until
their voices matter too, our justice system will
continue to be anything but.
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