Federal Appeals Court Backs Traffic Stop Patdown

The Newspaper
by The Newspaper

As long as a police officer cites his own safety as the reason, he may frisk any motorist during a traffic stop and remove objects from his pockets, according to a ruling handed down Tuesday by the US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. A three-judge panel evaluated whether Officer Joe Moreno was following the law when he searched driver Ivan Rochin after he was pulled over in Albuquerque, New Mexico for driving with an expired registration.

“No one likes being pulled over for a traffic violation,” Judge Neil M. Gorsuch wrote for the court. “Still, for most drivers the experience usually proves no more than an unwelcome (if often self-induced) detour from the daily routine. But not every traffic stop is so innocuous. Sometimes what begins innocently enough turns violent, often rapidly and unexpectedly. Every year, thousands of law enforcement officers are assaulted — and many are killed — in what seem at first to be routine stops for relatively minor traffic infractions.”

According to the latest available Federal Bureau of Investigation crime statistics, six officers were killed while pursuing a ordinary traffic infractions in 2009. That represents 0.0008 percent of the 706,886 sworn officers nationwide. Four of these patrolmen were gunned down as they approached the stopped vehicle, and only one was shot while standing at the offender’s vehicle window.

In this case, Rochin happened to match the description of someone wanted for a drive-by shooting. Moreno ordered him out of the car and performed a pat-down search that turned up glass pipes containing drugs. Rochin objected that it was absurd for the officer to remove the pipe from his pants on “officer safety” grounds, but the court ruled such a search was objectively reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.

“A reasonable officer could have concluded that the long and hard objects detected in Mr. Rochin’s pockets might be used as instruments of assault, particularly given that an effort to ask Mr. Rochin about the identity of the objects had proved fruitless,” Gorsuch wrote. “To be sure, the pipes Mr. Rochin turned out to have aren’t conventionally considered weapons. But a reasonable officer isn’t credited with x-ray vision and can’t be faulted for having failed to divine the true identity of the objects.”

The court upheld Rochin’s conviction. A copy of the decision is available in a 20k PDF file at the source link below.

Source:

US v. Rochin (US Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit, 12/13/2011)

[Courtesy: Thenewspaper.com]

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  • David Hester David Hester on Dec 21, 2011

    As much as the civil libertardian (and, yes, I spelled that word as I meant it) who runs The Newspaper wishes that this ruling was some sort of example of judicial overreach, it's really nothing more than an extension of the settled law under Terry vs. Ohio. Reading the specific facts of the case and the well reasoned majority opinion show that the defendant (or, more specifically, defense counsel) wasted everybody's time.

    • Pch101 Pch101 on Dec 21, 2011
      it’s really nothing more than an extension of the settled law under Terry vs. Ohio The Newspaper sort of missed the point of this one. The defendant was trying to get the crack pipe tossed on Fourth Amendment grounds; had that been successful, that would have then forced the court to toss out the subsequent drug arrest, search of the car and weapons charge. Terry allows a patdown for weapons. The question was whether a crack pipe bears enough of a resemblance to a weapon to justify removing it from clothes. Apparently, it does. Moral of the story: Crackheads should put their pipes in the trunks of their cars. Be a smart junkie, and don't carry the bad stuff on you or leave it out in plain sight while you're driving. (While you're at it, keeping the tags current on your car isn't such a bad idea, either.)
  • BlackDynamiteOnline BlackDynamiteOnline on Dec 21, 2011

    I wish the TSAa at the airport could only search you under such circumstances, instead of government imposed fear-mongering BD

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