Nov. 04, 2003 - Chicago Tribune
Justices Examine Police Liability for Defective Search Warrant
By Jan Crawford Greenburg
WASHINGTON - (KRT) - Tackling a case that raises questions
about how police carry out search warrants, several Supreme Court
justices suggested Tuesday that an officer who serves a bad warrant
could be personally liable for damages.
In a wide-ranging argument that focused on homeowners' rights
and police obligations, the justices appeared troubled by arguments
that officers could conduct searches based on a defective warrant.
Several suggested they thought allowing such searches would undermine
the Constitution's Fourth Amendment, which says warrants must
specifically describe the items police are seeking and the places
they intend to search.
The key legal question is whether an officer who relies on
a defective warrant when conducting a search can be liable to
the homeowners for damages. In puzzling over that problem, the
justices touched on an array of issues as they sought to clarify
how police go about executing warrants to search a person's home.
The case came about in 1997, when Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms agent Jeff Groh unknowingly relied on a defective
warrant during a search for weapons in the Montana home of Joseph
and Julia Ramirez. Although he had prepared the request for the
warrant, Groh failed to notice that the document did not list
the weapons sought. Instead, it merely described the Ramirez
home. No weapons were found.
"No one reading this warrant could possibly figure out
what this house was being searched for," Justice David Souter
told Groh's lawyer, Richard Cordray. "The purpose of the
Fourth Amendment was to make sure the officers at the scene knew
how far they could go."
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg added, "This looks like what
the Fourth Amendment was getting at."
The Fourth Amendment says search warrants should "particularly"
describe the items to be searched and the persons or items that
officers are seeking.
The Ramirez family sued Groh and other agents after the search,
and a California-based federal appeals court ruled that the family
could proceed with its litigation against Groh. The appeals court
rejected Groh's argument that he was immune from being sued.
The agent had asserted he was immune because he was acting
in good faith in his capacity as a law enforcement officer, and
because the law was unclear.
Now the justices must decide whether the warrant violated
the Fourth Amendment and, if so, whether Groh could claim he
nonetheless was immune. If they agree with the Ramirez family,
the family will be allowed to pursue its lawsuit against Groh
in a lower court.
Several justices, including conservatives Sandra Day O'Connor
and Anthony Kennedy, appeared deeply troubled by arguments by
Cordray and a lawyer for the Bush administration that the warrant
was constitutional, even though it failed to list the items sought
or describe where police could look for them.
O'Connor asked Cordray why the court would not apply the constitutional
provision that warrants be specific. "Why couldn't the agent
be responsible for checking the warrant?" she asked.
Cordray said Groh, who had applied for the warrant and properly
listed the details on the supporting affidavit, had acted in
good faith. He also said Groh was immune from a lawsuit because
he had not departed from clearly established law on the issue
at the time.
But the Ramirez family's lawyer, Vince Kozakiewicz, said the
law was clear and that Groh should have known the warrant was
illegal.
Other justices questioned the assertions by Cordray and the
administration that the defective warrant was legal. Several
were incredulous when Justice Department lawyer Austin Schlick
insisted that Groh could have conducted the search even if he
realized the warrant was defective.
"You're saying this warrant is sufficient?" asked
Kennedy.
As Schlick answered yes, Justice Stephen Breyer put his hands
over his face and groaned.
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