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    Decided by a nose? Court ponders drug dog's sniff

    MIAMI (AP) — Franky the drug dog's super-sensitive nose is at the heart of a question being put to the U.S. Supreme Court: Does a police K-9's sniff outside a house give officers the right to get a search warrant for illegal drugs, or is the sniff itself an unconstitutional search?

    Florida's highest state court said Franky's ability to detect marijuana growing inside a Miami-area house from outside a closed front door crossed the constitutional line. State Attorney General Pam Bondi, an elected Republican, wants the nation's justices to reverse that ruling.

    The Supreme Court could decide this month whether to take the case, the latest in a long line of disputes about whether the use of dogs to find drugs, explosives and other illegal or dangerous substances violates the Fourth Amendment protection against illegal search and seizure.

    Many court watchers expect the justices will take up the Florida case.

    "The Florida Supreme Court adopted a very broad reading of the Fourth Amendment that is different from that applied by other courts. It's an interpretation that a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court will question," said Tom Goldstein, who publishes the widely read SCOTUSblog website and also teaches at the Harvard and Stanford law schools.

    The case, Florida v. Jardines, is being closely monitored by law enforcement agencies nationwide, which depend on dogs for a wide range of law enforcement duties.

    "Dogs can be a police officer's best friend because they detect everything from marijuana or meth labs to explosives," said Kendall Coffey, a former U.S. attorney in Miami now in private practice. "They are an essential tool for law enforcement."

    The 8-year-old Franky retired in June after a seven-year career as a K-9 dog with the Miami-Dade Police Department. He's responsible for the seizure of more than 2.5 tons of marijuana, 80 pounds of cocaine and $4.9 million in drug-contaminated money. And because he's an amiable chocolate Labrador, he was used extensively in airports, sports arenas and other places where people congregate.

    "He's a friendly, happy dog," said his former handler, Detective Douglas Bartelt, who kept Franky after he retired. "People don't have fear because of his appearance."

    The U.S. Supreme Court has OK'd drug dog sniffs in several other major cases. Two of those involved dogs that detected drugs during routine traffic stops. In another, a dog hit on drugs in airport luggage. A fourth involved a drug-laden package in transit.

    The difference in the Florida case is that it involved a private residence. The high court has repeatedly emphasized that a home is entitled to greater privacy than cars on the road or a suitcase in an airport. In another major ruling, the justices decided in 2001 that police could not use thermal imaging technology to detect heat from marijuana grow operations from outside a home because the equipment could also detect lawful activity.

    "We have said that the Fourth Amendment draws a firm line at the entrance to the house," the court ruled in that case, known as Kyllo v. United States. The justices added that the thermal devices could detect such intimate details as "at what hour each night the lady of the house takes her daily sauna and bath."

    It's well-settled that law enforcement officials can walk up to a home and knock on the front door, in hopes that someone will open up and talk to them. But if a person inside refuses the "knock and talk" effort, the officers must get a search warrant — and for that they need evidence of a crime.

    On the morning of Dec. 5, 2006, Miami-Dade police detectives and U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents set up surveillance outside a house south of the city after getting an anonymous tip that it might contain a marijuana grow operation. Bartelt arrived with Franky and the two went up to the house, where Franky quickly detected the odor of pot at the base of the front door and sat down as he was trained to do.

    That sniff was used to get a search warrant from a judge. The house was searched and its lone occupant, Joelis Jardines, was arrested trying to escape out the back door. Officers pulled 179 live marijuana plants from the house, with an estimated street value of more than $700,000.

    Jardines, now 39, was charged with marijuana trafficking and grand theft for stealing electricity needed to run the highly sophisticated operation. He pleaded not guilty and his attorney challenged the search, claiming Franky's sniff outside the front door was an unconstitutional law enforcement intrusion into the home.

    The trial judge agreed and threw out the evidence seized in the search, but that was reversed by an intermediate appeals court. In April a divided Florida Supreme Court sided with the original judge.

    "There is simply nothing to prevent agents from applying the procedure in an arbitrary or discriminatory manner, or based on whim and fancy, at the home of any citizen," the Florida court majority concluded.

    In its petition to the U.S. Supreme Court, state lawyers argue that the Florida Supreme Court's decision conflicts with numerous previous rulings that a dog sniff is not a search.

    "A dog sniff of a house reveals only that the house contains drugs, not any other private information about the house or the persons in it," wrote Carolyn Snurkowski, Florida associate deputy attorney general. "A person has no reasonable expectation of privacy in illegal drugs."

    She added that there's no comparison between thermal imaging and a dog's nose, as the Florida court suggested.

    "A dog is a dog, not the rapidly advancing technology" that was a key in the thermal imaging ruling, Snurkowski wrote. "Chocolate Labrador retrievers are not sophisticated systems. Rather, they are common household pets that possess a naturally strong sense of smell."

    Jardines' appellate lawyer, Assistant Public Defender Howard K. Blumberg, countered that the U.S. Supreme Court should let the Florida ruling stand because it's consistent with the idea that there's a firm line at the door to a private home.

    "The Florida Supreme Court did not announce any type of new test for determining whether the conduct of law enforcement officers constitutes a search," he wrote. "The Florida Supreme Court properly emphasized the increased level of intrusiveness and the significant level of embarrassment suffered by the owner of the home in this case."

    The criminal case against Jardines is on hold until the question involving Franky's nose is settled. Meanwhile, Jardines is out on bail following a 2010 arrest for alleged armed robbery and aggravated assault. He pleaded not guilty in that one, as well, and trial is set for Feb. 21.

    _____

    Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://Twitter.com/Miamicurt

     
    • rabidreader  •  4 mths ago
      Geez people. Our civil liberties depend on people smarter than JennyC. We have an expectation of privacy in our home---due to scenarios like leslie stated. CARS are MOBILE, not personal domains with the same level of privacy expectations. COPS need probable cause to search a car---but create it pretty well. Motor homes are the same as cars---no privacy expectations. Homes can be warrentless searched only to prevent life loss/injury or serious property damage---and a dog walking around your yard sniffing on your private property is UNCONSTITUTIONAL! Far right cops want more and more rights taken away in the name of safety (theirs more than yours) and temperance is not normally in their nature. Thanks god for courts and people who actually went to school and know their rights. Want to tick off a cop? State your rights and see how quick they view you as an enemy. You could be Einstein and they will instantly go up on guard---they are the law, in their eyes, and your rights don't supercede their power. Frightening for all who want to hand over freedom to keep little pot grower down the street in jail, who is the least of our jail inhabitants.
      By the way---im missouri law of 2006, canine sniffs of exterior containers or vehicles were not considered searches under the fourth amendment. Courts disagree under other circumstances, like roadblocks, and the day that the police can walk randomly and search out drug smells from the road or yard we are no longer America, but any socialist nation where governement rules.
      More people need law classes, and more people need to value freedom over safety! I am so ashamed we are turning into a selfish nation that only values our own rights and not those of all.
      • Cartigan 4 mths ago
        "Homes can be warrentless searched only to prevent life loss/injury or serious property damage---and a dog walking around your yard sniffing on your private property is UNCONSTITUTIONAL!"

        A dog being walked up DIRECTLY to your FRONT DOOR based on a TIP FROM A NEIGHBOR THAT YOU ARE GROWING DRUG and then detecting drugs FROM OUTSIDE THE HOME is perfectly legitimate grounds to GET A SEARCH WARRANT. The SEARCH WARRANT was then used to search the home. You people have been brain washed by your own stupidity and the American right-wing.
      • Cartigan 4 mths ago
        Moreover, you people couldn't identify a socialist country if it bit you in the #$%$ Enjoy America as it is - you can't possibly leave. Every other country is "socialist," an ACTUAL communist country, an Islamic theocracy, or a lawless hellhole (that is also probably an Islamic theocracy)
      • Hubert 4 mths ago
        I bet you #$%$ if you don't get layed just the way you want too. If you don't like living here MOVE you are free to do that. Go get the H--- out of here!!
    • Caddman  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      Just legalize all drugs and TAX them. That will stop the drug cartels because drug prices will crash. The government is, in effect, supporting these cartels. Those that want to do drugs will find a way regardless of what the law is.
      • Doug 4 mths ago
        If you legalize drugs, then who will be best poised to immediately enter and corner the market? Who has the facilities and expertise to mass-produce and distribute the product starting tomorrow?

        Sure, they'd charge less to the consumer, but they'd make even more profit because they wouldnt be subject to seizures, wouldnt have to smuggle or sell under-the-table.

        Plus, how would "legitimate" growers compete with criminal organizations, who can afford below-legal labor rates overseas and wouldnt shy from attacking competition? Also, how effectively do you really think you can tax a criminal? They're willing to smuggle and kill, but they'd never evade a tax?

        The tax would just get passed along to the consumer, at any rate. And if you tax too much then, well, people will just start buying illegally under-the-table again...

        Its worth noting that most major American liquor corporations (eg Jack Daniels, Jim Beam) flourished after being moonshining operations during Prohibition. If you legalize weed, in 20 or 30 years you'll probably just end up with a Zetas Marijuana Corporation and a Sinaloa Cannabis Co. worth $500 billion a year each, doing everything you probably hated Philip Morris for doing in the 50s and 60s.
      • nice... 4 mths ago
        Doug, what about prohibition? Is that what happened to the alcohol industry? How much bootleg liquor do you drink? Sure maybe some homemade wine, but I sure know the store has much better wine than my dad makes. And I don't have to worry about Corona slipping PCP in my weed.
    • smarts  •  Pekin, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      The house and my property I own not the Government. What is the recourse for the Citizen that has their house searched and nothing is found? The answer is nothing. This is a recipe for abuse of power.
      • TIM 4 mths ago
        dont pay your taxes and see who realy owns it!
      • Oliver Clothesoff 4 mths ago
        Tim, your a turd..
      • VA 4 mths ago
        uh actually your bank probably owns your house. you just live there (for now until they take it)
    • Ah_Geez  •  4 mths ago
      Those Who Sacrifice Liberty For Security Deserve Neither. - Ben Franklin
      • AngryoungRedhead 4 mths ago
        What are you saying? That some one from the neighborhood should have gone in and shot the loser drug-dealer to death?

        Hmmm, sounds like a good idea!
      • Oliver Clothesoff 4 mths ago
        Angry Young Idiot. You better pay more attention in History class.... #$%$.
    • JJMON  •  Sterlington, Louisiana  •  4 mths ago
      Every day you hear of the misuse of police powers and prosecutorial misconduct but once again here they are saying "Trust Us" we serve and protect. To law enforcement your constitutional rights are just an annoying side note to their getting to play cowboys and badguys. We are no longer citizens to these people we are perps, unsubs, scumbags or whatever the flavor of the month cop show on TV is calling us. If we don't get a control on the current Para-Military direction all police (and we have about thirteen different agencies from park rangers to levy patrols all armed and stupit) in this country are taking you can rest assured we will have a cop on every corner with a sub-machine gun getting his graft for letting you have the right to cross HIS street and his dog won't be the cuddly variety. WHEN THEY RE-FIRE THE OVENS IN AUSCHWITZ ,TREBLINKA, AND PROBABLY DETROIT YOU CAN BET A GUY WITH A BADGE WILL GLADLY BE HOLDING THE MATCH!
      WELCOME TO AMERICA, THE NEW THIRD WORLD!
      • phoenix 4 mths ago
        my friend told me the other day i had anger issues because i foresee a police state one day. i told him it was righteous fury, and i was glad to speak out now before it's too late :/
      • Cartigan 4 mths ago
        That's not anger issues. That's being a paranoid Fox watcher - the only kind of person who would not see a police state in the Patriot Act but would see one in cops wanting to get SEARCH WARRANT to search a home.
      • nice... 4 mths ago
        Tin foil and Ross for you! This case ain't gonna happen. They have to test it. Court will shoot it down.
    • Just Say Now  •  Freedom, California  •  4 mths ago
      Fight back, Beat drug prohibition the old fashioned way. With jury nullification. A jurist can throw away a million dollar drug investigation with one refusal to convict. Do that enough times and the drug war will end.
    • BIGBLUENATION  •  4 mths ago
      Legalize the weed!!!!!!!!!!
    • AuditU  •  Lake Geneva, Wisconsin  •  4 mths ago
      I pulled up to a roadblock where dogs were present. I was driving my old work truck. (I don't like to leave my newer car in the large employee parking lot) The dog got a hit on my truck after they ran it around my vehicle 4 times. They then let the dog in the truck and it sniffed around, only when the officer put his hand on my glovebox did the dog react. Guess what no drugs! I've never had drugs in my vehicle and had owned it for 7 years so if the previous owner had drugs in it the smell would of been gone. The dogs will do what the handler wants them to do if needed. They are not 100% reliable.
    • Andrea P  •  4 mths ago
      Say I move into a house that was once occupied by drug users(rental, bought, whatever). The carpet has never been replaced, the walls never washed, etc. If a cop is with his dog and the dog detects whatever it is that the prior owners did in the house, now the cop has the right to come in with a warrent & destroy my home searching for a whiff something that I have no part of?
    • Rodney  •  Lansing, Michigan  •  4 mths ago
      if this stuff is worth so much, why not make it legal, tax it, and get us out of debt! seems to me no one would need to pay taxes if it were legal!
    • John  •  4 mths ago
      Another waste of taxpayer money, the War on Drugs, the wasted law enforcement, the wasted resources of dog training, the wasted judicial expense. When will people wake up. Law enforcement lost the war a long time ago when they first declared the war along with policiticians and elected #$%$ No law nor bullet will cure a social disease. Plain and simple. Legalize drugs, tax it, and use the tax dollars to pay for treatment for those wanting to break the habit. To each his own. Everyman his own judge, the right to privacy, the right to life, and the right to liberty. Intertwined in the constitutional but everybody wants to dictate to another. Usually from the right wingers.
    • Willie Austin  •  Houston, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Just as Clint Eastwood said... "Get off my lawn!"
    • Marque  •  Hampton, Virginia  •  4 mths ago
      Having been in the military and knowing several dog handlers in the military and civilian world I can tell you that if the police really want to search you they will call on the dog to make a "false positive reaction" . This in turn allows them to actually conduct a search. So yes I do belive that the use of dogs has it's place but not in securing the right to search omeone.
    • SmokedFish  •  4 mths ago
      What is to prevent the cops from rubbing some weed on the door then bringing in the dog?
    • Forward thinking  •  4 mths ago
      Silly me, I think my home and my privace begin at my property line, not my front door.
    • pj  •  4 mths ago
      So the Florida Attorney General wants to make it easier for cops to bust you IN YUR OWN HOME! I thought republicans were for SMALLER government?
    • MPA2000  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  4 mths ago
      The dogs are routinely used to circumvent the constitution. I refused to let an officer look in my car, so he sent the dogs in because he "suspected" drugs. That is their way around the rule of law. Glad to have so many "Law" abiding police in the world.
    • seethepositive  •  4 mths ago
      the courts' own ruling says the home is entitled to greater privacy.
    • Christa  •  Fayetteville, North Carolina  •  4 mths ago
      let me see if i got this straight: i now live in a country where i, a US citizen, can be indefinitely detained, sent to another country & tortured, or even assasinated -- all without so much as a trial...but my government still worries itself with whether a dog sniff at my front door is intrusive. we are living in very strange times, indeed!
    • iMrightURaMoron  •  4 mths ago
      I'll bet money that they side with the Florida attorney general on this one. The Fourth Amendment is being whittled away to nothing.
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