CdwJava
Moderator
Ultimately, until there is case law to the contrary in CA, making a stop with articulable, reasonable suspicion based in whole or in part upon the running of a license plate that matches the ID of a driver with a suspended license will be effectively lawful. Since "reasonable suspicion" has no bright line rule, and its evaluation is based upon all of the facts and open to the subjective interpretation of the court, it will continue to be valid if the court says it is valid.
You and I are free to decide whether or not we feel comfortable with making such stops. Like you, I do not. However, if I had to, I would. Likewise, if I see a vehicle moving that is registered to a subject I know to have a warrant, I am going to be stopping that vehicle, too, and under the same theory of reasonable suspicion. There are oodles of case law decisions on registered owners having warrants and that being sufficient to justify a stop, so the same theory applies. And, since CA is required since the old Proposition 8 (1982) to hold to the federal standard for evidence, such a stop will be valid even if in violation of the state Constitution ... again, provided the court buys the reasonable suspicion for the stop.
The case is UNITED STATES v. DIAZ-CASTANEDA ... (
United States v. Diaz-Castaneda (9th Cir. Jul. 18, 2007) 494 F.3d 1146
) it is a 2007 decision from the 9th Circuit out of Portland, OR. The question was thus:
We are presented with a question this court has not yet
resolved: Does a license plate check by a law enforcement
officer that reveals information about a person's car ownership,
driver status and criminal record constitute a search
under the Fourth Amendment? We agree with all the other
courts that have considered the issue that it does not. We
therefore hold that Defendant Ismael Diaz-Castaneda's Fourth
Amendment rights were not violated when a Clackamas
County Deputy Sheriff stopped the truck in which Diaz-
Castaneda was a passenger, asked him for identification and
checked his driver's license or Oregon identification card with
radio dispatch. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's
denial of Diaz-Castaneda's motion to suppress.
And the conclusion was this ...
We hold that a license plate check does not constitute a
Fourth Amendment search. We also hold that none of
Helzer's actions after the license plate check — stopping
Diaz's truck, requesting Diaz-Castaneda's identification and
checking Diaz-Castaneda's driver's license or Oregon ID card
with radio dispatch — violated the Fourth Amendment.
Because there was no Fourth Amendment violation we do not
reach the issue of whether Diaz-Castaneda's identity should
be suppressed.
As I said previously, the stopping officer affirmed that the driver appeared to match the general description of the registered owner, but since reasonable suspicion is a subjective foundation nothing is to say that a court would be okay with something less? Or even no driver description at all?
Like I said, our opinions aside as to whether this is a good idea or meets the level of reasonable suspicion is moot as courts have already ruled that it does. Until controlling case law exists that forbids it, courts are free to evaluate reasonable suspicion on the individual merits of the circumstances and to apply their own subjective opinions to the interpretation of the law. If I were a judge I might be more inclined to accept it as a reasonable argument than you would be. If it were otherwise, then there would be no reason for judges, would there?
- Carl
You and I are free to decide whether or not we feel comfortable with making such stops. Like you, I do not. However, if I had to, I would. Likewise, if I see a vehicle moving that is registered to a subject I know to have a warrant, I am going to be stopping that vehicle, too, and under the same theory of reasonable suspicion. There are oodles of case law decisions on registered owners having warrants and that being sufficient to justify a stop, so the same theory applies. And, since CA is required since the old Proposition 8 (1982) to hold to the federal standard for evidence, such a stop will be valid even if in violation of the state Constitution ... again, provided the court buys the reasonable suspicion for the stop.
The case is UNITED STATES v. DIAZ-CASTANEDA ... (
United States v. Diaz-Castaneda (9th Cir. Jul. 18, 2007) 494 F.3d 1146
) it is a 2007 decision from the 9th Circuit out of Portland, OR. The question was thus:
We are presented with a question this court has not yet
resolved: Does a license plate check by a law enforcement
officer that reveals information about a person's car ownership,
driver status and criminal record constitute a search
under the Fourth Amendment? We agree with all the other
courts that have considered the issue that it does not. We
therefore hold that Defendant Ismael Diaz-Castaneda's Fourth
Amendment rights were not violated when a Clackamas
County Deputy Sheriff stopped the truck in which Diaz-
Castaneda was a passenger, asked him for identification and
checked his driver's license or Oregon identification card with
radio dispatch. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's
denial of Diaz-Castaneda's motion to suppress.
And the conclusion was this ...
We hold that a license plate check does not constitute a
Fourth Amendment search. We also hold that none of
Helzer's actions after the license plate check — stopping
Diaz's truck, requesting Diaz-Castaneda's identification and
checking Diaz-Castaneda's driver's license or Oregon ID card
with radio dispatch — violated the Fourth Amendment.
Because there was no Fourth Amendment violation we do not
reach the issue of whether Diaz-Castaneda's identity should
be suppressed.
As I said previously, the stopping officer affirmed that the driver appeared to match the general description of the registered owner, but since reasonable suspicion is a subjective foundation nothing is to say that a court would be okay with something less? Or even no driver description at all?
Like I said, our opinions aside as to whether this is a good idea or meets the level of reasonable suspicion is moot as courts have already ruled that it does. Until controlling case law exists that forbids it, courts are free to evaluate reasonable suspicion on the individual merits of the circumstances and to apply their own subjective opinions to the interpretation of the law. If I were a judge I might be more inclined to accept it as a reasonable argument than you would be. If it were otherwise, then there would be no reason for judges, would there?
- Carl