The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on
Tuesday in Florida v. Harris that prosecutors are not required to present evidence detailing the
stellar records of police dogs before their results can be used in court. The
ruling, written by Justice Elena Kagan, said that courts should subject sniff
tests by drug dogs to the same scrutiny given to other issues that police use
to demonstrate probable cause prior to a search, and no more.
Kagan, writing for a unanimous
Court, said that the question should be whether all the facts surrounding the
dog’s sniff alert would lead a reasonably prudent person to believe that a
search would turn up evidence of a crime.
The ruling by the Supreme Court
overturns an earlier decision by the Florida Supreme Court about a drug dog
named Aldo. Aldo had been trained by police in Liberty County, FL to sniff for
marijuana, cocaine, heroin, ecstasy and methamphetamine. During a routine
traffic stop in 2006, Aldo gave a signal to his handler that he detected
something in the truck.
A search was performed by
officers and 200 loose pseudoephedrine pills, 8,000 matches, a bottle of
hydrochloric acid, antifreeze and iodine were discovered. In combination these
ingredients make methamphetamine, but individually they are not things Aldo was
trained to detect. The man was arrested and charged and later appealed the
issue asking that a judge throw out the evidence obtained during the search
given that the defense claimed Aldo’s search was not a sufficient basis for
probable cause to search the vehicle.
The Florida Supreme Court agreed
with the defendant, saying that the police lacked probable cause to search the
truck. The Florida Court claimed that prosecutors should have to present
evidence of training, certification records, field performance records and
other objective evidence concerning a drug dog’s abilities and experience.
The Supreme Court disagreed, voting unanimously to reverse the Florida high court. The Court said that such
a lengthy laundry list of documents are not needed to support the reliability
of a drug sniffing dog.
The Court, in an odd coincidence,
is preparing to release a second opinion concerning drug-sniffing dogs. The
second case involves officers who brought a police dog up to a private residence.
The issue for the justices to decide is whether judges may issue search
warrants for private residences when a drug-sniffing dog outside the home
reacts as if it smells drugs inside.
Source:
“Supreme
Court: Police Dog Ability Doesn't Need To Be Extensively Tested, 'Sniff Is Up
To Snuff,” by, published at HuffingtonPost.com.
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