Georgia Cops Rummaged Through Student-Athletes' Luggage in a Fruitless Search for 'a Little Bit of Marijuana'
When did the K-9 arrive? And what was the probable cause for the search?

Police in Liberty County, Georgia, are scrambling to defend a traffic stop last month of the Delaware State University women's lacrosse team, which players and coaches say ended in a "humiliating" and unlawful search of their belongings.
The team charter bus for Delaware State University, a historically black institution, was stopped on April 20 while traveling north through Georgia on I-95 after a game in Florida. In bodycam footage recorded by one of the Liberty County deputies, you can hear him tell the driver he pulled the bus over because it was illegally driving in the left lane.
Rather than simply cite the bus driver and send the team on their way, however, the deputies searched the luggage of the players and coaches, which was stowed under the bus.
Based on reporting in other outlets and the bodycam footage made available by Liberty County, it's not clear what the pretext was for the search. The footage shows the first officer saying, "Positive on the truck? There's a bunch of things. Schoolgirls on the bus, it's probably some weed." A K-9 is then visible a few moments later.
While the positive indication of a K-9 is probable cause for a search (regardless of the truly staggering false-positive rate such dogs produce), it is unclear whether the dog was brought to the scene after the bus was stopped, or if the bus was stopped by a K-9 unit.
Further, the bodycam video shows the bus' luggage area opened, and it is unclear whether that was done before or after the dog's apparent positive indication.
These are all pertinent questions. The Supreme Court's majority opinion in Rodriguez v. United States (2015) held that "[a]bsent reasonable suspicion, police extension of a traffic stop in order to conduct a dog sniff violates the Constitution's shield against unreasonable seizures." If the bus was pulled over for driving in the wrong lane, but the stop was extended in order to bring a dog in, that extra time has constitutional implications.
It also matters whether the luggage compartment was opened before the police dog supposedly alerted to it or in response to its alert. While police do not need permission, a warrant, or probable cause to walk a drug dog around a vehicle, they do need one of those three things to open a luggage compartment before the dog alerts.
Footage shows an officer telling Tim Jones, the bus driver, that he was stopped for illegally driving in the left lane, but that same deputy can also be heard saying, "This is what we do, OK? Every day we get out here, we stop commercial vehicles, OK?" This audio exchange possibly undermines Liberty County's claim that the pretext for the stop was an actual traffic violation.
The team also received another explanation for the search. As Pamella Jenkins, the team's coach, later recounted, when a player inquired as to why officers were searching players' luggage, she was told that previous charter buses on I-95 had been found engaging in human trafficking and narcotics smuggling, and thus the officers needed to be "diligent." But what indication did Liberty County deputies have that this bus was doing one of those things?
The video of the incident captures one officer telling the players: "If there is anything in y'all's luggage, we're probably going to find it, OK? I'm not looking for a little bit of marijuana, but I'm pretty sure you guys' chaperones are probably going to be disappointed in you if we find any."
On Tuesday, Liberty County Sheriff William Bowman claimed that "no personal items on the bus or person(s) were searched"—a claim directly contradicted by bodycam video.
Jenkins further recounted that the officers retrieved a wrapped package at one point in the search, questioning the player whose name was on it. When the player told officers that the package was a gift from a family member and intended to be opened after the team got home, Jenkins claimed that the officer pointedly questioned the player: "You accepted something, and you don't know what it is?" The officer then opened the gift and found a book-shaped jewelry box.
Despite searching for minutes through the teams' belongings—including probing through players' underwear and menstrual products—the officers found nothing illegal. What, then, was the dog alerting to? Deputies then released the bus without giving the driver a citation for the illegal lane use that was the pretext for the stop.
Following a USA Today article, the stop and search have become a national story, gaining the attention of public officials and university administrators.
Delaware State University President Tony Allen released a statement in which he said, "It should not be lost on any of us how thin any day's line is between customary and extraordinary, between humdrum and exceptional, between safe and victimized. This is true for us all but particularly so for communities of color."
Delaware Sens. Chris Coons (D) and Tom Carper (D) and Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D–Del.) all expressed outrage over the incident, especially its perceived racial motivations, writing in a joint statement that "[n]o one should be made to feel unsafe or humiliated by law enforcement or any entity who has sworn to protect and serve them. That's especially true for students who have sought out [historically black colleges or universities] like Delaware State University with a long history of empowering communities of color that have far too often faced discrimination and other barriers to opportunity."
While critics of the stop have argued that it, and the ensuing search, were clearly racially motivated, the larger issue for all Americans is the outrageous latitude the Supreme Court has given to police officers patrolling America's roads. As Damon Root noted last year, Whren v. United States (1996) "effectively erased" the Fourth Amendment rights of drivers who have "committed even the most minor of traffic infractions"—like misusing an interstate passing lane.
While released bodycam footage leaves some key details of the stop ambiguous, this incident is a reminder that the Supreme Court has given police—and their magical dogs—the right to disregard the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans in transit.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
HELP-HELP-HELP, won’t someone please give me some good advice?!!? I have a most EXCELLENT tax-money-saving idea that I’d like to put in to the Departments of Our Heroic Protectors in Government Almighty all across the land, and I just don’t know WHERE to submit my brilliant money-saving idea; PLEASE help. Idea summary: REAL drug-sniffing dogs are expensive to train, feed, house, and transport. EFFIGY dogs (think sock-puppet-doggie on officer’s hand) would be FAR less expensive! Officer waves sock-puppet-effigy-dog slowly over car, says wuff-wuff-wuff quietly and softly, then reaches trunk of car, goes WOOF-WOOF-WOOF loudly and urgently, now the car can be searched! Problem solved, cost-effectively! Woo-Hoo!!! … Now… HOW do we spread this most excellent idea? Please advise… This excellent idea brought to you by the Church of Scienfoology, see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/ …
Aha! Plucky Squirrel has idea similar to inflatable copilot to circumvent officious FAA regulations. But FAA does not get to hold people up at gunpoint, rob them and kill all who resist under the doctrine of qualified impunity. What is solution?
Two old retards walk into a bar…
Make money by creating an easy and quick strategy to work part time and get extra 30k or more on the internet. (res72) I earned 30,485 in my overtime in the previous month and am extremely happy with this work now. You can try this now by:-
.
Following this information:- https://bestjobshere40.blogspot.com/
Well, at least IJ got some good news out of Arizona:
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix-breaking/2022/05/11/arizona-court-appeals-reverses-39-500-civil-forfeiture-decision/9739292002/
Yup, this one was epically stupid. Good thing they were female or we'd've ended up with some deescalation and more riots.
Girl-bullying has inflated into another coercive industry. Yet one solution is obvious. To the extent that televangelists and their politicians use male & Trilby voters as coercion-enabling dupes in a Jihad on Women, selectively aborting male fetuses will, over time, defeat that strategy. Christian National Socialist activists realize this. It is therefore no surprise that they so strenuously seek to strangle choice in its cradle BEFORE the 14-weeks stage at which the distinction can be discerned--right at the 1972 LP plank and Roe v Wade boundary.
Sounds like an unlawful stop and search. Hopefully there are consequences for the officers and department involved. Now then:
1. I keep seeing reporting of the incident as "humiliating". What was the humiliation? Maybe "embarrassing" would be a better word. We should all try to have some mental fortitude/resilience to not feel "humiliated" when we have done nothing to merit it.
2. "Delaware Sens. Chris Coons (D) and Tom Carper (D) and Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D–Del.) all expressed outrage over the incident, especially its perceived racial motivations,"
And what exactly were those racial motivations? Was the bus painted in Rasta colors? Did it have a BLM banner? Did it have the universities name/logo on the side and the police did a quick Google search and identify it as a "black school"?
No mention of shocked the officers were when they realized they had stopped a busload of black lacrosse players...
Maybe the officers will try to cite that in their defense: "Well see what happened was... we stopped the bus and asked the driver what his contract was for and he told us he was transporting some female student athletes from a HBCU up North. We asked him what sport and he said lacrosse. We knew right then something was up." "It was an honest mistake."
No mention of how the police stop all buses and search them with dogs. Or for that matter taxis and Ubers. Because they don't!
What is clear that after an extensive search, they found .... NOTHING which begs the question "What was the pretext to the search?" I guess "probable cause" wasn't really so 'probable'
Yes, that was an M. Night Shyamalan-level twist.
Being stopped whilst going about your lawful business and having to submit under threat of death is humiliating.
Not really.
One time, a speeder cut in front of us on the highway. He was driving a somewhat similar car, but it was obvious that only one person was in the car and it wasn't the same make or model. Considering how open the road was, him cutting in front us made no sense.
About 20 seconds later, we got pulled over by a state trooper. We had just passed the local state police barracks and they probably picked up on the speeder. Someone who was just speeding, switching to a lawful rate of speed and shifting lanes, is plausible. We complied, answered all the officer's questions, didn't pitch a hissy fit because we were innocent, and then after he checked everything, we told him that there was another car speeding that had cut us off.
Officer immediately knew he was wrong. Apologized to us, said have a nice day and went back to his car.
I don't consider being stopped to be even remotely humiliating. It's just life. If he didn't stop us because he thought that we might be the wrong car, then he wouldn't be doing his job properly.
Lookit how said prohibitionist pseudoscience has enabled Russia's "new" single-ruler secret police State to bully a female American athlete. This is what comes of exporting violence rooted in superstition, hatred and pseudoscience--in addition to financial crashes.
Maybe the cops are creeps and just wanted to go through the luggage of a busload of young women. We should investigate them thoroughly just to be sure. Check the cops' cell phone and web history.
It was humiliating when *a personal relaxation device* was left on and the battery ran dead. Those take forever to charge.
How incredibly newsworthy!
More newsworthy than your vapid comment!
Plucky Squirrel is still engaging with agents-provocateur inserted into Commentariant via Nixon subsidies to looter parties? Remember Mr Chekov: "Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice..."
"a historically black institution"
You mean 'racists'.
Skin color is the most important thing.
Yeah... the HBCUs were the racists ones...
But we are all good now, level playing field and all.
That's just staggeringly stupid. "Historically Black Colleges" exist because discrimination made attending colleges managed by the white majority not an option. Whether it was explicit in the laws (segregation in the South) or a matter of admissions officials at colleges not picking Black applicants doesn't matter. It takes some real gall to call it racist for these institutions to exist when their existence was a response to being the targets of racism.
Funny thing: I have on multiple occasions travelled by bus (Greyhound) along I 95 in Georgia. Being a commercial driver myself, I am always VERY aware of the vehicle and what it is doing, how it relates to other traffic, etc. Both times the GreyDog transporting myself AND my stuff travelled in the LEFT LANE along I 95 in Georgia. I never thougth twice about it, as it is legal in other states as well, I know tsuch large vehicles can NOT obstruct traffic behind them when travelling in the LEFT lane, but there is no prohibition against using that left lane.
SO the meme that this bus was "contacted" for "illegally driving in the left lane" is bogus.
Now, that behind us, I'd be interested in some solid TRUTHFUL answers from these dirty coppers. They were convinced they could bust some of the students for what was in their personal luggage, They were wrong, as ALL the students were (sad tale for these dirty coppers) clean, and knew it. Reminds me of that film from a few decades ago, about the dirty Georgia cop and how he got off with his crimes for so long. Bufored Pusser I believe was his name Maybe these dirty coppers saw that flick, and thought they'd reenact it wiht a bunch of college girls. Pure motives? Oh no..... crooked as a hunting dog's hind leg.
At least the cops were honest enough to not plant evidence.
How low the bar has come for good policing...
BTW, driving a bus or a truck in the left lane is reason enough for police brutality. Stay the F out of the left lane.
You claim you are/were a professinal driver, weird how you didn't know the simple rule, "slower traffic (YOU) keep right".
Just FYI, Bufford Pusser was a Tennessee cop, who fought the local organized crime in the Mississippi-Tennessee border area. No evidence that he was a dirty copper.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buford_Pusser
'What, then, was the dog alerting to?' For future reference, drug dogs are not particularly reliable indicators of the presence of drugs, but a very good indicator that LEOs want to perform a search.
For future reference, drug dogs are not particularly reliable indicators of the presence of drugs, but a very good indicator that LEOs want to perform a search.
Beautifully expressed, thanks!
There's only one way to correct this crap, when called for Jury Duty, don't try to weasel out of it....go, get on the jury and then vote your conscience.
Had I been on the jury for anyone on this particular bus getting pinched for just about anything, it would have been Not Guilty.
"previous charter buses on I-95 had been found engaging in human trafficking"
I was trafficked once by a busful of coeds...for the details, subscribe to my newsletter...
Thank you for that one!
"You accepted something, and you don't know what it is?"
Clearly a cop who has lived a truly joyless life. No birthday presents, no X-mas presents, no presents of gifts of any kind that hasn't been vetted well ahead of time. Must be totally afraid of any kind of surprise and is no doubt trigger happy at even the slightest unexpected sound as so many cops are. I can't imagine living such a life of paranoia, fear, and need for control. I'm surprised he can survive within a thousand miles of an amusement park.
Thoughts:
The dog alerts because his handler says to.
The cops (very probably) didn't know it was a bus full of blacks armed with clubs when they made the stop.
The body cams leave a lot of stuff "unclear".
This was a little south of Savannah, not much there to limit left lane traffic, unless there was some construction or something.
It is possible that some of the riders were not in the back of the bus.
How original! The Russian KGB-State just did exactly that in order to kidnap an American athlete. Perhaps the exhumed Lend-Lease program could include some mothballed nuclear-tipped cruise missiles. Russia under the KGB Czar is showing itself no more useful than under communist fanatics or fanatically religious Czars. All Ukraine need do is add a Second Amendment to its Bill of Rights. Ukraine DOES have a Bill of Rights, right?
Something tells me that 'reason' staffers just got a memo saying "no bus trips in Georgia until you air out your luggage!"
This is a war on drugs issue, it happens to whites, blacks, hispanics, homos, heteros, men and women old and young every single day. Hijacking a legitimate complaint in order to push the "everything is racist" agenda has become tiresome. As soon as I hear racism I tune out because every single thing seems to be racist, my cereal is racist, my syrup is racist, absolutely anything and everything is because racism. I'm so fed up with cries of racism that the fastest way to make me ignore the issue is to claim it's racism.
Many of us read "If You Give A Mouse A Cookie" as a child. What we need is a new book for children: "If You Give A Cop A Pretext"
"What, then, was the dog alerting to?"
Was there any US currency on the bus?
"regardless of the truly staggering false-positive rate such dogs produce"
I some times wonder if some of those are truly false positives or if the dogs are keying on minute traces too small to show up in a physical search.
A large percentage of US $1 bills are supposedly contaminated with detectable traces of cocaine.
They're false positives either way.
The last paragraph of the article:
"While released bodycam footage leaves some key details of the stop ambiguous, this incident is a reminder that the Supreme Court has given police—and their magical dogs—the right to disregard the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans in transit."
The police do not have the ". . . right to disregard the Fourth Amendment . . .", they have the power to do so, which has been wrongly legitimized by the Supreme Court. The distinction between rights and powers is an important distinction, and one that is frequently lost in articles like this one. People have rights, governments (and their agents) have powers. Rights are things which we all have by simply being normally functioning human adults. The US Constitution does not grant those rights, it guarantees them, at least in theory. Powers are things above and beyond rights, which are granted to governments (and their agents) by the people who instituted those governments, again, at least in theory.
Misusing, confusing, or conflating these two very distinct terms clouds the discussion and inhibits progress in the area of civil liberties.
It's a drug task force. The dogs were already there or very close by. The purpose of the stop, the sniff, and the search was to find cash.
Exactly. If not that, then at the least, they are collecting highway speeding taxes from out of staters.
"The team charter bus for Delaware State University, a historically black institution,"
If it wasn't a "historically black institution", would we even be hearing about this?
They were going through the women's lacrosse team's luggage?
They weren't looking for drugs, they were looking for lingerie.
Pet peeve #1: Trucks and busses in the left lane
Pet peeve #2: Unlawful search during traffic stops (no probable cause)
Pet peeve #3: Marijuana not being legal
Just a bad day all around...
Pet peeve #4: Attributing this to racist motives.
well, if they only want a little bit, you should really just share
This case seems to be fundamentally different from the “Whren” U.S. Supreme Court case.
In that case it was a traffic stop with the “plain view” exception. By pure happenstance (not premeditated) if an officer happens to see something illegal then the “plain view” exception applies. This case seems more like racial, political or age profiling. The officers never saw or smelled illegal items.
Apparently drug dogs are certified but there is no federal oversight on the dogs’ accuracy. In one U.S. Supreme Court case (“Bentley”), the court ruled a dog with a 59% accuracy rate was good enough to meet 4th Amendment probable cause.
One thing that hurts the police reform movement is alienation of allies of all races. A friend of mine, Mr. Whitey White McWhiteness, was stuck in bumper to bumper traffic in Alabama, when he was profiled for his ... long hair ... and pulled over for ... following too close. Dog indicated, search on the roadside ensued, 800.00 ticket plus an attempt to have TN revoke is license. One time I went through the jail intake process, and I was asked a bunch of questions in front of the police by a nurse, and I refused to answer. They threatened me with suicide watch saying, "it's cold in there", if I did not answer. I did not answer. I was forced to strip naked, given inadequate clothing, and stuck on concrete all night. My jailers that evening were black and latino, but this treatment was systematically applied to everyone. Someone should ask DA Steve Crump of Tennessee why his jurisdiction systematically deprives citizens of their constitutional rights.