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Writing a Crim Pro Casebook: How Do You Cover the "Search" Question?
A reflection on re-writing a chapter of Kamisar LaFave & Israel.
As I mentioned recently, I spent the last three months re-writing the Fourth Amendment materials for the Kamisar LaFave and Israel Criminal Procedure casebook for the 16th edition that will be available for use this coming fall semester. The biggest challenge of writing Fourth Amendment materials in a casebook is how to cover what counts as a Fourth Amendment "search." I thought I might write about what I think the challenge is, and how I restructured the existing material for the new edition.
Here's the problem. The Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures, and there is a dizzying amount of caselaw on what is a search. There are probably 50 or 60 major Supreme Court rulings on the question, and gobs of lower court cases. Further, the test itself is murky. The most often used test is the Katz "reasonable expectation of privacy" test, but the cases on that are confusing. The Supreme Court sometimes treats that test as a normative inquiry, sometimes as a descriptive inquiry, and when it's descriptive it divides over what it's describing. Then you add the trespass test, which is maybe (or maybe not) just a physical intrusion test — no one really knows, it depends on the judge — that does an uncertain amount of work in addition to the privacy test. To top it off, the results need to give students clarity about where officers can go and what they can do in a wide range of situations. How on earth do you cover that, especially if you only have 60 pages or so in which to do it?
I thought a lot about that question this fall, and here's the approach I adopted.
First, some context. In an introductory section, before the search materials begin, students will have already learned that the problems that inspired the Fourth Amendment involved physical intrusion into physical spaces — most often, searching houses in the literal sense of breaking in to them and physically rifling through their contents. The key question is, what beyond that foundational scenario is also covered as a search?
As I assembled the materials, I addressed that in four sections: Introduction to Katz; privacy in physical spaces; problems of new technology; and the trespass/intrusion test.
The first section, about 10 pages long, introduces the reader to Katz v. United States, which was the Warren Court's main case on what (if anything) beyond physical intrusion is covered as a search. Katz, and Harlan's concurrence, introduce the reasonable expectation of privacy test. Then the notes after Katz introduce some of the key conceptual questions around that: Just what is the Katz test asking? How does it relate to the text? What is the role of the subjective test? The notes also inform the reader of some of the common and repeated applications of the test: When is it is a search to get information about the inside of a car? What about a package? The point of this first section is to just get a basic bearing on what the Katz test is.
The second section, which is about 15 pages, considers how Katz applies in physical space. The point of this section is to make sure students understand how Katz applies in the non-technological scenarios of an officer just walking around and seeing physical things. Where can officers go in ordinary physical space before their conduct becomes a search? It starts with a case on the open fields doctrine, United States v. Dunn, to explain the curtilage/open-fields distinction. Notes then cover how the Katz test applies in common physical spaces like entering businesses (that may be open or closed to the public), entering common areas of apartment buildings, and entering government offices. We then get California v. Greenwood, the trash case, and notes how the Katz test applies to searches of abandoned property, searches of jail cells, and searches of property belonging to people experiencing homelessness.
The third section takes on Katz and changing technology. A lot of the harder Katz issues are about technology, as technology changes the relationship between place and information and how easy it is to collect information. So this is the longest section, about 25 pages. The materials start with cases on technology-enhanced surveillance of physical spaces and then turn to network surveillance. The materials on technology-enhanced surveillance of physical spaces bookend California v. Ciraolo (aerial surveillance of a home, not a search), and Kyllo v. United States (thermal imaging of a home, a search). The related notes consider variations on this theme, such as dog sniffs, physical tracking devices, and abandoned DNA. The network surveillance cases then bookend Smith v. Maryland (numbers dialed, not a search) and Carpenter v. United States (cell-site location information, a search). The related notes consider variations such as accessing emails and IP addresses, short-term location tracking, and lower court interpretations of Carpenter. The "bookend" approach includes two major cases that seem to present similar kinds of issues but come out differently; the contrast invites the reader to consider why the Court decided them differently, and thus what matters in the doctrine. I think it works well for this particular material.
The final section, about 10 pages long, covers the trespass/intrusion test of United States v. Jones in 2012 and Florida v. Jardines in 2014. In addition to covering those two cases as "main" cases, notes focus on what the test is (Is it a trespass test as in torts? Is it a physical intrusion test, a return to pre-Katz caselaw?); how lower courts have applied it in ways that might go beyond Katz (to scenarios like chalking a tire and inserting keys in locks); and where it might go next (covering Justice Gorsuch's opinion on the "traditional approach" in Carpenter).
There are an endless number of ways to teach the search materials. As I said at the beginning, I think it's a tremendously challenging topic to cover. So I don't claim to have found the one and only way to present these materials. But my hope is that this format will click the most for students and professors alike. My hope is that this is as conceptually clear as it can be, in that it breaks down the issues for students in what I hope are helpful ways (covering physical cases vs. technology cases, Katz vs. trespass/intrusion, etc.). And the approach very roughly tracks the chronological order in which the cases were decided, so students can appreciate the development of the law and understand how later cases are built on (or break from) earlier ones.
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How do I find out about the law on the fourth amendment, not in the context of warrants, and searches? Everyone always assumes that judges are going to protect us by refusing to sign warrants. What if I want to secure my own person, home, papers, and effects using my own methods, (like, locks, encryption, building my house on top of a tall mountain, ect), and the government tries to write laws to make this more difficult. I have a right to be secure don't I? Where would I find case-law on the Fourth apart from warrants and searches?
Likely in the same book, but a different section. Whether a search has occurred is a tremendously difficult question. Whether a warrant is legally acceptable is also quite difficult and subject to a whole different set of facts and issues, including, but not limited to, why did the police suspect the items listed to be searched on the warrant may have evidence.
“People experiencing homelessness.” Et tu, Orin?
I noticed that too. Mabye it's in Berkeley's faculty regulations that certain euphemisms must be used.
I think when folks refer to homeless folks, they are generally referring to a more chronic, long-term condition. People experiencing homelessness includes that long-term dimension as well as folks who are more short-term, maybe even couch surfing. I needed to find a place to crash for a week once between leases. I guess in a sense I was homeless, but no one talking about the problems of the homeless would have been referring to me. I also have no problem w/the euphemism more generally, as it puts the emphasis on the person, not the condition.
As a non-lawyer the organization and structure seemed logical to me. The progression of themes and approaches reminded me of how precedent builds on precedent and how it's applied (or not) in changing circumstances. I hope that some of the lawyers or prawfs who may still comment here will have more insight than me.
You hit all the definitive cases I remember from school, so I think you got it right.
Some of my struggles with “understanding” 4th Amendment law, both as a law student and then in my early years as a proscecutor, came from my desire to figure out the Grand Unified Theory to guide my inquiry. It was almost as if I was considering each case as a data point on some sort of n-order polynomial, and then trying to put my facts into that function to determine a response of ‘reasonable’ or ‘unreasonable.’ I have no idea what casebook I used, and I had a particularly bad criminal law professor (a faculty colleague of yours at one of your brief teaching gigs), so I can’t say that the conceptual method of the casebook led to this, or that it was my background (engineering undergrad, 7 years military, then law school).
I do tend to think that unless you offer a substantial disclaimer that there is no grand theory or function or bright line test in 4th Amendment law, you may leave students looking for one. “Unreasonable” cuts a very broad fact-specific swath, and the substantial body of cases represents nothing more than human judges applying the vague standard of reasonableness to unique fact patterns, each within its own discrete historical and social context (nod to ‘Equilibrium Adjustment’ here). From my perspective as a (now former-) prosecutor, the real shortcoming of so much of 4th Amendment jursiprudence is that ill-defined standards work poorly as prophylactic measures.
Free of charge, no copyright or trademark or patent, I give you a simpler test:
Can I do the same thing to a cop or prosecutor or judge without any repercussions?
If not, then get a warrant.
This sounds like something akin to Prof. Baude's "positive law" model: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/facpubs/1808/
I think you'll find Prof. Kerr does not find it very compelling.
Thanks for the link -- exactly my attitude too.
I have long held that judges are government employees who know who pays them, and lawyers who have no interest in providing simple clear solutions when they can make up all sorts of quibbly doctrine to justify their caselaw libraries and high fees.
I have long thought that the 4A analysis has gotten too hung up on the semantics of whether a "search" occurred, and gave short shrift to the reasonableness analysis.
Oddly enough, not a single SCT justice has reached out for my input.
I live in a RV. Before that, I lived on a boat (underway or anchored, not in a marina).
Those count as vehicles, and are considered an exception for 4th amendment rights.
So if "My home is my castle." and the home has the highest protections against unreasonable searches. Do citizens who choose mobile homes have fewer rights? Do they have a home but no castle?
I've read that even homeless people living in a tent on public property, get 4th amendment rights, but if they live in an RV parked on the street, no rights.
I guess it’s a judgment call how you construe, but the short answer is that under California v. Carney, 471 U.S. 386 (1985), mobile homes are treated as vehicles, not residences. The lower court opinions I’m familiar with treat houseboats the same way, although it’s possible there are exceptions.
As a fellow boater who views a house as a boat so poorly constructed and run aground so hard it is pointless to try and refloat it I have to point out that all the peeps that live on dirt enjoy much more 4A protections than guys like me that cruise on boats. The USCG has the power to search any vessel at any time with no cause needed as the link below indicates. The USCG has written agreements with other countries allowing them to conduct these searches in their waters. Maybe more to the point the USCG has written agreements allowing federal, state, and local agencies to conduct searches in their behalf. I have been sailing for more than fifty years and have personally never been subject to a search but I have to point out that I have what is usually described as a nice boat (a 42 foot catamaran I have sailed all over Florida, the Bahamas, Cuba, and down island). On the other hand there are multiple well documented stories about what I will call boats that are unable to move and are basically floating flop houses that are subject to such searches by local LEOs. There are also cases where commercial fishermen's boats have been searched by federal and state agencies and charged for possessing undersized or out of season fishes under authority granted by the USCG. One of my favorite Hunter S. Thompson quotations is “It was the Law of the Sea, they said. Civilization ends at the waterline. Beyond that, we all enter the food chain, and not always right at the top.”
link for street cred
https://www.uscg.mil/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=luZU9g1tNsc%3d&portalid=0#:~:text=The%20Fourth%20Amendment%20to%20the%20United%20States%20Constitution,reasonable%20suspicion%20that%20some%20criminal%20activity%20is%20occurring.
Can someone point me to the phrase "exigent circumstances" in 4A? I appear to have missed it.
You can find them in SCOTUS’ interpretation of the word “unreasonable.”
That’s how the whole legal profession works. Someone gets paid big bucks to write laws or contracts with words like “unreasonable”, then other lawyers get paid big bucks to argue about what that word means.
And none get paid to actually eliminate problems. Their incentives are just the reverse: to punt the current problem into a bigger problem down the road.
Corporate lawyers may be a bit different, but it doesn't show in the contracts I've seen. IANAL!
You should title the chapter "Herding Katz."
Seriously, this reminds me of reading fellow servant rule cases from workplace tort law in the late 19th century. Treatise writers, in introductory passages, would bemoan the confusion and the lack of general principles to guide lawyers and judges, and then lay out chapter upon chapter of exceptions to the rule.
I suspect AI will help with this, not least by making current law’s many shortcomings more visible.
Professor, I like the organization a lot. For people learning about the Fourth Amendment, I always think back to Professor Amar's wonderful book on the Bill of Rights. It's a beautiful lesson on the Founders' feelings about searches by the government.
I wouldn't be eager to try to develop a textbook regarding many constitutional issues these days. A number of important decisions have been reversed recently, with more reversals likely to follow during the next couple of years.
Soon after that, though, a bunch of the newly hatched precedents (guns, voting rights, abortion, religious privilege) seem destined to be tossed aside.
Should be interesting times for textbook authors and law students.
Textbook with a bitmap screen. Update away; problem solved.
Professor - I'm not certain this is directly related to your task & work.
The US Government agencies hold vast amounts of data on all of us. As I understand it, the control process for limiting the inter-agency sharing of that data is known as a 'System Of Records Notification' announced through the rule-making procedure.
Further, as I understand it, Federal Law Enforcement Agencies have fairly routine access to at least some of the data without benefit of a warrant. The USPS has the largest (?) data set of addresses and associated residents in the world.
So is this an issue (at all?) worthy of coverage?
Some of the other Agencies with large data sets include SSA, DHS Trusted Traveler System, Financial Regulators through the AML/BSA.
Thanks! Best wishes on completing your work successfully.
The 4th Amendment has been rendered, in pretty much every context, a nullity by the War on Drugs. All of it with the approval of the judiciary in this country.