<<http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/2470156>>

5th Circuit gives police new power in searchesWarrant unneeded in some
instances Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS -- A federal appeals court has opened the door for police in
Texas and two other states to search residences and buildings for
evidence without a warrant -- a ruling strongly criticized by two
dissenting justices. 

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled police do not need an arrest
or search warrant to conduct a swift sweep of private property to ensure
their safety. 

Evidence found in that search is admissible if the search is a "cursory
inspection" and if police entered for a legitimate purpose and believed
it may be dangerous. 

The 11-4 ruling affects Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi and replaces a
standard set in 1994, when the 5th Circuit held that police can make a
so-called protective sweep only if officers are there to arrest someone.
In the majority opinion, Judge William Lockhart Garwood wrote that any
in-home encounter poses a risk to police officers, even if it is simply
to interview someone. 

Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt wasn't available for comment,
department spokeswoman Sandra Aponte said. 

The opinion noted that a similar standard has been adopted by four other
federal circuit courts of appeals. 

The American Civil Liberties Union called the decision dangerous. 

"This decision is the latest rollback of safeguards to protect the people
from being at the mercy of a police state," said Joe Cook, executive
director of the ACLU of Louisiana. "Allowing law enforcement to search
homes without probable cause or any warrant makes a dramatic and
dangerous departure from one of our most fundamental American freedoms." 

The decision came in the case of Kelly Donald Gould, a Denham Springs,
La., man arrested in October 2000 on federal gun charges and accused of
threatening to kill judges and police. 

Deputies went to Gould's trailer with no warrant but were invited in by
another resident, who told them Gould was in the bedroom. 

Because of the threats and Gould's criminal history, the deputies said,
they looked for him under the bed and in two closets, where they found
three rifles. They later found Gould in the woods and seized the weapons
after they got him to sign a permission for the search. 

U.S. District Judge James Brady ruled the guns could not be evidence
because they were obtained illegally. A three-judge panel of the 5th
Circuit upheld that decision but told prosecutors to request a hearing
before the court to reconsider the precedent on which it was based. 

Dissenters said the ruling makes an exception to constitutional
protections against unlawful search and seizure. 

"I have no doubt that the deputy sheriffs believed they were acting
reasonably and with good intentions," Judges Harold DeMoss Jr. and Carl
E. Stewart wrote. "But the old adage warns us that `The road to hell is
paved with good intentions.' " 

U.S. Attorney David Dugas of Baton Rouge said the case illustrates the
"difficult situations" officers often face. 

"They're expected to make split-second decisions in potentially dangerous
situations involving constitutional issues that the courts and legal
scholars can spend years debating," Dugas said. 

But Mike Walsh, a defense attorney, said the 5th Circuit decision
"grossly expands" the definition of lawful searches and erodes
constitutional rights. 

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