A plan to replace the S. Ct's. current 4th Amendment "Spineless
reasonableness" test with something less biased in favor of the
government.
 

"Reasonableness with Teeth: The Future of Fourth Amendment
Reasonableness Analysis" (
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1906674 )  
Mississippi Law Journal, Forthcoming (
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/PIP_Journal.cfm?pip_jrnl=281197 )
GWU Law School Public Law Research Paper No. 576 (
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/PIP_Journal.cfm?pip_jrnl=213982 )
GWU Legal Studies Research Paper No. 576 (
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/PIP_Journal.cfm?pip_jrnl=615826 )
CYNTHIA LEE (
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=72025 ), George
Washington University Law School
Email: [email protected]

This essay assesses the past, the present, and the future of Fourth
Amendment reasonableness analysis. Part I focuses on the past. For much
of the twentieth century, the Court embraced what is called the warrant
preference view of the Fourth Amendment under which a search was
considered reasonable if the government obtained a search warrant prior
to the search or an exception to the warrant requirement applied. Part
II focuses on the present. Even though it still treats as reasonable
both searches conducted pursuant to a warrant and searches that fall
within a well established exception to the warrant requirement, the
modern Court has increasingly abandoned the warrant preference view.
Instead of interpreting the Fourth Amendment as expressing a preference
for warrants, the modern Court reads the text of the Fourth Amendment as
simply requiring reasonableness. In a number of cases, the modern Court
has adopted what some have called an originalist approach, assessing the
reasonableness of a search based on whether the challenged governmental
action was unlawful under the common law at the time of the framing.
Part III critiques the Court’s current focus on reasonableness as the
touchstone of Fourth Amendment analysis. It starts with what might be
called the traditional critique of reasonableness. Under this critique,
the current reasonableness inquiry is problematic because it provides
insufficient guidance to lower courts and results in rulings that tend
to be overly deferential to the government. Part III also provides the
left critique of reasonableness. Under this critique, implicit bias may
lead police officers to see young men of color on the street as more
suspicious than others, which may lead them to stop and search those
individuals more frequently than others. Implicit bias may also lead
courts to exercise their discretion to decide whether a search is
reasonable in ways that favor law enforcement and disfavor Blacks and
Latinos who make up the bulk of individuals arrested, tried, and
convicted of crimes in the United States. Part IV looks to the future.
Professor Lee opines that the Court today stands at a crossroads. It can
completely replace the warrant preference model with the reasonableness
model of the Fourth Amendment, as it has already done in a few cases, it
can return to a robust embrace of the warrant preference view, or it can
recognize the virtues of the warrant preference and the reasonableness
models and improve upon both. Because the Court is unlikely to return to
a robust embrace of warrants, Professor Lee argues that the Court should
continue its current path of recognizing both models. Instead of
extremely deferential pro-government reasonableness balancing, however,
Professor Lee argues that courts should engage in a more stringent form
of Fourth Amendment reasonableness review. Borrowing from a small slice
of the Court’s equal protection jurisprudence, its rational basis with
bite cases, Professor Lee urges courts assessing the reasonableness of a
Fourth Amendment search to engage in less deferential reasonableness
review with teeth. 
 
*****************************************************************************************
Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.                                  
o-   651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law (MS-D2037)                    f-   
651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                                               
 c-   612-865-7956
[email protected]                    
http://law.hamline.edu/constitutional_law/joseph_olson.html             
      
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