-Caveat Lector-

It wouldn't surprise me if this became a trend in the future under the
Sustainability developments for towns, though I don't think this is the
case here.

http://www.belleville.com/mld/belleville/news/4691498.htm

Posted on Sun, Dec. 08, 2002

Subject to inspection
Belleville inspectors and armed police officers show up without search
warrants to check for occupancy code violations, and ticket people who
don't let them in -- a practice experts say is unconstitutional. BY
GEORGE PAWLACZYK Belleville News-Democrat


Subject to inspection
Belleville inspectors and armed police officers show up without search
warrants to check for occupancy code violations, and ticket people who
don't let them in -- a practice experts say is unconstitutional. BY
GEORGE PAWLACZYK Belleville News-Democrat

and Beth Hundsdorfer
Invite friends over, babysit your grandchildren or allow relatives to
spend the night in Belleville and you risk an armed police officer
turning up at your door to search your home and give you a ticket.
Enforcement teams consisting of a housing inspector and a police officer
do not obtain search warrants before showing up to check for occupancy
code violations, a Belleville News-Democrat investigation found. Most
residents give their permission to come in, although reluctantly, and
those who don't usually are charged. Sometimes they simply walk in. Jim
Reese said he was standing in his kitchen when he heard a noise at 7
a.m. and found a housing inspector and police officer standing in his
living room. "I wanted to know who walked in without permission," he
said. "They didn't answer me. They just started walking through the
place." Such aggressive enforcement of a city law designed to prevent
overcrowding violates the Fourth Amendment, which guards against
unlawful search and seizure, legal experts say. "I think the way they
are using the housing ordinance is unconstitutional," said Jamie Carey,
a law professor at Loyola University. "I think it's just a way to get
around the Fourth Amendment." "You can't come in without a search
warrant," said William Schroeder, a professor and expert in federal law
at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. "The Supreme Court decided a
case on this that is right on point. It's based on the Fourth Amendment.
And you can't arrest anyone for refusing a search without a search
warrant." Belleville attorney Bruce Cook said: "If they suspect you of
something, then they can go to a police officer and get an affidavit and
then get a search warrant. Your home is protected by the Fourth
Amendment." In more than 30 interviews, residents said officials show up
without warrants and ticket people, sometimes for just having visitors.
While many times the tickets were justified because of significant
overcrowding, others were given for everyday events. A young mother who
works two jobs was ticketed because the elderly couple she hired to
babysit were not listed on her occupancy permit. A man who agreed to
house sit for a friend in the Air Force who was overseas was cited when
he was found alone in the house. In 70 percent of cases, documented in
city records since 1999, housing inspectors, called compliance officers,
and uniformed police offcers have gone into homes in the city's poorest
areas -- around Hough Park, in the Franklin neighborhood and near
downtown. Ninety-five percent of these surprise inspections were at
rental housing. City officials say enforcement of occupancy and housing
codes is crucial to prevent overcrowding and unsanitary conditions, and
to keep the city's housing stock from deteriorating. But civil rights
experts argue such tactics are discriminatory and unconstitutional.
"It's pretty much like the Gestapo. There is no right to privacy," said
Will Jordan, executive director of the Equal Housing Opportunity Council
in St. Louis, which works with the federal government to investigate
civil rights violations. "This is much more intrusive than making a
random stop on the highway because this is your home," he said. The
findings None of Illinois' 15 largest cities, including Chicago, sends
police officers on housing inspections, according to a survey by the
newspaper. In fact, none require occupancy permits. The searches usually
are based on anonymous calls and often come during the early morning
hours, according to a review of 263 Belleville Housing Department
occupancy violation case files since 1999. The newspaper found: • At
least four times, the police-compliance officer teams have been accused
of simply walking into houses unannounced without knocking first. • A
dozen times when people refused to let the officials in without first
seeing a warrant, they were charged with obstruction or interfering with
a health officer, despite a 1967 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that it is
unconstitutional to arrest someone who doesn't allow a search without a
warrant. • Fifty-seven percent of those cited for occupancy code
violations were white, while 43 percent were black. Belleville's black
population is 15.5 percent, according to the 2000 Census. • The Police
Department has taken advantage of the housing inspections, the records
show. In at least 10 cases, the housing inspections gave police an easy
way into homes to search for drugs. "This is a problem one sees all
across the country -- the use of these housing codes for doing what
really amounts to drug sweeps," said Ed Yohnka of the American Civil
Liberties Union • People cited with an occupancy violation are compelled
to give the police officer personal data that is entered into the
Belleville Police Department computer base and used for routine criminal
investigations. The personal information includes race, marital status,
birthdates, home and work telephone numbers, criminal history and even a
description of scars and tattoos. Crystal Wilson, 25, was asked to
describe a Caesarean scar on her abdomen during an occupancy inspection
on Nov. 14, 2000, according to an arrest report. The permits also record
the relationship of each person living in a residence to the head of the
household. Even an unwed couple who want to live together discretely
must state their relationship on a public document. "What is the public
policy served by knowing specifically who lives where?" said Todd
Swanstrom, a sociologist at St. Louis University. • Of the 584 people
charged altogether, 164 were cited for "allowing illegal occupancy," or
having too many people living in a house or apartment. Most of the
remaining 420 were charged with living in a residence where they weren't
listed on the occupancy permit. A dozen or more were held on other
charges, such as outstanding warrants. Mary Jones-Joyner, 55, of 132
Lauren Circle was babysitting her grandchildren when Sgt. Joe Stumph
came to her door at 7:10 a.m. May 31, 2000, and handed her an already
completed occupancy violation citation because the children were not
listed on her occupancy permit. "I told him my grandkids don't live with
me. I asked, 'What is it you're going to charge me with?" When
Jones-Joyner appeared in St. Clair County Circuit Court with a copy of
her daughter's lease showing the children lived with their mother, a
judge dismissed the case. "I had to take time off from work for this
crazy stuff," she said. • In 190 cases, homes that had children age 16
and younger were searched. In one case, six family members were issued
citations. Chandra Miller, 29, was ticketed Jan. 25 for allowing her
estranged husband to sleep on her living room floor when their daughter
was ill. Tyrone Miller, 30, also was cited, even though he showed the
enforcement team a driver's license listing his address in Cahokia. "I
want to know when it became illegal to have someone sleep on your living
room floor?" she said. Jordan said the fact families are involved is
significant. "If they're going after women and children, this is a
situation where the Justice Department will come in and make them stop,"
he said. John Farley, head of the Sociology Department at Southern
Illinois University Edwardsville, said the unannounced inspections
occurring almost exclusively at rental housing also is a concern. "It
sounds like they're trying to keep out lower-income people," he said.
"It sounds like this is a case of keep the renters out and send them
somewhere else." The 'overcrowding police' Henry Johnson said he was
fired because he refused to go along with what he called discriminatory
practices in enforcing the municipal housing code. Johnson, 51, was
hired in 1993 by the housing department after a U.S. Justice Department
investigation into Belleville's failure to hire minorities. He was one
of the city's first black employees. Johnson said that after Mayor Mark
Kern took office in 1997, a series of "disturbing" strategy sessions
took place in the housing department. "At one of these meetings, Stumph,
the police sergeant, advised that residents who balked at allowing a
search without a search warrant should be threatened with arrest," said
Johnson, who now lives in Fairview Heights. "Joe would say that when a
person wouldn't let us in, we should say, 'You mean you're not going to
let that inspector do his job? Do I have to arrest you for
obstructing?'" Johnson said. Stumph did not respond to requests to
comment. "I wouldn't go along with this kind of thing, and finally I was
cut out of the meetings," Johnson said, "I was finally told I wasn't to
supervise anybody." Six months after he was fired, the city settled a
civil rights lawsuit Johnson had filed in U.S. District Court in East
St. Louis for an undisclosed amount. Kern declined to be interviewed for
this story but issued a written statement: "Enforcement of occupancy
permit regulations is important to our residents, and we have strived to
enforce these rules." In his statement, Kern insisted city inspectors do
not enter people's property without permission. But Reese said
compliance officer Robert Craig and police Sgt. Don Sax entered his
apartment at 3419 W. Main St., at 7 a.m. on May 20 without knocking.
"They told me that I had to get out right away, the next day," said
Reese, a 55-year-old former Air Force enlisted man who was ticketed for
not having an occupancy permit. "I said I needed time to move but they
told me, "Didn't you hear? You've got to leave." In another case, James
R. Burnette of 611 E. McKinley awoke on May 6 to find a Belleville
Police officer and a housing inspector standing over his bed. "We found
the residence open and upon further inspection, Burnette was found
inside sleeping," the inspection report stated. Belleville Housing
Director Mike Eckert declined to be interviewed, but he said, "Our
department never forces its way into anyone's homes." He said the
purpose of the city's occupancy law is to prevent "dangerous
overcrowding." In one case, 12 people were found living illegally in a
residence at 516 W. C St. that was supposed to have only four. They
included six children 12 or under. That presents problems for schools as
well as the city. "Taxpayers in this district do not want to be paying
taxes to support children who do not actually live in this district,"
said James Rosborg, superintendent of Belleville School District 118.
"We strongly support the Belleville housing code. We want people to come
into the district. We're not against that. But we want them to legally
reside here," Rosborg said. Many who were ticketed said they were
friends or relatives who were visiting. They included 49 school-aged
teenagers, two as young as 15. "The problem is that people say they are
just visiting, but 30 days becomes 60 days, which becomes 90 or six
months or a year," said Louis Tiemann, a strong supporter of municipal
housing codes who helped draft the city's current code in the late
1980s. "How do you police that? It's very difficult." The city's housing
code does not define "occupy." A housing department employee said that a
visitor usually can stay "a week, or a week and a half" before the
occupancy permit must be changed. Most of the residents interviewed said
they allowed the searches because they felt intimidated or feared being
issued a criminal citation. They complained that police would ticket
anyone who happened to be in the house when they showed up to check for
overcrowding, refusing to listen to their explanations. "Whoever heard
of the overcrowding police?" Reese said. Rick Brown, an activist for
mobile home-dwellers and a frequent critic of the city's housing
policies, said, "You no longer have to register a dog or cat in
Belleville, but when my nephew comes to visit, I've got to register him
with housing." A change in strategy Soon after taking office, Kern
changed the way the city enforces its housing code. Mike Pierceall, the
former city planning director under Mayor Roger Cook, said police did
not escort housing inspectors except in rare cases involving repeat
offenders. Police Chief Terry Delaney refused to answer questions but
said in a written statement it is necessary to send a police officer out
on a housing inspection to issue a criminal citation, and for "the
security of the housing officer." "Neighbors call us all the time. When
we go into the area around Memorial Drive, it's terrible. They (youths)
stand in the street and defy us to run into them," he said earlier.
Pierceall said that under the Cook administration, a housing code
violator received a certified letter with a warning that unless the
problem was remedied, a citation and a fine would follow. Permits listed
only the head of household and the maximum number of people allowed to
live there. Using the certified letter approach, Belleville brought just
three people to court in 1996 for housing violations. In 1997, during
Kern's first year in office, housing court cases jumped to 222. Last
year, 521 people were given criminal citations stemming from housing
complaints, including 143 people cited for occupancy violations. "I
think it's just a difference of philosophy in handling matters," said
Pierceall. "Our way was to not force the issue. It worked pretty well.
But Belleville's got some very serious housing issues. Maybe the way
they're doing it now is overzealous, I don't know." Alderman Bob Blaies
said he thought certified letters still were being sent out. "We need to
keep people in line with the housing code, but if it's violating
anybody's rights, we need to take a look at it," Blaies said. Alderman
Paul Seibert said he approves of using police officers to enforce the
housing codes. "You can send a letter to anybody, that doesn't mean they
obey," he said. Asked whether people cited for a housing violation
should be required to provide the same personal information as someone
charged with a crime, Seibert said, "I don't believe they do that."
Court records show most people end up paying a fine of $75 to $100 for
housing ordinance violations rather than go to trial. Ordinance
violations are similar to traffic tickets, and a conviction goes on a
person's criminal record. Failure to show up in court to answer them can
result in a bench warrant being issued with bail set for up to $2,000.
"Unfortunately, under the law, the poor are not a protected class," said
Carl Carlson, a staff attorney for Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance
Foundation in East St. Louis, which provides legal services to
low-income people. "You can discriminate against them and prosecute them
and they don't have much legal recourse," he said. City vs. the
Constitution Belleville's current housing codes, which require mandatory
inspections and a $25 occupancy permit, were adopted in 1988, but
language was added in 1997 that allows inspectors to enter a home
without a resident's or a court's permission. Chapter 18 reads, in part,
"With reference to any health nuisance or any housing or maintenance
code violation, the director shall have the power to enter and examine
any property for the purpose of enforcement ... " and this authority
extends to "one-half mile outside the city limits." Eckert said the
language was adopted from the Building Officials and Code
Administrators, or BOCA, a Chicago-based, nonprofit organization that
has compiled a model housing and building code used by thousands of
communities nationwide. But Tom Frost, a BOCA vice president, said the
group's code does not state that local officials can force a search
without a search warrant. "Forced searches are unconstitutional," Frost
said. "You need a search warrant." The city also can declare a residence
unfit to live in and force people to move out if the utilities are
temporarily shut off, Eckert said. The BOCA code does not call for this.
City Attorney Bob Sprague said in a written statement he sees no problem
with having a rule that says housing inspectors can search homes without
a warrant. "I see no conflict between Chapter 18 (of the city code) and
the Fourth Amendment," Sprague said, adding, "As the mayor has already
informed you, the city does not enter a premises without permission."
However, refusing to allow a search without first seeing a search
warrant is every citizen's right, according to a 1967 U.S. Supreme Court
decision, Camara vs. San Francisco. In that case, the court said a
warrant is needed for housing inspectors to enter a home, and that a
person cannot be charged with a crime for refusing to allow his home to
be entered without a search warrant. The only exception is when an
emergency, such as a fire or gas leak, is thought to exist. Even so,
local laws to the contrary usually aren't struck down until someone
challenges them, said Schroeder, the SIUC law professor. "You do need a
test case to go forward with these things. Local municipalities pass
these laws all the time, and they are allowed to stand because no one
challenges them," he said. Belleville has been under the scrutiny of the
U.S. Justice Department since signing a consent decree in 1995 and
agreeing to end its discriminatory hiring practices. If Belleville is
performing improper searches aimed at low-income people, the Justice
Department would be interested, spokesman Casey Stavropolous said. "We
would certainly be interested in any civil rights complaints apart from
the employment consent decree," he said. "They would be investigated."
Brown, the mobile home activist, said he understands the need to enforce
the housing codes, he just disagrees with sending a gun-toting police
officer to do it. "It's like when you get stopped by a cop, you say
'yes, sir' even though you haven't said that since you were in trouble
with your dad when you were in high school," he said. "When police show
up, people will agree to just about anything."

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