Creators Syndicate
September 16, 2024
Bestselling author Malcolm Gladwell wrote about a concept he
called "thin-slicing." This idea suggests that spontaneous decisions
are often as good as — or even better than — carefully deliberated decisions.
His book "Blink" begins with the story of the
Getty kouros, a statue purchased in 1985 by the J. Paul Getty Museum in
California. Many experts thought the kouros was authentic, but others who just
looked at the statue were skeptical. George Despinis, head of the Acropolis
Museum in Athens, said after viewing the kouros, "Anyone who has ever seen
a sculpture coming out of the ground could tell that that thing has never been
in the ground."
Thin-slicing suggests that intuitive judgment is developed
by experience, training and knowledge.
Intuitive judgment, in layman's terms, is a hunch. In the
criminal justice system, a hunch is the lowest level of what is referred to as
a standard of proof. To make a traffic stop, obtain a search warrant or make an
arrest, the police must have probable cause. Probable cause means that a reasonable
person would believe a crime was in the process of being committed, had been
committed or was going to be committed.
In the context of the Fourth Amendment, a mere hunch refers
to a situation in which the police have an intuitive feeling that a suspect is
engaging in criminal activity, but they do not have any specific evidence to
support that feeling.
The Fourth Amendment protects individuals from unreasonable
searches and seizures. Thin-slicing in the criminal justice system, and acting
on it, would violate the U.S. Constitution. A hunch is suspicion without
articulable facts.
"On October 31, 1963 while walking the beat through
downtown Cleveland," an ACLU of Ohio article reads, "Cleveland Police
detective Martin McFadden with 39 years of police experience noticed three men
acting suspiciously and pacing in front of a jewelry store on Euclid
Avenue."
McFadden was thin-slicing; based on his years of experience,
he was concerned the men were "casing a job, a stickup," and carrying
weapons. "McFadden identified himself as a police officer ... asked them
their names" and searched the three men for weapons.
Unfortunately for McFadden at the time, a hunch was not
enough to overcome a constitutional violation. The searches resulted in John W.
Terry's arrest for possessing a firearm without a license. He was convicted,
and he appealed all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Although the court, in
Terry v. Ohio, acknowledged that a hunch was not enough, the court carved out a
new standard of proof — reasonable suspicion.
Reasonable suspicion was defined by the U.S. Supreme Court
as "the sort of common-sense conclusion about human behavior upon which
practical people ... are entitled to rely." According to an article on the
Maricopa County, Arizona, website, "Further, it has defined reasonable
suspicion as requiring only something more than an 'unarticulated hunch.' It
requires facts or circumstances that give rise to more than a bare, imaginary,
or purely conjectural suspicion."
Terry v. Ohio did not provide blanket authority to intrude
on an individual's rights. However, it did radically expand police authority to
investigate crimes where there is a reasonable articulable basis for suspicion.
To paraphrase a well-known sardonic commentary, no good
decision goes unpunished. The Terry decision led to the controversial policy
allowing police officers to stop, interrogate and search New Yorkers to find
illegal guns, on the sole basis of reasonable suspicion. According to The New
York Times, the New York Police Department made 4.4 million stops under the
citywide stop-and-frisk policy between January 2004 and June 2012. "More
than 80 percent of those stopped were Black and Latino people," according
to the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.
In 2013, New York Judge Shira A. Scheindlin ruled that
NYPD's stop-and-frisk tactics violated the U.S Constitution's Fourth Amendment
prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. She didn't say that Terry v.
Ohio was unconstitutional but that the NYPD's tactics were unconstitutional.
Many New Yorkers of color were arrested, convicted and jailed as a result of
NYPD's unconstitutional conduct.
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett,
Kelly & George P.C. His book The Executioner's Toll, 2010 was released by
McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on
X @MatthewTMangino.
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