"Imagine if we had to go through the process of getting a judicial warrant."
-Speaker of the House Mike Johnson
Those are
the complaining
words of Johnson a Republican from Louisiana, who was voicing
his support for the actions of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),
which now
claims that its agents have the right to forcibly enter private homes
without first obtaining a warrant signed by a judge, reported Reason. According to ICE, its
agents may forcibly enter homes in certain immigration enforcement contexts
based merely on a so-called "administrative warrant," which is not
actually a warrant at all, but is rather just a piece of paper signed by
someone in the executive branch.
To fully appreciate the inherent lawlessness of the Johnson view, simply replace the phrase "getting a judicial warrant" with any constitutional requirement that you like in the above-quoted statement. For example:
"Imagine
if we had to go through the process of guaranteeing freedom of speech."
"Imagine
if we had to go through the process of respecting the right to keep and bear
arms."
"Imagine
if we had to go through the process of paying just compensation when private
property is taken for a public use."
You get
the idea.
When a
government mouthpiece complains that it would be too difficult to follow the
commands of the Constitution in a given context, that's a dead giveaway that
the government is already violating (or planning to violate) the commands of
the Constitution in that context.
The
principle that law enforcement must generally obtain a judicial warrant before
entering a home is well-established in Fourth Amendment caselaw. In California v.
Lange (2019), for example, the U.S. Supreme Court declared, "we
are not eager—more the reverse—to print a new permission slip for entering the
home without a warrant." At issue in that case was a decision by the
California Court of Appeals which said that a police officer may always enter a
suspect's home without a judicial warrant if the officer is in "hot
pursuit" of the suspect and has probable cause to believe that the suspect
has committed a misdemeanor.
But the
Supreme Court overturned that lower court ruling because it violated the Fourth
Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. "When the
totality of circumstances shows an emergency—such as imminent harm to
others," the Court said, "the police may act without waiting."
But "when the nature of the crime, the nature of the flight, and
surrounding facts present no such exigency," the decision held,
"officers must respect the sanctity of the home—which means they must get
a warrant." Indeed, the opinion stated, "when the officer has time to
get a warrant, he must do so—even though the misdemeanant fled."
The Lange decision
also contained a helpful reminder of the warrant requirement's deep roots in
Anglo-American jurisprudence by quoting from a venerable British common law
judgment:
"To
enter a man's house" without a proper warrant, Lord Chief Justice Pratt
proclaimed in 1763, is to attack "the liberty of the subject" and
"destroy the liberty of the kingdom." That was the idea behind the
Fourth Amendment.
Which
brings us back to Johnson, who whined, "imagine if we had to go through
the process of getting a judicial warrant."
But if an
ICE agent has the time to obtain a piece of paper signed by a superior in the
executive branch before heading out to bust down somebody's front door, then
that agent also has the time to obtain a real warrant signed by an actual
judge. As the Supreme Court instructed in Lange, "when the officer
has time to get a warrant, he must do so." The "sanctity of the
home" demands it under our Constitution.
To read more CLICK HERE

No comments:
Post a Comment