News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Meth Labs Make For Doubling In Search Warrants |
Title: | US MO: Meth Labs Make For Doubling In Search Warrants |
Published On: | 2002-01-26 |
Source: | The Southeast Missourian (MO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 22:53:10 |
METH LABS MAKE FOR DOUBLING IN SEARCH WARRANTS
JACKSON, Mo. -- Law enforcement officers in Cape Girardeau set a
record for the number of search warrants issued in 2001, nearly
doubling the number issued the year before.
According to the Cape Girardeau Prosecuting Attorney's office, there
were 105 search warrants issued, compared to 52 in 2000.
Prosecutor Morley Swingle attributes the increase to a well-trained
local police force and to the vigorous activity of the Southeast
Missouri Drug Task Force.
He said 46 search warrants were filed by Assistant Prosecuting
Attorney Angel M. Woodruff, who works closely with the task force. The
majority of those warrants were prompted by increased methamphetamine
activity in the area.
Officers in the county regularly attend search and seizure training
sessions to learn when to contact a prosecuting attorney, file an
affidavit and take their request to a judge.
"Sometimes you've got to type fast," said Swingle, who has been filing
warrants for the prosecutor's office since 1982.
Judge's choice
A judge ultimately decides if a search is reasonable, weighing an
individual's right to privacy against the government's responsibility
to ferret out crime, Swingle said.
Swingle said the use of a search warrant is a way to "bulletproof" a
case, whereas consent searches -- warrantless searches that occur
after an officer has obtained verbal permission -- can draw out legal
proceedings. Swingle teaches search and seizure law to municipal
judges and also teaches a section on the subject at the university.
During a court hearing Thursday, Linda and Jimmie McKinney of Oak
Ridge, Mo., told the judge that a SEMO Drug Task Force officer had no
right to search their property in an Aug. 8 incident.
Brad Smith, a detective with the task force, testified that Linda
McKinney gave him permission to search. The search resulted in
officers finding marijuana, methamphetamine and materials for a meth
lab.
Since officers didn't have a warrant, the judge had to decide who was
telling the truth. He decided in Smith's favor.
When consent is challenged, a judge must decide whether circumstances
demonstrate that consent was voluntary, Swingle said.
Some factors include:
a.. Whether the individual granting consent is in custody
a.. The number of officers
a.. The degree to which officers emphasized their authority
a.. Whether weapons were displayed
a.. Possible fraud by officers
a.. Whether the person consenting was intoxicated
a.. The age, intelligence and education of the consenting
individual
a.. Length of questioning
a.. The use of physical punishment, deprivation of food or
sleep
a.. Whether the person was advised of the right to refuse
consent
Weighing all of these factors, Swingle said, if an officer can make a
reasonable argument to get a search warrant, he should.
Obtaining physical evidence is always better for police, said Cape
Girardeau Police Chief Steve Strong.
"I'd often rather have evidence than an eyewitness," he said.
"Evidence doesn't get confused and doesn't make mistakes."
Exceptions to warrants
In some cases, search warrants are unnecessary.
If an officer finds legal cause for an arrest, the law allows
searching the area within the person's reach. That includes nail
scrapings and examining hands for gunshot residue.
At a bench trial Tuesday, 18-year-old Edward Bryan was convicted of
firing a gun at his estranged girlfriend's door.
Physical evidence included a spent shell casing at the scene and
gunshot residue on Bryan's hands.
In the case of exigent circumstances, sometimes called emergency
exceptions, the prosecutor has to be able to prove that if officers
had stopped to get a warrant, someone may have been injured or
evidence would have been destroyed.
"Those police officers have to make these decisions in a split
second," Swingle said. "That's why you want experienced officers on
the street."
JACKSON, Mo. -- Law enforcement officers in Cape Girardeau set a
record for the number of search warrants issued in 2001, nearly
doubling the number issued the year before.
According to the Cape Girardeau Prosecuting Attorney's office, there
were 105 search warrants issued, compared to 52 in 2000.
Prosecutor Morley Swingle attributes the increase to a well-trained
local police force and to the vigorous activity of the Southeast
Missouri Drug Task Force.
He said 46 search warrants were filed by Assistant Prosecuting
Attorney Angel M. Woodruff, who works closely with the task force. The
majority of those warrants were prompted by increased methamphetamine
activity in the area.
Officers in the county regularly attend search and seizure training
sessions to learn when to contact a prosecuting attorney, file an
affidavit and take their request to a judge.
"Sometimes you've got to type fast," said Swingle, who has been filing
warrants for the prosecutor's office since 1982.
Judge's choice
A judge ultimately decides if a search is reasonable, weighing an
individual's right to privacy against the government's responsibility
to ferret out crime, Swingle said.
Swingle said the use of a search warrant is a way to "bulletproof" a
case, whereas consent searches -- warrantless searches that occur
after an officer has obtained verbal permission -- can draw out legal
proceedings. Swingle teaches search and seizure law to municipal
judges and also teaches a section on the subject at the university.
During a court hearing Thursday, Linda and Jimmie McKinney of Oak
Ridge, Mo., told the judge that a SEMO Drug Task Force officer had no
right to search their property in an Aug. 8 incident.
Brad Smith, a detective with the task force, testified that Linda
McKinney gave him permission to search. The search resulted in
officers finding marijuana, methamphetamine and materials for a meth
lab.
Since officers didn't have a warrant, the judge had to decide who was
telling the truth. He decided in Smith's favor.
When consent is challenged, a judge must decide whether circumstances
demonstrate that consent was voluntary, Swingle said.
Some factors include:
a.. Whether the individual granting consent is in custody
a.. The number of officers
a.. The degree to which officers emphasized their authority
a.. Whether weapons were displayed
a.. Possible fraud by officers
a.. Whether the person consenting was intoxicated
a.. The age, intelligence and education of the consenting
individual
a.. Length of questioning
a.. The use of physical punishment, deprivation of food or
sleep
a.. Whether the person was advised of the right to refuse
consent
Weighing all of these factors, Swingle said, if an officer can make a
reasonable argument to get a search warrant, he should.
Obtaining physical evidence is always better for police, said Cape
Girardeau Police Chief Steve Strong.
"I'd often rather have evidence than an eyewitness," he said.
"Evidence doesn't get confused and doesn't make mistakes."
Exceptions to warrants
In some cases, search warrants are unnecessary.
If an officer finds legal cause for an arrest, the law allows
searching the area within the person's reach. That includes nail
scrapings and examining hands for gunshot residue.
At a bench trial Tuesday, 18-year-old Edward Bryan was convicted of
firing a gun at his estranged girlfriend's door.
Physical evidence included a spent shell casing at the scene and
gunshot residue on Bryan's hands.
In the case of exigent circumstances, sometimes called emergency
exceptions, the prosecutor has to be able to prove that if officers
had stopped to get a warrant, someone may have been injured or
evidence would have been destroyed.
"Those police officers have to make these decisions in a split
second," Swingle said. "That's why you want experienced officers on
the street."
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