COURT RULES THAT 2017 BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINTS IN WOODSTOCK, NH WERE UNCONSTITUTIONAL
Plymouth, NH
 – The New Hampshire Circuit Court has ruled that the border patrol 
checkpoint that occurred in August 2017 on Interstate
 93 in Woodstock, New Hampshire was “unconstitutional under both State 
and federal law.”  Woodstock is a small town (population 1,374) in the 
White Mountains—a popular tourist attraction—that is approximately 90 
driving miles from the Canadian border. 
The
 American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire (“ACLU-NH”) challenged 
the constitutionality of this border patrol checkpoint on behalf of 16 
individuals.  These 16 individuals
 were travelling in New Hampshire lawfully and were seized and searched 
during this checkpoint without any suspicion that they had committed a 
crime.  The State ultimately charged these individuals with allegedly 
possessing small amounts of drugs for personal
 use.  These 16 individuals are being represented by Gilles Bissonnette 
(Legal Director for the ACLU-NH), Professor Buzz Scherr from UNH School 
of Law, and defense attorney Mark Sisti. 
During
 this border patrol checkpoint, the Woodstock Police Department (“WPD”) 
worked in concert with federal United States Customs and Border 
Protection (“CBP”) to circumvent the
 independent protections provided by the New Hampshire Constitution 
against dog-sniff searches in the absence of a warrant or reasonable 
suspicion.  Specifically, CBP agents used dog-sniff searches in 
situations where New Hampshire law enforcement would have
 been barred from conducting similar searches. The CBP then turned over 
to the WPD resulting evidence from these federal searches for state drug
 prosecutions. 
The
 Circuit Court ruled that the “evidence was seized in violation of the 
constitutional rights recognized” under the New Hampshire Constitution. 
 As the Court explained, “given
 that the defendants in this matter are facing prosecution in the State 
court for violations of State laws, the constitutional protections of 
the New Hampshire Constitution should apply.”  The Court added: “[T]he 
inadmissibility of the evidence does not change
 based on the fact that it was seized by federal officers and then 
handed over to the State.”  Indeed, according to the Court, CPB and the 
WPD “were working in collaboration with each other with the 
understanding that the WPD would take possession of any drugs
 seized below the federal guidelines for prosecution in federal court 
and bring charges in this [state] court based on that evidence.” 
The
 Court also separately ruled that this border patrol checkpoint, given 
the facts of this case, violated the Fourth Amendment to the United 
States Constitution, which prohibits
 unreasonable searches and seizures.  Under the Fourth Amendment, a 
border patrol checkpoint is unconstitutional if its primary purpose is 
to detect drugs.  The Court concluded that, based on the evidence 
presented, “it is patently clear that the primary purpose
 of WPD being present at the checkpoint in August [was] to accept the 
illegal drugs confiscated by the CBP searches in order to prosecute the 
defendants on state drug charges.”  The Court added: “[T]he State and 
federal authorities were absolutely working in
 collaboration with each other.”  Thus, the Court ruled, “while the 
stated purpose of the checkpoints in this matter was screening for 
immigration violations, the primary purpose of the action was detection 
and seizure of drugs.”
“This
 decision is a victory for civil liberties.  As the Court ruled, these 
checkpoints flagrantly violated the New Hampshire Constitution and the 
Fourth Amendment,” said Gilles
 Bissonnette, the Legal Director for the ACLU-NH and co-counsel on the 
case.  “CPB and the WPD searched and seized hundreds, if not thousands, 
of the individuals during the summer tourist season without any reason 
to believe that these individuals had committed
 a crime.  This is not how a free society works.”
“The
 New Hampshire and Federal Constitutions do not allow law enforcement to
 engage in a fishing expedition for criminal activity.  Yet this is 
precisely what happened here,” said
 Buzz Scherr, a professor of law from UNH School of Law and co-counsel 
on the case. 
“The
 checkpoints ignored the presumption of innocence and assumed that all 
those passing through were guilty of criminal activity.  This ‘ends 
justifies the means’ approach is precisely
 what the New Hampshire and Federal Constitutions have rejected since 
their inception,” said Mark Sisti, who was counsel on the case.

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment