NOW HOLD ON ONE SECOND HERE! There are no conditions on the Fourth Amendment in the
Bill of Rights, so the courts are simply justifying the unconstitutional
behavior of the government, and by so doing, delegitimize themselves.
The U.S. Supreme Court apparently has decided to let Americans choose
between their Second and Fourth Amendment rights, leaving untouched a
lower court decision that supported the use of a violent SWAT attack on a
man’s home because authorities were concerned about the mere presence
of a weapon.
The Rutherford Institute
represented John Quinn, who was shot in the no-knock raid by officers
because he thought his home was being invaded by criminals and reached
for his weapon.
Attorneys with William Olson P.C. and the the United States Justice Foundation also submitted the friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of Quinn.
They were appalled that the reason the officers chose to conduct a
violent no-knock raid was based on the presence of a firearm, as if the
weapon “could somehow load itself, disengage its own safety, open the
door, and begin to fire at the police.”
Quinn was targeted by police because his son – who was suspected of
possessing drugs – lived in the same home. His son was absent, and
police records reveal officers knew that fact when they broke into
Quinn’s home in a no-knock, SWAT-team style forced entry.
Rutherford said the decision lets stand a lower court ruling that
“essentially makes lawful gun ownership and possession grounds for
police to evade the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment and
improperly penalizes and limits the Second Amendment right to bear
arms.”
“Whatever the issue might be, whether it’s mass surveillance,
no-knock raids, or the right to freely express one’s views about the
government, we’ve moved into a new age in which the rights of the
citizenry are being treated as a secondary concern by the White House,
Congress, the courts, and their vast holding of employees, including law
enforcement officials,’ said John W. Whitehead, president of the
Rutherford Institute and author of “A Government of Wolves: The Emerging
American Police State.”
“The disconnect, of course, is that the Constitution establishes a
far different scenario in which government officials, including the
police, are accountable to ‘we the people.’ For it to be otherwise, for
government concerns to trump individual freedoms, with government
officials routinely sidestepping the Constitution and reinterpreting the
law to their own purposes, makes a mockery of everything this nation is
supposed to stand for – self-government, justice, and the rule of law.”
The case began in August 2006
when police in Collin County, Texas, obtained a warrant for Quinn’s
home. Lower courts rejected Quinn’s objection to the no-knock entry on
the grounds that because police had information that guns were present
at the residence, they were justified in making a forced and unannounced
invasion.
Quinn’s advocates argued that the tradeoff – of Fourth Amendment rights for Second Amendment rights, was improper.
“Although police had obtained a search warrant for John Quinn’s home
based on information that Quinn’s son might possess drugs, the warrant
did not authorize police to enter the residence without knocking and
announcing their entry. During the raid, Quinn was shot by police
because he had reached for his lawfully owned firearm, thinking that his
home was being invaded by criminals,” Rutherford explained.
The friend-of-the-court brief agreed.
“John Quinn lawfully kept firearms in his home for self-defense,
exercising a freedom which this court has recognized to be a ‘core’ and
‘fundamental’ right protected by the 2nd Amendment. Yet based on the
presence of firearms alone, the police conducted a no-knock raid,
smashing down Quinn’s front door in the middle of the night, leading to
his being shot,” the brief explained.
“The police knew that Quinn’s son, Brian, the target of the raid, was
not at home, and they knew that Quinn was a law abiding man. Indeed,
the state of Texas had certified him as such by licensing him to carry a
concealed weapon. Yet the Texas court embraced the prosecution’s theory
that the police were in such grave danger from a sleeping man and an
inanimate object that they were permitted to dispense with 4th Amendment
requirement to knock on the door and announce themselves.”
The attorneys argued: “At common law, a person was presumed a
trespasser if he was present on the property of another without
permission, as the police were in this case. Thus, the police needed to
justify their presence in Quinn’s home. Although they had a warrant to
search the home, they did not have any valid legal justification for
using a battering ram to get through the door, making them nothing more
than trespassers.”
The brief warned that if “police are now permitted to justify
no-knock raids any time there is a firearm in a residence, no American
home is safe from a terrifying, middle of the night, home invasion.”
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