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Resistance
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Title: California Appeals Decision Limits Car Confiscation- California Appeals Court decision limiting car seizures outside the home of a motorist
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/15/1506.asp
Published: Dec 13, 2006
Author: /
Post Date: 2007-10-24 13:13:34 by Artisan
Keywords: None
Views: 123
Comments: 4

California Appeals Decision Limits Car Confiscation Full text of a California Appeals Court decision limiting car seizures outside the home of a motorist.

A three-judge California Appeals Court panel issued a unanimous ruling last week limiting the ability of police to seize automobiles from outside a motorist's own home without a compelling safety reason to do so.

The case began when Santa Monica Police Officer Derek Morton stopped Ricky Conley Williams for not wearing a seatbelt, just outside of Williams' home. Because Williams was driving a rental car at the time, he did not have the vehicle's registration or insurance information. Officer Morton decided to arrest Williams on an outstanding warrant over a traffic ticket that the same officer had issued months before. In the course of impounding the car, Morton searched the vehicle and found a gun in a bag in the back seat.

Morton said he impounded the car because that was the action he always took in such cases, but Santa Monica police have no policy regarding the seizure of vehicles under these circumstances.

"That a validly licensed driver in legal possession of the car parked legally in front of his own home was irrelevant to Morton's decision to impound," the court explained.

A trial court found Williams guilty, but the appellate court disagreed stating that the gun was found only after an unconstitutional search that preceded the illegal vehicle seizure.

"No community caretaking function was served by impounding appellant's car," the court wrote. "The car was legally parked at the curb in front of appellant's home. The possibility that the vehicle would be stolen, broken into, or vandalized was no greater than if Morton had not stopped and arrested appellant as he returned home."

Source: California v. Williams (Court of Appeal, State of California, 12/13/2006)

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#1. To: All (#0)

CALIFORNIA VS WILLIAMS is a very interesting case and I recommend reading the ruling. it's 8 short pages. http://www.thenewspaper.com/rlc/docs/2006/ca-williams.pdf

It all started in Santa Monica CA where a guy not wearing his seatbelt was tailed by a cop, pulled over in front of his house. The guy had a previous warrant for an unpaid traffic ticket (given by the same cop). The cop then arrested him, illegally searched his car and impounded and towed his car. The court ruled that it was an illegal impound, thus the search illegal and finding of the gun was not admissable. The case also addresses the constitutional reasonableness of impounds in front of people's houses.

Artisan  posted on  2007-10-24   13:17:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#1)

Here is another very interesting site:

LAW ENFORCEMENT LIABILITY REPORTER http://www.aele.org/law/2003LRDEC/LR2003DEC.html

deals with 'qualified immunity' cases of govt employees/ police officers.

Artisan  posted on  2007-10-24   13:46:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Artisan (#0)

Good news.

And beyond that, the Draconian forfieture laws enacted in the War On some Drugs are abused by certain law enforcement redneck fascists as legal get rich quick schemes. A travesty for the innocent victims thereof.

Register to vote for Ron Paul NOW.

wbales  posted on  2007-10-24   15:07:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: wbales (#3)

sad part is that most people would never resist or file such legal challenges. There are many interesting and helpful rulings regarding such things, as well as traffic ticket rulings in the state supreme court. I don't follow all of them but will look up relevant info when it applies to me or someone i know.

sad part is that people are too tired and busy to resist the state in most cases. they just 'pay up', or lose their property, concede to the state. it's a damn shame. The economic circumstances dictate this most of the time. people just dont have time money resources or inclination to challenge the state. petty and not-so-petty tyrannies everywhere.

a friend of mine recently had his car towed from in front of his house, because he had purportedly been parked there 72 hours. it was registered. and not an abandoned car. they simply had not driven the car for a few days. the car now has a lein on it and they owe over a thousand, or their credit will be affected. he could have done certain things to circumvent this situation though. a fast response is imperitive in these matters.

In CA, state law allows cities to tow cars that have been parked for over 72 hours, IF there is a city code outlining such. However, this article above and ruling seem to give victim some recourse.

Artisan  posted on  2007-10-24   15:58:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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