
No problem
Any passenger is either 1, a foreigner or 2, an American that felt it was necessary to leave the land of the free (however briefly)
Both are causes for suspicion
The seizure and search of phones and laptops at the US border is unconstitutional, a judge said Tuesday in a landmark ruling. Massachusetts district court judge Denise Casper declared [PDF] that the practice breaks the Fourth Amendment on unreasonable search, and that border agents need to have a “reasonable suspicion” of …
[A] passenger? It might come as a surprise, but there are places where you can – gasp – walk across the border.
And it's the "Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave." But I hope we never get to the point where you have to be brave to want to come back home from visiting other places.
>Home of the Brave
Scotland?
They wish.
Scotland repeatedly elects a political party that brays on almost exclusively about independence and has achieved nothing constructive in its whole history. The one thing it did a achieve was a once in a generation referendum, which it then lost mostly because too many Scots were frightened of change.
Sorry, but that isn't brave, its paralysis, indecision, and fear. And I say that as a Northerner who quite likes the Scots & Scotland.
Not to mention the various totalitarian and authoritarian policies enacted or attempted to enact via the back door by the Nats...
Named Person - every child has a govt snooper allocated to them who can stick their beak into any area without justification including medical records, only slapped down by the supreme court as unlawful after the court of session deemed concerns over it "hyperbole"
Equally Safe - Sounds fair enough doesn't it? Shame its a policy written by Nordic Model Now and the Soroptomists, that conflates Pornography, stripping and prostitution with human trafficking to justify a ban on the aforementioned, along with any form of sex they deem "exploitative" (a very vague and broadbrush term, that generally includes anything outwith vanilla sex and removes agency from sex workers. Nordic Model denounced by Amnesty International in a report, which of course provoked a furious and borderline slanderous response by NMN.....NMN also regularly attack sex positive educators as "groomers" "child abusers" and worse....
Attempting to outlaw Pornography and Strip clubs as "gender violence"
Creating a single Scottish Police force, overseen by the Scottish Policing Authority, which handily is made up of those appointed by.....The SNP....
The SPA are currently without their oversight powers after trying to hold meetings behind closed doors, being opaque in their decision making and worst of all....failing to hold the police to account and simply rubber stamping everything.
Promising a "fairer and more respectful" disability benefit system 2.5 years ago, now announced as a clone of PIP covered in tartan with only VERY minor tweaks
Severe intolerance of dissent and harassment of opponents - opposition offices daubed with swastikas, "Traitors" "Quislings" and worse, snp msps stymying investigations into ministerial colleagues, FM ordering that media FOI requests be treated differently to others, bunker mentality, SNP activists openly hostile and aggressive to anyone who says they won't vote SNP, I got a tirade off one the other day "WHO ARE YOU VOTING FOR" "YOU'D BETTER BE VOTING" "VOTE SNP or you will lose your healthcare" which can be construed in 2 ways - claiming any other party will shut down the NHS and 2 that if you don't vote for the SNP we will find out and cut off your healthcare.
School attainment dropping, Curriculum for Excellence in crisis
Councils broke and cutting services all around to avoid bankruptcy
NHS waiting lists in orbit and health boards cowed into not criticising the lack of funding in exchange for their debts (due to lack of funding) being written off, excuses about "we put in £80million extra this year" which sounds a lot till you see the NHS budget and £80 Million is peeing in the ocean compared to what it needs.
GPs told to cut back what they are prescribing, leaving patients in pain or switched to less effective drugs to save money
Carseview Scandal still rolling on. with NHS Tayside and SNP doing best to bury it with a backhoe
Dundee MP Chris Law embroiled in a scandal after claiming he would set up he would set up a respite centre for disabled children in the castle he bought yet no work has been done, no permissions sought and suddenly he has gone very quiet on the idea.......
Cybernat army ready to jump on anyone who opposes the SNP or independence....with some shocking abuse and threats levelled
Disparaging the media as "fake news" "misreporting Scotland" "MSM lies" and worse with elected members phoning editors etc to pressure them into firing journalists they dislike or having stories stopped...
In the minds of ICE and CPB drones probably, but in a court "reasonable suspicion" usually has a far more restricted meaning. When enough cases will be thrown away because gathered evidences will be deemed gathered illegally, they will have to change their practices. Of course, is the Supreme Court doesn't assert otherwise.
A suit against the relevant agency and the individual, jointly and severally would probably do the trick. The agency would undoubtedly blame the individual in order to defend themselves and as soon as the message got out that the employer is simply going to hang its employees out to dry that would be the end of it.
No, "the System" backs the most powerful people. If you want to take down a president, you need more than cast-iron evidence and multiple taped confessions, you also need truckloads of cash to dump on senators' lawns. But if you just want to take down a nameless border security drone, all you need is one photogenic witness and a suitably motivated lawyer.
I'm not so worried about my case being thrown out, as I am worried about some low-paid CBP or ICE agent clawing through my personal info and using it for some nefarious purpose. Don't forget that every tin-pot county sheriff's office clerk has access to NCIC and every other data-base about you, your kids and your ex-spouse's personal total history. There is no public interest in allowing warrentless, casual, low-class free-for-all access to your private finances, health, employment, information.
[A] passenger? It might come as a surprise, but there are places where you can – gasp – walk across the border.
I can attest to that. Back in the late '70's I had been wandering around back roads in Northern VT, and happened upon an unused border crossing (gate, guard shack & all) on a "road" that consisted of little more than a couple ruts in the ground. And a sign on the gate asked any persons crossing at that location to please report in at the customs station on the main road.
Me thinks you equate "free" with "libertine".
Home of the Free refers not to behavior, but freedom from (foreign) government oppression. You know, "that tyrant, the King".
Unfortunately, it didn't take long after the Revolution for the Union's own government to take on oppressive traits. But hey, it least it was "by the people, for the people, and of the people" instead of some foreign King and his Parliament...
The Fourth Amendment protects US Citizen's Rights. There is nothing in the Bill of Rights that extends those Rights to all people. NON citizens even with permission to reside in the US do not automatically qualify for those Rights. Giving those Rights to NON citizens only cheapens their value to those born with them or those who work to legally obtain them.
We'll start with the fact that your comment is factually incorrect. The fourteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution makes all rights guaranteed by that constitution, including the rights under the fourth amendment, applicable to all "persons" in the United States. This is obviously everybody, citizen or noncitizen. However, someone did argue as you did that well, how about we don't. The Supreme Court decided that that idea was wrong. See the case Yick Wo v Hopkins. So your statements are wrong on all counts.
In addition to being factually wrong, they are also morally wrong. Nobody is arguing here that all rights of a citizen should be given to noncitizens, but basic human rights should be. That is also in various legal documents, including the U.N. Convention on Human Rights, to which the U.S. is a signatory. In fact, many of the rights in that document are very similar to the ones specified in the U.S. Constitution.
EXCEPT, according to CBP, at the border (and within 100 miles of it).
So far, this has held up. I wonder if we are beginning to see some cracks in the wall. Logically, US citizens should have the same rights at the border that they have inside the country. We shall see.
That's one of the dangerous slopes some US forces have taken after being scared to death by events that shown all their complacency and unpreparedness.
Instead of fixing the real issue they are just trying to show the muscles, until someone will remember them they are violating their own Constitution, and many basic human rights.
I believe countries abroad should start to reciprocate to remember USaians they don't write the world laws, nor they are exempt from local ones. And here 100 miles form the border and any international airport means the whole country....
You mean that when a US citizen comes to Europe, our Constitutions don't apply and we can do whatever we like with them? And obviously the same can happen elsewhere?
For example we can jail forever without due process those two US drug-addicted men who stabbed to death an Italian cop while looking for cocaine in Rome?
You may be surprised to know that there are some basic rights that protect anyone in a given country - plus countries expects some kind of reciprocity so their citizens don't become without any right when abroad.
Guess you never put your nose outside US.
The Fourth Amendment protects US Citizen's Rights...
I'm not a Constitutional Scholar, or even a lawyer, but I have read the Constitution. I don't see anything in it that it says it only applies to US citizens.
You must be thinking of some other Constitution. I'm guessing you also have a Republican Bible. That's the one that doesn't have "Thou shall not kill" in it.
Ever thought they're not Christians or Jews and thus not necessarily subject to the Ten Commandments? Even the Founding Fathers were mostly Deists who felt God was taking a "hands-off" approach to his Creation.
PS. Anyway, the whole "God" business is pretty recent: mostly in reaction to the Red Scare (where they associated atheism with communism, the Soviets, etc.).
When someone thinks he's born with basic human rights others should not be endowed with, you see where he's form and where he's going to...
Moreover it's interesting the Founders asserted those rights to exist even before USA existed and the Constitution was written....
One big difference between USA and most other countries is that IIUC, US citizens while abroad must continue to comply with most US laws in addition to the laws of the country they are in unless doing so conflicts with the laws of the other country. Most other countries do not require its citizens to comply with laws that do not exist in the country they are visiting. Theoretically a 20 year old US citizen who has an alcoholic drink in a UK pub could be prosecuted upon their return to the US.
Although recently I believe the law in the UK was changed so that it is an offence for a UK citizen to have sex with another UK citizen who is under he age of 16 even if they are at the time both in a country where the age of consent is lower than the ages of the UK citizens. Previously they would have had to have been breaking the law of both the UK and the other country before a prosecution could have been brought.
I'm pretty sure that if you want to come back to the UK you shouldn't be flying off to #SomeRandomCountry to molest children (as defined by UK law as under 16 for sex related issues).
It was not long ago that being a gay male couple was illegal in the UK until both parties were 18 of older. They probably wouldn't advertise the fact that they were a couple if they went on holiday to say Russia?
So should you adhere to the law of the country they are in, the one they are going back to or both?
Also I thought the US rights were only applicable to persons in the US? If you haven't gone through passport control are you not still in 'international waters' or something? Or maybe just a short trip from the Guantanamo Bay luxury resort?
"Also I thought the US rights were only applicable to persons in the US? If you haven't gone through passport control are you not still in 'international waters' or something?"
As I understand it, the USA is one of the few (only?) countries to not have a concept of "in transit" for international travellers "passing through". Once you cross their border, you are under their control in terms of law. Worse, they have a possibly unique definition of "border" such that if you are within 100 miles of a border crossing point, the law is different to the (very few) remaining parts of the country that are not classed as the "border" with fewer, if any, rights.
There are numerous laws, especially tax laws, that are interpreted differently in the US than anywhere else. By law, for example, you become subject to US tax laws "simply by being there long enough", regardless of whether you are a US citizen or not. They do this by saying "Once you have been here a certain number of months, you are a resident and subject to US tax laws". And, you would think that this "residency" would stop automatically by simply "no longer being there for a sufficient number of months, but, nooo, you have to let them know that you are gone and won't come back, or else the long arm of US tax law can still get you". True in fact, and by law. Luckily, if you are a poor sap with nothing but a silly pay-check to your name, they won't come after you. But, if you are a "worthwhile billionaire" who has not bribed enough politicians with protection money, then they are gonna get you.
Yup, the Americans have often made laws that are valid "wherever, whenever, forevermore". Their mindset is weird, overbearing and without regard to the laws of other countries, similar to the million year contract a scientology member is supposed to sign.
So, people who are running governments and make laws often are certifiably insane. Most laws should come with an expiration date.
The British "sex tourism" law is an exception to the usual rules, at least as applied in British courts. It's justified purely on the Think Of The Children rule. The only other law I can think of that the UK applies extra-territorially is for war criminals.
If you think laws don't apply to people who haven't gone through passport control, just imagine what would happen if you turned to the person on your left and clubbed them to death with your suitcase. Do you really think there's any airport on earth where you could do that, and not be arrested and tried by the local authorities?
"ne big difference between USA and most other countries is that IIUC, US citizens while abroad must continue to comply with most US laws in addition to the laws of the country they are in unless doing so conflicts with the laws of the other country. Most other countries do not require its citizens to comply with laws that do not exist in the country they are visiting. Theoretically a 20 year old US citizen who has an alcoholic drink in a UK pub could be prosecuted upon their return to the US"
You are wrong . The only thing you can be prsocuted for in a forgien land by the US as an American is traveling to have sex with a minor, not paying your taxes to Uncle same and killing another american. Other wise you can get drunk, do drugs and kill kids and not be proscuted when you get back(unless those kids are American
Let's look at the actual text of section 1, shall we?
Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
When I look at this, the term citizen is quite specifically used where it is necessary; the equal protection clause states person
That distinction is important; had it meant citizens only in the equal protection clause, the text could easily have stated "citizen", but it does not; it states "person".
Having had a constitutional lawyer for a girlfriend many years ago, I was immersed in this stuff for years.
Interesting side note: The bill of rights (otherwise known as the first ten amendments to the Constitution of the United States) was held to apply to the states by application of the Due process clause of the 14th amendment.
The 14th amendment is one of the Reconstruction Amendments
The 13th abolished slavery and was ratified about 19 months prior to the 14th and therefore by that time, no person could (legally) be a slave within the USA.
An attitude that will put USA in the same league of North Korea and the ISIS "Caliphate".
I hope some adult will soon understand the long-term damage some too scared idiots looking too much like the grandsons of McCarthy are doing to US reputation abroad.
If I am not mistaken, they already have done something like that. I'd have to look that up, but there are
certain US laws that, essentially, make areas within a certain distance, inside the US, from US borders
to be "constitution-free zones", where "anything goes".
The US police and drug enforcement people are also benefiting from laws that make "certain amounts of cash" found on persons "within drug trade corridors" (i.e. any major highway) as a "potentially suspect proceed from criminal activity seizeable by law" without due process. They get around the pesky due process idea by "calling the cash to be guilty of a potential crime", not necessarily the person carrying it.
Thus they can take your money, and you can't get it back. Not even by proving your "non-guilt". Because, hey, it was your money that was "guilty looking", not you!
If you think I am kidding, be assured that a number of US States have made laws to invalidate that particular fairly crazy Federal law within the borders of their particular states. Because, yes, there are still a few reasonable people left in the US. Not many, but a few.
If you ask me, all US senators and elected officials are guilty of unconstitutional behavior merely by voting for any number of laws that violate the constitution over and over. They all ought to be put in jail.
But I am too literal, and not pragmatic enough for their taste.
"Giving those Rights to NON citizens only cheapens their value to those born with them or those who work to legally obtain them."
The value of a right should not exist only by dint of its denial to others. If it does, you don't have a system based on rights, but on discrimination.
"The value of a right should not exist only by dint of its denial to others. If it does, you don't have a system based on rights, but on discrimination."
But without discrimination, how can one distinguish a citizen from a noncitizen? ANY kind of classification by default is a form of discrimination.
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"I see that's a digital device you got there. And you got a shifty look about you; nervously glancing about I'd say. Hey, Chief, don't you think this guy's got a shifty look?"
"Yes. Grab that laptop and search it. He's a shifty one, alright"
- - -
Case before the US Supreme Court: probable cause at the border. Five "Conservative" Justices; Four "Outvoted" Justices. Hmm.. wonder which way that decision is likely to go... Oh, and as for those 700K "Dreamers?" 2020 is the year to start packin' their bags; the Court has already signaled they're gonna be leavin' on a Jet plane if they can afford the ticket; otherwise, the Tijuana bus will do.
Except for one thing. The Riley decision that forms the basis for this case was ruled unanimously (meaning ALL the Jusitces, conservative ones included) ruled against the government. Barring the two recent additions, the remaining seven Justices would be going back on their own word.
It depends.
Broadly speaking, the conservative justices attempt to discern the literal meaning of the Constitution while the liberal justices tend to incorporate more subjective terms like "disenfranchisement", "fairness", and "desirable".
Liberal justices are more likely to rule according to what the Constitution ought to be, or would be if written in this day and age, while conservative justices defer to the states for amending the constitution through the codified process for that.
Many people fail to understand these key differences between conservative and liberal justices. This leads to bemusing statements like "justice X is becoming a liberal" if he rules against, for instance, restrictions on abortion. The opposite it true; the justice is merely consistent in applying his conviction that it is the Constitution and not his personal moral beliefs that determines whether a law is constitutional or not.
Read the artilce: "That means border agents will continue to be able to search devices at the border, though will have to justify doing so."
And their subsequent actions will decide if they acted lawfully or not.
The best line of action in not to be fully uncooperative - it's to be calm, and let them know you know the law.
Of course if you don't care you can just bend and let them do whatever they like.
The judge won't be around when they haul you in, but anything they find would then be inadmissable in court. Border agents can still act like the bullies they are...
...but it will just take a couple of cases of clear criminals going free because the clear proof of their crimes was illegally taken off their devices without having reasonable suspicion* before their supervisors rein in that behaviour
*When it comes to a court, they would need to prove there were grounds of reasonable suspicion *before* the search happened
"
*When it comes to a court, they would need to prove there were grounds of reasonable suspicion *before* the search happened
"
Theoretically. However if incriminating evidence was found, it's not too difficult to make something up post-fact (e.g. "He appeared nervous and displayed other classic signs of guilt."). This tends to be believed because the suspicions, no matter how bogus, have been proven to be correct.
It's the innocent people who were searched and then sue where the legality of the search gets the most scrutiny.
if you're a US citizen and green card holders, all others are free game. Not that other borders in the world offer you better protection, there's always this gateway excuse of "suspicion / terrorism-related investigation", etc, which will get royally fucked, whichever country you enter / exit, democracies and regimes alike.
Now, pay me my roubles, cause I'm doin gospadin Putin's dirty work, etc.
Nice place to visit*
Not really. Been to the US twice, under protest, for business. Neither visit could be remotely described as "nice".
From snide immigration officials (so what can a bunch of limeys do that an american couldn't do better?), through insulting hotel staff (what the hell kinda accent is that anyway?) to being refused service at a roadside diner (partly because we "talked funny", but mostly, we believed, because we were travelling with an experienced barrister they described as a "niggrah"), both experiences were nasty, brutish, but thankfully short.
"Schwartz argues that the “logic should be” that all visitors are given equal protections.
(Bear in mind, if you show up on a visa, you can be turned away for whatever reason, realistically speaking.)"
Of course, even though visitors are given equal protection from unwarranted search, in practice visitors who don't voluntarily submit to having their devices searched could be turned back. It wouldn't happen in practice 'en masse' because of the resulting uproar, but my understanding is that it could still happen sporadically and it would be legal.
It could, but if it is even a little more than extremely sporadic, chances are pretty good Americans get refused in other countries for completely spurious reasons as pay back. And yes, half a couple will be admitted and the other half refused, just to make it really stick.
"in practice visitors who don't voluntarily submit to having their devices searched could be turned back"
Lets explore what might then happen.
Such a visitor, possibly getting the EFF or the like behind them (after all it's the next logical step for such organisations) sues the individual guard, any supervisor who might get involved and the agency. The argument would be that the intending visitor has been issued a visa so there would need to be a good reason for turning them away and without such reason the implication must be that it was a refusal to undergo an unconstitutional search. (And could there be any such thing as a voluntary search?) The agency then has to either try to defend itself against in a dubious case occasioned by the actions of one of its employees or side with the plaintiff and throw the employee(s) under the nearest bus.
>practically speaking they must submit to a search.
Its also really difficult to pursue a court case if you've just been deported (or just plain refused entry).
But then who would be dumb enough to carry a device full of "interesting" data over a border? That's what the Internet's for.
What bothers me is that, at the end, when the courts have decided that the CBP and friends have neither common sense nor a good understanding of the constitution, the same people will still be employed there.
If the people employed by the government would fail a citizenship test, that's okay? I think it would be wonderful for every American to have to pass the same citizenship test immigrants must. Hey, call that native-born citizenship merely a learner's permit! Though "Old one" above would never ever graduate...
Technically speaking all of us are a hue of brown.
For the fun of it I recently put my supposedly "white" hand under a color scanner for paint pigments. The computer judged my hand to be "red". Certainly not "white". (R: 202, G: 130, B: 100).
"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."
I'm not writing this to get up or down votes, this is the truth.
You think laws will change how we interact with people? not a chance.
If we want look at or just take your device, or you, we will.
Don't want your stuff or person confiscated, keep a low profile, be passive in your social media post, be anti gun, anti self defense, pro government. Say "thank you for keeping me safe" when approached by government security. When we check your ID (in the right system) your risk assessment score is a guide. (cumulative analyzed data on maybe 25% of the population, not being ranked gives you a weaker score for being safe).
You know what "reasonable suspicion" is, it's what ever I call it. "you looked nervous to me" "it looked like you were hiding something" it's my personal opinion/judgment.
What reasonable suspicion is not "they had a gun hanging out of they pocket" "they were screaming ala akbar and running" those things will get you shot on site. Reasonable suspicion is in all truth - the golden ticket.
"You know what "reasonable suspicion" is, it's what ever I call it. "you looked nervous to me" "it looked like you were hiding something" it's my personal opinion/judgment."
Not quite, as there is court precedent establishing a legal standard to "reasonable suspicion". Cases have been thrown out on account of "loose" interpretations of the term. You try that trick with an actual citizen, especially one with unknown connections to the Feds, you're looking at things turning ugly fast.