Aug. 14, 2006
NEWS ANALYSIS: NYPD Beats ACLU in Court Battle over Anti-Terrorism Program
By Jim Kouri
Special to Huntington News Network
A US appeals court ruled in favor of New York City Police Department
conducting random bag searches at subway station entrances throughout the
city. The court said that it viewed the random searches "as an adequate
method to curb terrorism."
"In light of the thwarted plots to bomb New York City's subway system, its
continued desirability as a target, and the recent bombings of
transportation systems in Madrid, Moscow, and London, the risk to public
safety is substantial and real," the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals said
in its ruling.
The court shot down the New York (American) Civil Liberties Union position
that random bag searches were unconstitutional and ineffective for pinning
terrorists. The NYCLU had filed a lawsuit against the NYPD upon learning of
the random subway station searches in what many police officers -- including
this writer's cousin who is involved in supervising the searches --
characterize as a knee-jerk reaction to protecting New Yorkers from
terrorism.
The court had heard testimony from counterterrorism experts who argued and
demonstrated the effectiveness of the searches.
"The expert testimony established that terrorists seek predictable and
vulnerable targets, and the program generates uncertainty that frustrates
that goal, which in turn, deters and attack," the court said.
While the court concurred that the searches do invade the riders' privacy,
"the kind of search at issue here minimally intrudes upon that interest" as
random searches were limited to bags and only last seconds. The searches are
viewed as unobtrusive by NYPD officers. This writer's police officer cousin
said that of the thousands of subway passengers who've had bags searched,
perhaps two or three complained about the procedure.
"Most New Yorkers look at the searches as something to talk about at the
water cooler and they take them in good stride. You'll always have a couple
of people who will mouth-off, but they're few and far between," said Officer
Edna Aguayo.
The court's final decision follows the events in the United Kingdom
revealing the terrorist plot to bomb passenger aircraft destined for US
citizens.
"The program -- whose constitutionality two federal courts have now
recognized -- enhances the safety of millions of New York City subway
riders," said Kate O'Brien Ahlers, spokeswoman for the New York City Law
Department.
The ACLU continues to file their nuisance lawsuits following the
announcement of just about any anti-terrorism program, whether it be
national or local. In the case of the subway bag searches, their attorneys
cited Fourth Amendment violations. The amendment protects citizens from
"unreasonable search and seizure."
In essence, the circuit court of appeals found the searches reasonable.
Another case being pursued by the NYCLU, which is the New York chapter of
the ACLU, is one involving city police entering the immigration status of
non-citizens they've arrested.
NYCLU and ACLU were among several organizations that filed a joint complaint
on behalf of various immigration-advocacy groups. The complaint claimed that
this policy has induced state and local police to make federal immigration
arrests that Congress has forbidden.
The suit seeks to stop the police from continuing the policy while removing
all relevant information from the criminal database. The ACLU claims that
Congress has been quite specific in describing the documents that may be
included in the National Crime Information Center database, in recognition
of the need to guard against the too casual inclusion of names in the
criminal database and the recognition that such information is accessible to
local police agencies across the country.
Opponents of the ACLU say that the purpose of this legal action is to
prevent the federal government from gathering information on crimes
committed by illegal aliens for statistical purposes. They say the ACLU --
which very sympathetic to illegal aliens -- wants to prevent citizens from
learning how many crimes are committed by illegal aliens in the United
States.
* * *
Jim Kouri is currently fifth vice-president of the National Association of
Chiefs of Police and he's a staff writer for the New Media Alliance
(thenma.org). He's former chief at a New York City housing project in
Washington Heights nicknamed "Crack City" by reporters covering the drug war
in the 1980s. In addition, he served as director of public safety at a New
Jersey university and director of security for several major organizations.
Kouri has appeared as on-air commentator for more than 100 TV and radio news
and talk shows including Oprah, McLaughlin Report, CNN Headline News, MTV,
Fox News, etc. His book “Assume The Position” is available at Amazon.Com.
Kouri's own website is located at http://jimkouri.U.S.