Published in LiP
Magazine
[http://www.lipmagazine.org]
BUSTED:
THE CTITZEN'S GUIDE TO SURVIVING POLICE ENCOUNTERS
Director: Stephen Silverman
Flex Your Rights 2005
www.flexyourrights.org
Reviewed
by Ariane Conrad Hyde
06.21.05
It’s one of the more important lines you might someday have
to deliver: “I don’t consent to any searches.” Go ahead: try
it out and make it your own. “I’m sorry, ma’am, but I’m
afraid I don’t consent to searches.” If you don’t practice
this sentence—an assertion of one of your most important rights under
the Constitution—you might easily be overwhelmed in an encounter with
law enforcement. This warning is offered by Ira Glasser, former longtime director
of the ACLU, in the instructional video Busted: the Citizens’ Guide
to Surviving Police Encounters.
Being approached or stopped by police is often stressful and confusing whether
you’re breaking the law or not. A little bit of preparation now goes a
long way toward keeping your rights intact in these situations. That’s
the premise of this new video put out by public education group Flex Your Rights.
On their website, FYR points out that we citizens are complicit in the recently
hastened erosion of traditional constitutional rights, in part by permitting
everyday abuses of police power. For example, most people, during the course
of a traffic stop, are likely to waive their rights without even knowing it.
And traffic stops comprise about 50% of all citizen-police encounters.
The video toggles between Glasser and dramatizations that cover three typical
situations: police approaching your car, your person, and your home. Each of
these scenarios is presented twice: first, the wrong way—how to get arrested.
Then each scenario is repeated with the aid of Glasser’s steady, clear
commentary, along with bold titles that emphasize the most salient points (never
run away, use a peephole). This time, the citizens calmly, respectfully, and
articulately express their rights, and no arrests are made.
In the traffic stop scene, after “Darrell” successfully evades a
nosy officer by responding to intimidating questions with questions of his own
(most importantly, “Am I free to go?”), Darrell’s friend gushes
“That was like some Jedi mind trick!” (Darrell and his passengers
have recently toked up, it could be noted.)
Indeed, while the citizens’ confident behavior seems provocative and almost
foolhardy upon first viewing, after watching repeatedly—recommended by
Glasser—you begin to imagine yourself holding your own if accosted in
a similar way.
The disclaimer that opens the video points out that the law is complex and varies
from state to state and county to county, and that, obviously, police misconduct
exists, but familiarity with the content of this video is invaluable.
As Scott Fleming, a criminal defense lawyer based in the San Francisco Bay Area
notes, “The police can always find legal and illegal ways to get around
your constitutional rights, but even in the post-9/11 world, the advice offered
by [Busted]—to never consent to a search and never to answer questions
from the police—still stands as the best course of action in almost all
situations.”
If the police do violate your rights—if an officer searches your car,
person, or home after you have explicitly refused to consent to search—and
you’re arrested, your lawyer can ask for the charges against you to be
dismissed. (Provided that you present no lawful causes for search. Watch the
video!)
As the Flex Your Rights site states: “Just as regular physical exercise
strengthens muscles atrophied from underuse, innocent citizens must ‘flex’
their constitutional rights in order to keep them strong and secure.”
Of course, guilty citizens could stand a little constitutional rights workout
as well.
Copies of the video can be purchased online at www.aclu.org and www.flexyourrights.org
for everyone you care about protecting. Rights mean nothing if you can’t
exercise them.
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