October 22, 2008
The problem
- Normally under the Fourth
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the American people are not generally
subject to random and arbitrary stops and searches.
- The
border, however, has always been an exception. There, the longstanding view is that the
normal rules do not apply. For
example the authorities do not need a warrant or probable cause to conduct a
“routine search.”
- But
what is “the border”? According to
the government, it is a 100-mile
wide strip that wraps around the “external boundary” of the <?XML:NAMESPACE PREFIX = ST1 />United
States.
- As a
result of this claimed authority, individuals who are far away from the border,
American citizens traveling from one place in America to another, are being
stopped and harassed in ways that our Constitution does not permit.
- Border
Patrol has been setting up checkpoints inland — on highways in states such as
California, Texas and Arizona, and at ferry terminals in Washington State.
Typically, the agents ask drivers and passengers about their citizenship. Unfortunately, our courts so far have
permitted these kinds of checkpoints – legally speaking, they are
“administrative” stops that are permitted only for the specific purpose of
protecting the nation’s borders.
They cannot become general drug-search or other law enforcement
efforts.
- However, these stops by
Border Patrol agents are not remaining confined to that border security
purpose. On the roads of California
and elsewhere in the nation – places far removed from the actual border – agents
are stopping, interrogating, and searching Americans on an everyday basis with
absolutely no suspicion of wrongdoing.
- The
bottom line is that the extraordinary authorities that the government possesses
at the border are spilling into regular American streets.
Much of U.S. population
affected
- Many
Americans and Washington policymakers believe that this is a problem confined to
the San Diego-Tijuana border or the dusty sands of Arizona or Texas, but these
powers stretch far inland across the United States.
- To
calculate what proportion of the U.S. population is affected by these powers,
the ACLU created a map and spreadsheet showing the population and population
centers that lie within 100 miles of any “external boundary” of the United
States.
- The
population estimates were calculated by examining the most recent
US census numbers for all counties
within 100 miles of these borders.
Using numbers from the Population Distribution Branch of the US Census
Bureau, we were able to estimate both the total number and a state-by-state
population breakdown. The custom
map was created with help from a map expert at World Sites Atlas.
- What we
found is that fully TWO-THIRDS of the United States’ population lives within
this Constitution-free or Constitution-lite Zone. That’s 197.4 million people who
live within 100 miles of the US land and coastal borders.
- Nine of
the top 10 largest metropolitan areas as determined by the 2000 census, fall
within the Constitution-free Zone.
(The only exception is #9, Dallas-Fort Worth.) Some states are considered to lie
completely within the zone: Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont.
Part of a broader
problem
- The
spread of border-search powers inland is part of a broad expansion of border
powers with the potential to affect the lives of ordinary Americans who have
never left their own country.
- It
coincides with the development of numerous border technologies, including watch
list and database systems such as the Automated Targeting System (ATS) traveler
risk assessment program, identity and tracking systems such as electronic (RFID)
passports, the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI), and intrusive
technological schemes such as the Secure Border Initiative Network (SBINet) or
“virtual border fence” and unmanned aerial vehicles (aka “drone aircraft”).
- This
illegitimate expansion of the extraordinary powers of agents at the border is
also part of a general trend we have seen over the past 8 years of an
untrammeled, heedless expansion of police and national security powers without
regard to the effect on innocent Americans.
- This
trend is also typical of the Bush Administration’s dragnet approach to law
enforcement and national security.
Instead of intelligent, competent, targeted efforts to stop terrorism,
illegal immigration, and other crimes, what we have been seeing in area after
area is an approach that turns us all into suspects. This approach seeks to sift
through the entire U.S. population in the hopes of encountering the rare
individual whom the authorities have a legitimate interest in.
If the current generation of
Americans does not challenge this creeping (and sometimes galloping) expansion
of federal powers over the individual through the rationale of “border
protection,” we are not doing our part to keep alive the rights and freedoms
that we inherited, and will soon find that we have lost some or all of their
right to go about their business, and travel around inside their own country,
without interference from the authorities.