McElrath v. Goodwin

713 F. Supp. 299, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16209, 1988 WL 156234
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedAugust 24, 1988
DocketLR-C-87-255
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 713 F. Supp. 299 (McElrath v. Goodwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McElrath v. Goodwin, 713 F. Supp. 299, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16209, 1988 WL 156234 (E.D. Ark. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER

EISELE, Chief Judge.

Before the court is a motion to show cause filed by several class members in this case. On February 8, 1988, the parties to this action entered into a Consent Decree in settlement of this matter. This case involves various alleged practices of the Arkansas State Police, particularly officers assigned to the Criminal Apprehension Program (“CAPS officers”), which the plaintiffs claim violate the Fourth Amendment. The Consent Decree was designed to- remedy the alleged violations. . However, the parties interpret the decree differently, and the plaintiffs allege that the State Police have merely continued those practices challenged in the law suit despite the existence of the Consent Decree.

The Consent Decree states in relevant part:

The parties to this case enter into the following Consent Decree:
1. The Arkansas State Police will adopt a policy within 30 days that specifically addresses the following issues:
(a) Vehicles or drivers or passengers shall not be stopped or detained on less than probable cause or by pretext.
(b) A traffic stop cannot be used to question or detain the driver and occupants of a vehicle without reasonable suspicion of criminality.
(c) Reasonable suspicion cannot be used to detain a person longer than fifteen minutes. A.R.Crim.P. 3.1.
(d) Officers shall be advised of and ordered to comply with the Arkansas “stop and detain” law. Ark.Code Ann. s.s. 16-81-201; 16-81-209; A.R.Crim.P. 3.1-3.2.
(e) Evidence or property cannot be seized from a vehicle or person without probable cause to believe that the evidence is contraband or evidence of a crime.
(f) A vehicle consent search form will be adopted in both English and Spanish in substantially the form appended to this order, providing at least:
*301 (1) The driver or person in apparent control shall be told of the right to refuse, limit, or revoke consent.
(2) The driver or person in apparent control shall be told that they will be allowed to go on their way if consent is denied.
(g) No coercion, express or implied, will be used to gain consent. (For example, motorists shall not be told they should cooperate with officers, that things will go or be easier if they consent, that a warrant will be obtained if they do not consent (unless there actually is probable cause), that they will be detained or will be taken elsewhere if they do not agree to a search, etc.).
(h) A general consent to search a car does not grant an officer consent to search all places or containers in the vehicle.... Consent to search all of a vehicle and all its contents must be specific or it is not voluntary.
(i) The Arkansas State Police will also distribute Miranda warning cards and forms in English and Spanish to all officers.
2. The policy will include a statement that any officer violating the policy is subject to personal civil liability (e.g., Ark.Code Ann. s. 16-81-208) and professional discipline.
3. Supervisory personnel of the Arkansas State Police are responsible for line officers knowing about and following the policy.

On May 25, 1988, this court conducted a show-cause hearing at which various officials of the Arkansas State Police testified. The defendants admitted that consent to search forms were not distributed in compliance with the Consent Decree. It appeared that on the date of the hearing, almost three months after the date specified in the decree, the forms had not yet reached all of the officers in the State Police. The defendants offered little by way of justification for this failure to comply. They stated “The failure to comply has not in any way been intentional, wilful or wanton but occurred as a result of internal miscommunications and new staff assignments.” They urged the court to allow them more time and stated that distribution was progressing. Moreover, all line officers had not yet received training as to the meaning and ramifications of the decree. The training sessions given to some officers, principally the CAPS officers, appear to the court to have been cursory in nature. Apparently, the officers were given the decree and read it with little or no discussion as to its effect, if any, on existing policy. As of the date of the hearing, the defendants stated that they planned, within the following 30 days, to conduct training sessions for all line officers in the state.

Of more concern to the plaintiff class members was the apparent continuation of the policies initially challenged by this law suit. The plaintiffs alleged that State Police officers were using a form of the “drug courier profile” to detain and search out-of-state drivers without probable cause or reasonable suspicion. The class members alleged that in violation of the Consent Decree and of the Fourth Amendment the State Police continued such practices after March 8, 1988.

After hearing the evidence, the court concludes that officers of the State Police have violated the decree. At the hearing, several Plaintiffs testified as to their experiences. Each of these Plaintiffs had been stopped by Trooper John Scarberough, a CAPS officer. It was conceded that Trooper Scarberough knew of, and had read the Consent Decree at the time he made the stops in question. Trooper Scarberough testified as to the circumstances of each stop.

The plaintiffs allege that Trooper Scarbe-rough violated the Consent Decree in several respects. First, they allege that Trooper Scarberough stopped their vehicles on less than probable cause in violation of paragraph 1(a). Second, they claim that the stops in question were pretextual in violation of paragraph 1(a). Third, they claim that after the reason for the traffic stop had ended, i.e. a ticket or a warning had been given, Trooper Scarberough interrogated them as to matters unrelated to the traffic stop. They contend that this tactic *302 was employed to generate probable cause or reasonable suspicion upon which to base a search. Fourth, they allege that the detentions in question were of an unreasonable length, in excess of 15 minutes, in violation of paragraph 1(c).

Initially, the court holds that the defendants violated the Consent Decree by failing to distribute all relevant materials in a timely fashion. Testimony at the hearing indicated that new consent to search forms and Spanish language Miranda forms were not distributed until April 19, 1988, approximately one month late. Copies of the new Arkansas State Police Policy and of the Consent Decree were not distributed until May 24, 1988, one day before the hearing and approximately two months late. Moreover all the officers had not been trained as of the date of the hearing; therefore State Police will be at least two months late in training line officers. Colonel Goodwin, the director of the State Police, admitted “we goofed”. The court holds that the State Police have violated the decree despite their allegations of good faith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
713 F. Supp. 299, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16209, 1988 WL 156234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelrath-v-goodwin-ared-1988.