No Remedy When Police Fail to Knock Before Executing Search Warrant
by TChris
The police have little incentive to obey the constitutional requirement to knock and announce their presence before busting down doors to serve search warrants, thanks to a 5-4 Supreme Court decision issued today. Justice Alito provided the tie-breaking vote.
The Court ruled that suppression of the results of the search -- the usual remedy when evidence is acquired in violation of the Constitution -- is too extreme when police fail to knock-and-announce. The dissent voiced the obvious response:
"The court destroys the strongest legal incentive to comply with the Constitution's knock-and-announce requirement,'' Breyer wrote for the four dissenters.
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