Have your right been violated in a DUI Arrest?
Attorneys and COUNSELORS at law!
Sure we know the law, but from your first meeting with us you will notice something different. We take the idea of counseling our clients seriously. This means of course, that you will understand the actions we will take on your behalf legally, but much more than that, we will take the time to help you deal with these often difficult and sometimes intimidating circumstances in your life in a way that will greatly improve your comfort level with the whole legal process. It is your case, not ours, and we will use every effort, and listen carefully to you to achieve the results you are looking for. We will offer clear advice and help you to see what's possible and not waste your time on the impossible, just to secure a fee. Speaking of fees, truly competent legal representation is not going to be cheap, and a great lawyer is worth the cost, however, we promise that you will not be knickled and dimed for expenses or bewildered by our fees, and that when the case is finished you will know that you got your money's worth and more. We've built a great legal practice with little or no advertising. The vast majority of our new cases were referred by old or current clients and we work hard to keep those referrals coming. As President and Senior Partner of our firm, I am proud to welcome you as a new client and grateful for the great continuing relationship we have with all of our past clients. Remember the first commandment of legal representation: THOU SHALLT NOT LIE TO THY LAWYER! Second, and equally important: Expect the same from your "Attorney and Counselor at Law"!
Included are basic facts regarding some of the more popular issues, charges and defenses.
There are numerous issues involved in any traffic stop, but far away those issues are multiplied if the traffic stop turns into a DUI arrest. There are many potential constitutional rights violations which occur on an all too frequent basis. This disturbing practice of stepping beyond the limits of the Constitution in order to obtain a DUI arrest can only be remedied with the help of an attorney that has significant expertise in constitutional law as well as expertise in DUI law and procedure. Many questions that arise include issues as to whether the police even had probable cause to stop a driver in the first place, whether the field sobriety tests administered were fair and accurate, and whether the later administered intoxilyzer test meets constitutional requirements. The attorneys at Allen Richards & Pace have all received extensive DUI training concerning the intoxilyzer 8000 (and its predecessor the intoxilyzer 5000). Additionally the law firm deals with numerous constitutional issues and can determine whether constitutional or statutory rights been violated.
It is important that you protect your rights if you are arrested for a DUI. A constitutional challenge may not only benefits you, but also benefit the general public by stopping police who go beyond the law. For additional information view the attached video segment of a local trooper who has been sanctioned for failing to follow constitutional mandates.
Attorneys and COUNSELORS at law!
Sure we know the law, but from your first meeting with us you will notice something different. We take the idea of counseling our clients seriously. This means of course, that you will understand the actions we will take on your behalf legally, but much more than that, we will take the time to help you deal with these often difficult and sometimes intimidating circumstances in your life in a way that will greatly improve your comfort level with the whole legal process. It is your case, not ours, and we will use every effort, and listen carefully to you to achieve the results you are looking for. We will offer clear advice and help you to see what's possible and not waste your time on the impossible, just to secure a fee. Speaking of fees, truly competent legal representation is not going to be cheap, and a great lawyer is worth the cost, however, we promise that you will not be knickled and dimed for expenses or bewildered by our fees, and that when the case is finished you will know that you got your money's worth and more. We've built a great legal practice with little or no advertising. The vast majority of our new cases were referred by old or current clients and we work hard to keep those referrals coming. As President and Senior Partner of our firm, I am proud to welcome you as a new client and grateful for the great continuing relationship we have with all of our past clients. Remember the first commandment of legal representation: THOU SHALLT NOT LIE TO THY LAWYER! Second, and equally important: Expect the same from your "Attorney and Counselor at Law"!
Included are basic facts regarding some of the more popular issues, charges and defenses.
ILLEGAL SEARCH AND SEIZURE
Clients often come in and ask whether their stop, search and police investigation was legal. Below are a few interesting facts regarding your fourth and fifth amendment rights.
Protecting Clients From Unreasonable Searches
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution bars law enforcement from performing unreasonable search and seizure. However,many law enforcement agencies are notorious for violating illegal search and seizure laws. When getting stopped and pulled over, police officers count on you to be intimidated, scared and submissive when they come to search your home or car and just let them in, even without a valid warrant.Know your rights! If the law was violated and if an officer, the magistrate signing the search warrant, or some other agent violated your constitutional rights, the evidence found may be suppressed.
- If you give consent for your home, car, personal belonging to be searched, the police DO NOT need a search warrant.
-If you withhold consent, there must be a search warrant. If there is a search warrant, it does not mean the police can search all areas of your home, the scope of the warrant must be specifically listed.
- A search of a car can be invalid if you were handcuffed and out of the reach of the vehicle. In 2009 the US Supreme Court concluded that the police may search your car without a warrant if there is reason to believe evidence for the crime being arrested is in the vehicle. However, if there is no evidence of illegality in your vehicle and you are out of the reach of the car, a search of that vehicle may be deemed invalid.
- A police officer has the right to come question you on the street, but if you are stopped for an excessive period, the questioning is beyond the scope of the stop, or if there was no reasonable suspicion to detain you the evidence found may be suppressed. Fighting to Preserve Constitutional Rights
Standard-Examiner staff
Tuesday, February 8, 2011 - 10:57pm
OGDEN -- Attorneys have been back in court for another round of debating the constitutionality of Ogden's injunction against the Trece street gang.
Tuesday's was the first such session since the Utah Supreme Court declined Nov. 1 to weigh in on the issues, although those on both sides of the injunction fully expect it to eventually return to the high court.
The injunction, ordered into law Sept. 27 by 2nd District Judge Ernie Jones, bans Trece gang members from associating with each other in public, being in the vicinity of guns, drugs or alcohol, and staying out past an 11 p.m. curfew.
Common in California and used in a few other states, the injunction is a first in Utah.
Among Tuesday's arguments before Jones were limits allowed on First Amendment rights and the question of curtailing behavior of individuals before they commit a crime.
Weber County Attorney Dee Smith, co-author along with the Ogden Metro Gang Unit of the 331-page injunction, said the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed First Amendment limits on groups via injunction.
"There is a difference between an injunction and an ordinance, or statute," noted Smith, in that the latter applies to everyone, but the former only to a specific group.
The high court, he said, has limited where anti-abortion groups may protest, as well as union members, when "violence enmeshed contemporaneously with peaceful protest."
"The county attorney says, 'We think you're going to commit a crime, so we're going to enjoin you from doing anything,' " said Mike Studebaker, attorney for two alleged Treces.
One of his clients runs a recording studio that is suffering financially because Treces can no longer frequent it, he said.
"The injunction is putting him out of business for something that may happen," Studebaker said. "There's no precedent for what the county is trying to do here."
Attorney Randy Richards, representing another alleged Trece, argued, "The state is stripping my client of his sacred constitutional rights that have been in place for more than 200 years."
In addition to taking away his client's First Amendment rights of free association, Richards claims Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and 14th Amendment violations by the injunction.
For the police to be able to pull over his client's car if he has a documented Trece member in the vehicle steps on Fourth Amendment protections against illegal search and seizure and Ninth Amendment privacy rights, he said.
Fifth and 14th Amendment due process rights are also violated in that scenario, he said.
Richards said his client is not a Trece, but the process for proving that under the injunction includes holding a job for a year, which his client is unable to do because of a disability.
Jones took the cases under advisement. He said he will issue a decision within 30 days on several defense motions seeking to dismiss the injunction against some of those alleged to be gang members.
After that, scheduling could be discussed on other hearings leading up to an eventual trial on the question of making the injunction permanent.
Essentially, the injunction is currently labeled preliminary, with no expiration date, officials have explained, until the outcome of the trial.
Ogden police, as of the end of January, count several dozen arrests of Treces for violations of the injunction, a misdemeanor typically filed in Ogden Justice Court.
But several arrests incident to the injunction have led to felony charges filed in district court after drugs or weapons were found on Treces when taken into custody for injunction violations.
So far, about 150 members of the gang, estimated to include more than 300 members, have been served personally with a copy of the injunction.
Standard-Examiner staff
Sunday, February 27, 2011 - 10:01pm
OGDEN -- Attempting a police omniscience seen in only about 20 U.S. cities, the Ogden Police Department is gearing up for a "real time crime center" to be operational soon after its Crime Blimp launches.
The center hopes to eventually be linked with the thousands of private and government security cameras around town, including the city's own inventory of some 200 cameras.
Utah Department of Transportation and Utah Transit Authority are already on board to share their cameras with Ogden police in the video center planned for soon-to-be-remodeled offices in the department headquarters.
Officials are shooting for an April launch date for the blimp, under construction by Weber State University's Utah Center for Aeronautical Innovation and Design, which will feed video to a fledgling version of the RTCC. They hope the center is fully operational by July.
A civil rights debate is likely to flare at some point.
"Scary," was local defense attorney Bernie Allen's reaction to the coming integrated camera system and the blimp.
"Talk about your Big Brother, it's 'A Brave New World,' " he quipped, referring to two famous novels about futuristic worlds surveilled by oppressive governments.
An inventory of the city's central business district, between 18th and 28th streets, Adams and Wall avenues, has identified 37 businesses with external security cameras, said Dave Weloth, the OPD crime analyst who is overseeing the real time crime center's development and will likely be its manager.
Owners are being asked if they'll integrate their security cameras with OPD's, a slower process than Weloth's inventory.
So far, half a dozen have signed on, he said, although less than half of the 37 have been approached.
"After that it's up to the IT guys to sit down with them," said Weloth, referring to the city's information technology staff.
Included in the business district is the five-story Ogden 2nd District Courthouse, which has 40-plus cameras, mostly indoors, and several businesses with as many as 10 cameras.
"We're only interested in the external cameras," Weloth said.
The idea is to give officers information about a crime scene while they are still rolling up on an event in progress, officials say. Operators in the real-time crime center linking with any camera systems in the area can immediately relay information on what they see to responding officers.
"We're not taking control of anyone's camera system," Police Chief Jon Greiner said. "We just want to be sure it's recording."
Greiner said his research shows about 20 cities in the country that operate RTCCs, with New York City opening the first in 2005. He and Mark Johnson, city management services director, visited the RTCC in Memphis, Tenn., in January, he said. This week the city paid the manager of the Memphis center several thousand dollars for a two-day visit to consult about Ogden's center. Memphis' center is closer to what Ogden's would do than say, New York's, Greiner said.
An example of that is the license plate readers that will be tied to the center. Greiner hopes to purchase 15 or 20 of the $20,000 units to deploy this year.
Looking much like the head of the "Wall-E" robot in the movie of the same name, they can be mounted next to a patrol car's light bar to automatically read licenses plates, up to 3,000 in an hour, according to Greiner. An alarm tone would sound in the patrol car and the video center if a plate is on a stolen vehicle, for example.
"The center can e-mail the Blackberry of a detective if they find the plates of a vehicle that detective is looking for," Greiner said.
The Weber County Sheriff's Office purchased a plate reader system for one patrol vehicle there in September. A consortium of insurance industry professionals lends four license plate readers regularly to police departments around the state, Greiner said, some coming to Ogden for training in March.
Jess McLellan is the IT project coordinator given the task of integrating the many private security camera systems with Ogden's RTCC.
Some of the hookups will be as simple as exchanging provider and password information, he said, while others will require software exchanges "to make this dream come true, to give cops eyes on the crime scene before they get there."
UDOT and UTA are already tinkering with their systems to integrate with Ogden's, he said, and are completely on board.
One of the bigger challenges will be retaining video, McLellen said. "Being able to view an event in real time is one thing. Recording is another."
But he loves the blimp.
"I wont lie. At the beginning, I thought this is a little hard to believe," he said. "But after meeting with UCAID, it's obvious this is well-thought-out. I'm really impressed."
The blimp caused a stir when it came up during a Jan. 11 city council meeting, making the news nationwide, including NPR and a Jay Leno monologue.
Planned at 52 feet long and 4 feet in diameter to hold a 20-pound payload of cameras, GPS gear, and telemetry, the blimp will likely be the first to patrol the skies of an American city, according to Greiner and UCAID.
Greiner has been consulting with other cities that have real time crime centers and would like to do the same with the blimp, but no luck.
"Nobody else has a blimp," he said.
The blimp causes more heartburn to local civil libertarians like Bernie Allen, a defense attorney for more than 30 years, than do the integrated real-time cameras.
"If police can't go into your backyard without probable cause, then why would they be allowed to fly over your backyard with a blimp?" he asks.
"There will be all sorts of legal challenges. If something can't be seen from a public vantage point, then it's private and protected. A blimp changes all that."
"Is the blimp out looking for work?" asked Camille Neider, a former deputy Weber County Attorney turned defense counsel. "Or is it a reactive tool, sent to a chase or a search?
"If my 6-year-old walks away, then yes, it's great to have a blimp," she said. "But there's good with bad in any technology. You're depending on the character and integrity of the people using it."
"We're not interested in filming the city's 80,000-plus population," Weloth said. "Just the ones causing trouble."
He estimated that number as in the range of several thousand or more, including the estimated 1,000 on parole or probation and the 800- to 1,000-inmate population in and out of the county jail.
"From the blimp, we won't be able to see the marijuana plants you're growing between the rows of corn in your backyard."
Chicago Tribune article: Drug-sniffing dogs in traffic stops often wrong, including 73% failure rate with hispanic's vehicles.
Drug-sniffing dogs can give police probable cause to root through cars by the roadside, but state data show the dogs have been wrong more often than they have been right about whether vehicles contain drugs or paraphernalia.
The dogs are trained to dig or sit when they smell drugs, which triggers automobile searches. But a Tribune analysis of three years of data for suburban departments found that only 44 percent of those alerts by the dogs led to the discovery of drugs or paraphernalia.
For Hispanic drivers, the success rate was just 27 percent.
Dog-handling officers and trainers argue the canine teams' accuracy shouldn't be measured in the number of alerts that turn up drugs. They said the scent of drugs or paraphernalia can linger in a car after drugs are used or sold, and the dogs' noses are so sensitive they can pick up residue from drugs that can no longer be found in a car.
The dogs are trained to dig or sit when they smell drugs, which triggers automobile searches. But a Tribune analysis of three years of data for suburban departments found that only 44 percent of those alerts by the dogs led to the discovery of drugs or paraphernalia.
For Hispanic drivers, the success rate was just 27 percent.
Dog-handling officers and trainers argue the canine teams' accuracy shouldn't be measured in the number of alerts that turn up drugs. They said the scent of drugs or paraphernalia can linger in a car after drugs are used or sold, and the dogs' noses are so sensitive they can pick up residue from drugs that can no longer be found in a car.
But even advocates for the use of drug-sniffing dogs agree with experts who say many dog-and-officer teams are poorly trained and prone to false alerts that lead to unjustified searches. Leading a dog around a car too many times or spending too long examining a vehicle, for example, can cause a dog to give a signal for drugs where there are none, experts said.
"If you don't train, you can't be confident in your dog," said Alex Rothacker, a trainer who works with dozens of local drug-sniffing dogs. "A lot of dogs don't train. A lot of dogs aren't good."
Civil rights advocates and Latino activists say the findings support complaints that police unfairly target Hispanic drivers for invasive and embarrassing roadside vehicle searches.
"We know that there is a level of racial profiling going on, and this is just another indicator of that," said Virginia Martinez, a Chicago-based staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
Adam Schwartz, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union in Illinois, said the innocent suffer from unjustified searches.
"We've seen a national outcry about being frisked and scanned at airports," Schwartz said. "The experience of having police take your car apart for an hour is far more invasive and frightening and humiliating."
Police insist no racial profiling
The Tribune obtained and analyzed data from 2007 through 2009 collected by the state Department of Transportation to study racial profiling. But the data are incomplete. IDOT doesn't offer guidance on what exactly constitutes a drug dog alert, said spokesman Guy Tridgell, and most departments reported only a handful of searches based on alerts. At least two huge agencies — the Chicago Police Department and Illinois State Police — reported none.
The Tribune asked both agencies for their data, but state police could not provide a breakdown of how often their dog alerts led to seizures, and Chicago police did not provide any data.
That leaves figures only for suburban departments. Among those whose data are included, just six departments averaged at least 10 alerts per year, with the top three being the McHenry County sheriff's department, Naperville police and Romeoville police.
Romeoville did not respond to requests for comment, but Naperville and McHenry County authorities insisted there was no racial profiling and defended the performance of their dogs and handlers.
The McHenry County's sheriff's department had the most dog alerts, finding drugs or paraphernalia in 32 percent of 103 searches. In the eight searches on Hispanic drivers, officers reported finding drugs just once.
Since September 2008, Deputy Jeremy Bruketta has handled Sage, one of the McHenry County department's two drug-sniffing German shepherds. Officers sometimes come up empty-handed in searches of vehicles that clearly once contained drugs, he said, recalling a traffic stop in which a man, reeking of pot, had a marijuana stem stuck to his shirt but no drugs were found in the car.
In Naperville, 47 percent of searches turned up drugs or paraphernalia, though searches on Hispanic drivers turned up drugs in only one of 12 traffic stops, for a rate of 8 percent.
Officer Eddie Corneliusen, who handles Kairo, one of Naperville's two police dogs, also cited drug residue and said he's "confident that (the dog) is hitting on the odor of narcotics."
Inconsistent training and standards
Experts and trainers agree that residue could be to blame for some false positives.
In a cavernous, chilly building at the abandoned former Lake County Fairgrounds, Rothacker, the trainer, demonstrated the dogs' ability to pinpoint not only drugs, but also residue.
Rothacker, who works with some 60 area police dogs and handlers at TOPS Kennels in Grayslake, rubbed a bag of marijuana against a cinder block in the wall. Two German shepherds he trained alerted on the block with little hesitation, earning sessions of play with handlers who control the dogs' beloved chew toys.
But Rothacker said false alerts can't be blamed on residue alone.
Rothacker, who trained dogs for both Naperville and McHenry County, said many trainers use suspect methods and some handlers are "very lazy" about training their dogs. After initial intensive instruction for dog and handler, Rothacker offers twice-weekly training to handlers diligent enough to keep showing up, he said.
"The dogs are only as good as the handlers," he said.
A federally sponsored advisory commission has recommended a set of best practices, though they are not backed by any legal mandate.
Illinois state Rep. Jim Durkin, R- Western Springs, sponsored a bill in 2007 that would have created a certification board responsible for setting standards that all police dogs would have to meet, but the bill died in a Senate committee after passing in the House. Durkin, a former Cook County prosecutor who referred to police dogs as "probable cause with four legs," said he may push the legislation again.
"This one makes sense," he said.
State Rep. Monique Davis wants the drug-dog issue vetted by a state panel on racial profiling. Davis, D-Chicago, co-sponsored a 2004 law to collect the police data. Seven years later, she said racial profiling remains a problem.
"This is the kind of information the commission is supposed to discuss," she said.
False cues
Civil rights advocates and detector-dog experts said the lack of regulation or standards has led police to subject innocent drivers to prolonged, humiliating roadside searches.
The state's data — in which drivers and officers aren't identified — show that the average false alert led to a stop lasting nearly a half-hour. One Crystal Lake search led to a three-hour stop for a Hispanic man in 2007. He was stopped for a license plate/registration violation, according to the data.
The main check on the competency of a dog-handling officer comes in court, where a defense lawyer may question a dog's ability to sniff out drugs. But, by their nature, the stops that don't lead to drug seizures don't get reviewed by a judge.
The limited court oversight and lack of uniform standards leave vast discrepancies in the skills of dog-and-officer teams, experts agreed.
Dog handlers can accidentally cue alerts from their dogs by leading them too slowly or too many times around a vehicle, said Lawrence Myers, an Auburn University professor who studies detector dogs. Myers pointed to the "Clever Hans" phenomenon in the early 1900s, named after a horse whose owner claimed the animal could read and do math before a psychologist determined the horse was actually responding to his master's unwitting cues.
Training is the key to eliminating accidental cues and false alerts, said Paul Waggoner of Auburn's detector-dog research program.
"Is there a potential for handlers to cue these dogs to alert?" he asked. "The answer is a big, resounding yes."
That frustrates Martinez, the attorney from the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
"If you don't train, you can't be confident in your dog," said Alex Rothacker, a trainer who works with dozens of local drug-sniffing dogs. "A lot of dogs don't train. A lot of dogs aren't good."
The dog teams are not held to any statutory standard of performance in Illinois or most other states, experts and dog handlers said, though private groups offer certification for the canines.
Civil rights advocates and Latino activists say the findings support complaints that police unfairly target Hispanic drivers for invasive and embarrassing roadside vehicle searches.
"We know that there is a level of racial profiling going on, and this is just another indicator of that," said Virginia Martinez, a Chicago-based staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
Adam Schwartz, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union in Illinois, said the innocent suffer from unjustified searches.
"We've seen a national outcry about being frisked and scanned at airports," Schwartz said. "The experience of having police take your car apart for an hour is far more invasive and frightening and humiliating."
Police insist no racial profiling
The Tribune obtained and analyzed data from 2007 through 2009 collected by the state Department of Transportation to study racial profiling. But the data are incomplete. IDOT doesn't offer guidance on what exactly constitutes a drug dog alert, said spokesman Guy Tridgell, and most departments reported only a handful of searches based on alerts. At least two huge agencies — the Chicago Police Department and Illinois State Police — reported none.
The Tribune asked both agencies for their data, but state police could not provide a breakdown of how often their dog alerts led to seizures, and Chicago police did not provide any data.
That leaves figures only for suburban departments. Among those whose data are included, just six departments averaged at least 10 alerts per year, with the top three being the McHenry County sheriff's department, Naperville police and Romeoville police.
Romeoville did not respond to requests for comment, but Naperville and McHenry County authorities insisted there was no racial profiling and defended the performance of their dogs and handlers.
The McHenry County's sheriff's department had the most dog alerts, finding drugs or paraphernalia in 32 percent of 103 searches. In the eight searches on Hispanic drivers, officers reported finding drugs just once.
Since September 2008, Deputy Jeremy Bruketta has handled Sage, one of the McHenry County department's two drug-sniffing German shepherds. Officers sometimes come up empty-handed in searches of vehicles that clearly once contained drugs, he said, recalling a traffic stop in which a man, reeking of pot, had a marijuana stem stuck to his shirt but no drugs were found in the car.
In Naperville, 47 percent of searches turned up drugs or paraphernalia, though searches on Hispanic drivers turned up drugs in only one of 12 traffic stops, for a rate of 8 percent.
Officer Eddie Corneliusen, who handles Kairo, one of Naperville's two police dogs, also cited drug residue and said he's "confident that (the dog) is hitting on the odor of narcotics."
Inconsistent training and standards
Experts and trainers agree that residue could be to blame for some false positives.
In a cavernous, chilly building at the abandoned former Lake County Fairgrounds, Rothacker, the trainer, demonstrated the dogs' ability to pinpoint not only drugs, but also residue.
Rothacker, who works with some 60 area police dogs and handlers at TOPS Kennels in Grayslake, rubbed a bag of marijuana against a cinder block in the wall. Two German shepherds he trained alerted on the block with little hesitation, earning sessions of play with handlers who control the dogs' beloved chew toys.
But Rothacker said false alerts can't be blamed on residue alone.
Rothacker, who trained dogs for both Naperville and McHenry County, said many trainers use suspect methods and some handlers are "very lazy" about training their dogs. After initial intensive instruction for dog and handler, Rothacker offers twice-weekly training to handlers diligent enough to keep showing up, he said.
"The dogs are only as good as the handlers," he said.
Experts said police agencies are inconsistent about the level of training they require and few states mandate training or certification. Jim Watson, secretary of the North American Police Work Dog Association, said a tiny minority of states require certification, though neither he nor other experts could say exactly how many.
A federally sponsored advisory commission has recommended a set of best practices, though they are not backed by any legal mandate.
Illinois state Rep. Jim Durkin, R- Western Springs, sponsored a bill in 2007 that would have created a certification board responsible for setting standards that all police dogs would have to meet, but the bill died in a Senate committee after passing in the House. Durkin, a former Cook County prosecutor who referred to police dogs as "probable cause with four legs," said he may push the legislation again.
"This one makes sense," he said.
State Rep. Monique Davis wants the drug-dog issue vetted by a state panel on racial profiling. Davis, D-Chicago, co-sponsored a 2004 law to collect the police data. Seven years later, she said racial profiling remains a problem.
"This is the kind of information the commission is supposed to discuss," she said.
False cues
Civil rights advocates and detector-dog experts said the lack of regulation or standards has led police to subject innocent drivers to prolonged, humiliating roadside searches.
The state's data — in which drivers and officers aren't identified — show that the average false alert led to a stop lasting nearly a half-hour. One Crystal Lake search led to a three-hour stop for a Hispanic man in 2007. He was stopped for a license plate/registration violation, according to the data.
The main check on the competency of a dog-handling officer comes in court, where a defense lawyer may question a dog's ability to sniff out drugs. But, by their nature, the stops that don't lead to drug seizures don't get reviewed by a judge.
The limited court oversight and lack of uniform standards leave vast discrepancies in the skills of dog-and-officer teams, experts agreed.
Dog handlers can accidentally cue alerts from their dogs by leading them too slowly or too many times around a vehicle, said Lawrence Myers, an Auburn University professor who studies detector dogs. Myers pointed to the "Clever Hans" phenomenon in the early 1900s, named after a horse whose owner claimed the animal could read and do math before a psychologist determined the horse was actually responding to his master's unwitting cues.
Training is the key to eliminating accidental cues and false alerts, said Paul Waggoner of Auburn's detector-dog research program.
"Is there a potential for handlers to cue these dogs to alert?" he asked. "The answer is a big, resounding yes."
That frustrates Martinez, the attorney from the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
Dogs do not have the human failings that have led to the targeting of minorities, but Martinez worries that an officer's bias can translate through the dog leash. She fears drug-sniffing dogs are another tool to justify roadside searches of innocent drivers, the unfair consequences of what she called "driving while Mexican."
"People of color are just targets," she said.