The late Chalmers Johnson often reminded us that “A nation can be one or the other, a democracy or an imperialist, but it can’t be both. If it sticks to imperialism, it will, like the old Roman Republic, on which so much of our system was modeled, lose its democracy to a domestic dictatorship.” His warning rings more true by the day, as Americans watch the erosion of their civil liberties accelerate in conjunction with the expansion of the US Empire.
When viewed through the lens of Johnson’s profound insights, the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Kentucky v. King makes perfect sense. On May 13, in a lopsided 8-1 ruling, the Court upheld the warrantless search of a Kentucky man’s apartment after police smelled marijuana and feared those inside were destroying evidence, essentially granting police officers increased power to enter the homes of citizens without a warrant.
Under the Fourth Amendment, police are barred from entering a home without first obtaining a warrant, which can only be issued by a judge upon probable cause. The only exception is when the circumstances qualify as “exigent,” meaning there is imminent risk of death or serious injury, danger that evidence will be immediately destroyed, or that a suspect will escape. However, exigent circumstances cannot be created by the police.
In this case, the police followed a suspected drug dealer into an apartment complex and after losing track of him, smelled marijuana coming from one of the apartments. After banging on the door and announcing themselves, the police heard noises that they interpreted as the destruction of evidence. Rather than first obtaining a warrant, they kicked down the door and arrested the man inside, who was caught flushing marijuana down the toilet.
The Kentucky Supreme Court had overturned the man’s conviction and ruled that exigent circumstances did not apply because the behavior of the police is what prompted the destruction of evidence. Tragically, an overwhelming majority of the Supreme Court upheld the Conviction. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that citizens are not required to grant police officers permission to enter their homes after hearing a knock, but if there is no response and the officers hear noise that suggests evidence is being destroyed, they are justified in breaking in.
In her lone and scathing dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg agreed with the Kentucky Supreme Court, arguing that the Supreme Court’s ruling “arms the police with a way routinely to dishonor the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement in drug cases. In lieu of presenting their evidence to a neutral magistrate, police officers may now knock, listen, then break the door down, nevermind that they had ample time to obtain a warrant.” She went on to stress that “there was little risk that drug-related evidence would have been destroyed had the police delayed the search pending a magistrate’s authorization.”
Not only did the police instigate the destruction of evidence by banging at the door and shouting “Police, police,” but they could have easily obtained a warrant since they likely had probable cause. There is no reason to believe that delaying the search to obtain a warrant, as legally required, would have led to the destruction of evidence. This was pure laziness and contempt for the constitution on part of the officers.
An argument could be made that entering without a warrant saves money, time, and resources, especially if it’s obvious that a crime is being committed. However, the protection of our rights is worth the money, time, and resources. Living in a free society requires that we make these sacrifices, even at the peril of our safety if need be. In fact, I would argue that the wasting of money, time, and resources is the fault of a deeply flawed drug policy, not the protection of those pesky civil liberties always getting in the way of law enforcement.
As for the implications of such a ruling, arming the police with more power will have serious consequences for an already institutionally biased criminal justice system in regards to the “war on drugs.” Jordan C. Budd notes the existence of a “poverty exception” to the Constitution, particularly the Fourth Amendment, a bias that renders much of the Constitution irrelevant at best, and hostile at worst, to the American poor. While attacks on the Fourth Amendment negatively affect all members of society, minorities and the poor, generally the targets of the drug war, are more vulnerable to the abuse of power that follows.
Chief Judge Kozinski of the Ninth Circuit recently decried this “unselfconscious cultural elitism” in a case upholding the ability of police to clandestinely attach a GPS tracking device to the underside of a car parked in the driveway of a modest home:
Poor people are entitled to privacy, even if they can’t afford all the gadgets of the wealthy for ensuring it. . . . When you glide your BMW into your underground garage or behind an electric gate, you don’t need to worry that somebody might attach a tracking device to it while you sleep. But the Constitution doesn’t prefer the rich over the poor; the man who parks his car next to his trailer is entitled to the same privacy and peace of mind as the man whose urban fortress is guarded by the Bel Air Patrol. . . .We are taking a giant leap into the unknown, and the consequences for ourselves and our children may be dire and irreversible. Some day, soon, we may wake up and find we’re living in Oceania.
The same holds true in the context of warrantless door-busting. In the Kentucky case the police smelled marijuana in the hall of the apartment complex that the initial suspect they were tracking had taken refuge in. An apartment hall is a common space shared by many people, who could be emitting various odors from inside their homes, such as cooked onions or fresh paint. Had this been a single-family home in the suburbs, there is no way the smell of pot would have been detected from the doorway of the house across the street.
Scott Lemieux made this point well when he wrote:
As with the broader drug war, civil-liberties violations have a disparate impact in terms of race and class. It is generally not wealthy white suburbanites who have to worry about being stopped and frisked on the streets or having their doors broken down. Like the grotesquely harsh sentencing disparity between powder and crack cocaine possession, this erosion of Fourth Amendment rights has persisted because wealthy people are largely insulated from its effects.
The failure of society at large to secure the rights of all segments of the population, has resulted in what can only be described as a nail in the coffin of our right to privacy, at least for those who can afford it.
In her dissent, Ginsburg went on to ask, “How ‘secure’ do our homes remain if police, armed with no warrant, can pound on doors at will and, on hearing sounds indicative of things moving, forcibly enter and search for evidence of unlawful activity?” While I agree with Ginsberg’s premise, I would go further in arguing that the war on drugs has created a dangerous precedent where even when a search warrant is obtained, we are far from secure in our homes.
For example, about a week prior to the Kentucky ruling, police authorities in Pima County, Arizona, fired 71 shots in seven seconds at 26 year old Jose Guerena, a former Marine who served two tours in Iraq. Guerena was murdered in the middle of the night while his terrified wife and 4-year old son hid in the closet. The SWAT team that killed him was there to serve a narcotics search warrant as part of a multi-house drug crackdown. As Guerena lay dying with his wife pleading for help, the SWAT team barred paramedics from entering the home.
Guerena’s wife asserts that her husband grabbed his gun because he thought his family was the victim of a home invasion, not a police raid. This is understandable given the family’s location in Arizona, a state where anti-immigrant militants are notorious for the cold-blooded murder of hispanic families. Deputies initially justified their actions by claiming that Guerena fired at officers but later said he kept the gun safety on and never pulled the trigger.
As it turns out, Guerena’s murder is just the most recent in a long line of botched paramilitary operations. According to an investigation carried out by the CATO Institute, America has seen a disturbing militarization of its civilian law enforcement over the last 25 years, along with a dramatic and unsettling rise in the use of paramilitary police units for routine police work. In fact, the most common use of SWAT teams today is to serve narcotics warrants, usually with forced, unannounced entry into the home.
The CATO study found that some 40,000 of these raids take place every year, and are needlessly subjecting nonviolent drug offenders, bystanders, and wrongly targeted civilians to the terror of having their homes invaded while they’re sleeping, usually by teams of heavily armed paramilitary units dressed not as police officers but as soldiers.
These raids bring unnecessary violence and provocation to nonviolent drug offenders, many of whom were guilty of only misdemeanors. The raids terrorize innocents when police mistakenly target the wrong residence. And they have resulted in dozens of needless deaths and injuries, not only of drug offenders, but also of police officers, children, bystanders, and innocent suspects.
Those who suggest that the Supreme Court’s decision in Kentucky v. King is ‘no big deal’ or that it’s ‘alarmist’ to think otherwise, must not understand the extent to which the boundaries are pushed when the Court makes exceptions to our rights. Nor do they comprehend that once lost, civil liberties are impossible to reclaim. With SWAT teams already injuring and at times killing the wrong people to serve warrants, just imagine the abuse to come given the increased power the Court has bestowed upon the state.
Considering the level of brutality we have been dishing out around the world, from the “war on drugs” to the “war on terror,” the erosion of our civil liberties is sadly inevitable. Did we really think that we could wage war and occupy other nations with checkpoints, invasive surveillance, and brutal violence without these same policing tactics spreading to our country?
After sending hundreds of thousands of soldiers abroad to terrorize people in their homes around the world, we shouldn’t be surprised that our government would eventually employ the same actions against its own citizens. Just as Chalmers Johnson predicted, our imperialism abroad is destroying what is left of our democracy at home. From warrantless wiretapping to warrantless door-busting, this is what a police state looks like.

We already ARE living in Oceania!
May 21, 2011 at 5:02 amIt has never been the government’s business what we knowingly put into our bodies in the first place. Marijuana use was very nearly make completely legal in the last California election. The whole subject is laughable.
Can you imagine the state listing a ballot measure to make murder or robbing banks legal?
Now our prisons are so full of harmless drug offenders that it is straining the capacity of the prisons to contain them all and the court dockets are loaded with drug cases that are a waste of judicial time. We can thank our state and federal legislators for this mess.
Over time our drug laws have become an instrument of state terror and robbery and extortion, just like our tax laws.
May 21, 2011 at 10:40 amAll brought to you by the party of less government and respect for the Constitution, as you know!
May 21, 2011 at 2:07 pmRania, the same Chalmers Johnson also called for an abolition of the CIA.
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1105-30.htm
Progressives and left-leaning libertarians could have and still can get together on this but years of no go makes this hopeless. I’m afraid that as this country stays a lost soul as it crumbles in empire status mode, the police state is here to stay and get worse just as it happened in George Orwell’s “Animal Farm”.
May 21, 2011 at 6:18 pmThe US Empire is entering late stage capitalist imperialism and all that entails: export the proletariat for cheap labor, constant resource wars, more and more militarization of the economy and society, rapid growth of a bloated and corrupt financial capitalist over-class and maintenance of a heavily propagandized police state( a police state is a huge industry btw) with constant economic crisis and the commoditization of everything.
Eventually the system will alienate the majority of the population under it’s current logic, one way or another and that police state will come in handy
May 21, 2011 at 10:35 pmConsidering that the Supreme Court has equated money (spent to influence the outcome of elections) with Constitutionally-protected free speech, it’s not surprising that after 35 years since Buckly vs. Valeo we live in a society where those who have more money have, in practice, more Constitutionally-protected rights than the others.
Another thoughtful, insightful, well-composed column. Rania, you’re on a roll, and have shot to the top of my daily read list.
May 22, 2011 at 12:51 amAnd where are the supposed liberals on the court in this case? Missing! There are none.
We are experiencing a slow erosion of our civil rights, and we ourselves are to blame.
While we stare, hypnotized by our myriad screens, waiting for some elusive Rapture, our corrupt politicians and judges are stripping us of our rights, turning U.S. into a rogue, fascist nation. Good luck….
May 22, 2011 at 10:56 amPolice officers are the tool of those in charge. Lots of bad stuff follow that.
May 23, 2011 at 9:59 amThe cops are doing this sort of crap every where.
http://lifeinspenard.wordpress.com/2011/04/29/he-was-going-to-take-my-camera/
Nice work Rania, I’ll keep checking back.
May 23, 2011 at 12:17 pmLooking forward to rendaig more from you than can be conveyed in 140 characters. Why should I be one of the only few to hear your wisdom over ice cream? (We can still eat ice cream, though, right?)
May 23, 2012 at 9:21 pm[…] Filling In the Gaps ← This Is What A Police State Looks Like […]
May 23, 2011 at 4:31 pmThe Fascist state is here! The Rise of the Police State and Fall of the American Empire!
Chalmers Johnson was a great analyst and wonderful person! Read many of his articles!
May 24, 2011 at 1:12 amWhat is happening here is also happening everywhere in the world. Not just here.
May 30, 2011 at 5:35 pmThank you for an excellent analysis.
The American people are ruled by the biggest, baddest dictatorship of all – the US capitalist class.
http://susanrosenthal.com/featured/no-more-dictatorships-build-the-social-revolution
The more Americans are mistreated in the same ways as the peoples their State purports to “liberate,” the greater the prospect of cross-border solidarity to liberate us all from the global dictatorship of Capital.
June 5, 2011 at 10:23 amKeep up the good reporting.
June 14, 2011 at 8:17 amWasn’t there an Illinois state supreme court ruling that stated that citizens have no right to resist unlawful entry by police?
June 23, 2011 at 3:47 pm