1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 2 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x 3 GAIL ATWATER, ET AL., : 4 Petitioners : 5 v. : No. 99-1408 6 CITY OF LAGO VISTA, ET AL. : 7 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x 8 Washington, D.C. 9 Monday, December 4, 2000 10 The above-entitled matter came on for oral 11 argument before the Supreme Court of the United 12 States at 11:02 a.m. 13 APPEARANCES: 14 ROBERT C. DE CARLI, ESQ., Austin, Texas; on 15 behalf of the Petitioners. 16 ROGER J. GEORGE, JR., ESQ., Austin, Texas; on 17 behalf of the Respondents. 18 ANDY TAYLOR, ESQ., First Assistant Attorney 19 General of Texas; on behalf of Texas, et al., 20 as amici curiae, supporting Respondent. 21 22 23 24 25 1 1 C O N T E N T S 2 ORAL ARGUMENT OF PAGE 3 ROBERT C. DE CARLI, ESQ. 4 On behalf of the Petitioners 3 5 ORAL ARGUMENT OF 6 ROGER J. GEORGE, JR., ESQ. 7 On behalf of the Respondents 22 8 ORAL ARGUMENT OF 9 ANDY TAYLOR, ESQ. 10 On behalf of Texas, et al., as 11 amici curiae, supporting 12 Respondent 37 13 REBUTTAL ARGUMENT OF 14 ROBERT C. DE CARLI, ESQ. 15 On behalf of the Petitioners 45 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 2 1 P R O C E E D I N G S 2 [11:02 a.m.] 3 CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST: We'll hear argument 4 now in Number 99-1408, Gail Atwater v. The City of Lago 5 Vista. 6 Mr. De Carli. 7 ORAL ARGUMENT OF ROBERT C. DE CARLI 8 ON BEHALF OF PETITIONERS 9 MR. DE CARLI: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it 10 please the Court: 11 Reasonableness is the touchstone of the Fourth 12 Amendment. The court of appeals below, however, announced 13 a broad new rule that permits custodial arrest for any 14 offense committed in an officer's presence regardless of 15 the nature of that offense. The court of appeals in doing 16 so ignores the Fourth Amendment's requirement of 17 reasonableness. 18 First, it ignores the fact that a common law at 19 the time of the Fourth Amendment's adoption such an arrest 20 would not have been layoff. 21 QUESTION: Well, why would the common law be 22 involved here Mr. De Carli if Texas law says otherwise? 23 MR. DE CARLI: Mr. Chief Justice, the common law 24 should be considered because it is our position that the 25 Fourth Amendment incorporates the protections, the 3 1 restrictions on arrest that existed at the time of the 2 Fourth Amendment's adoption. 3 QUESTION: Well, but you're arguing here that 4 this offense should not have led to a custodial arrest, 5 now as part of that argument has to be a condition of 6 Texas law, isn't it? I mean if Texas law had authorized a 7 custodial arrest for this, wouldn't your case be 8 different? If you conceded that it authorized it? 9 MR. DE CARLI: No, Your Honor, because it is our 10 position that the Fourth Amendment restricts the use of 11 custodial arrest for minor offenses such as this. If 12 Texas were to increase the penalty for this offense, then 13 it would be a different balancing. 14 QUESTION: Even with a warrant you couldn't do a 15 custodial arrest? 16 MR. DE CARLI: No, but let me qualify that. It 17 would be a much weaker argument, one we would lose the 18 common law argument. Two, however, this Court -- we're 19 well aware of this Court's respect for warrants and the 20 fact that interjecting a neutral and detached magistrate 21 operates as a check. However, the fact is, by requiring a 22 warrant, still that would only require probable cause and 23 it's our position that probable cause does not 24 sufficiently balance the competing interest, although I 25 concede it's a much, it would be a much weaker argument -- 4 1 QUESTION: See, my problem is with your common 2 law argument because the Fourth Amendment does not contain 3 a warrant requirement, it just says if you do have, get a 4 warrant, it has to be based upon probable cause, blah, 5 blah, blah, blah, but the only root requirement of the 6 Fourth Amendment is that the arrest be reasonable. You're 7 telling me that you could do arrests at common law, so 8 long -- at least so long as there was a warrant. 9 MR. DE CARLI: That's correct, Justice Scalia, 10 and for that reason we say -- 11 QUESTION: Why would a warrant make it more 12 reasonable? 13 MR. DE CARLI: Because, Your Honor, it would 14 interject a neutral and detached magistrate who we would 15 hope would say Officer Turek, why are you arresting this 16 woman for not wearing a seat belt? Why do we not issue a 17 summons. Why not issue just a traffic citation. 18 QUESTION: Would that be a magistrate's 19 prerogative ordinarily? Isn't it a magistrate's 20 prerogative to find probable cause. 21 MR. DE CARLI: Yes, Mr. Chief Justice, and for 22 that reason I'm willing to concede that if a warrant were 23 obtained, this arrest still would be reasonable. Our 24 position is that probable cause, although it works as a 25 balancing of the competing interest of law enforcement and 5 1 the individual in some instances, in the setting before 2 the court and in most traffic offenses, it does nothing to 3 balance the competing interest of the individual. 4 QUESTION: What about the situation of a traffic 5 violator, maybe parking tickets or maybe seat belt use, 6 who continues repeatedly to refuse to use a seat belt or 7 to pay the parking fee when parking a car and has a whole 8 string of tickets for it? Does there come a time when due 9 to the repeated nature and in the case of seat belts 10 possible endangerment of children that the state can say, 11 okay, custody here is required, this person just won't 12 cooperate? 13 MR. DE CARLI: Justice O'Connor, I believe that 14 time would come when, if I understand you correctly, 15 you're alluding to nonappearances, the repeat offender. 16 QUESTION: Well, it's possible that a 17 nonappearance could amount to something that generates 18 jail time, but I'm just talking about the repeat offender. 19 MR. DE CARLI: Okay. 20 QUESTION: Without an offense that requires jail 21 time. 22 MR. DE CARLI: Without the nonappearance 23 problem. What that raises is it's the distinction between 24 punishment and enforcement. Punishing the repeat offender 25 is not the role of the police officer, that's the role for 6 1 a judge or a legislature that has provided heightened 2 penalties. 3 QUESTION: Not punishment, a concern for highway 4 safety. 5 MR. DE CARLI: Well, Your Honor, the thing is, 6 even the repeated, the fact if there are repeated 7 penalties and there is no heightened penalty, well then 8 the legislature has made a determination that on the 9 balance that does not regard that aspect of highway safety 10 is that sufficient to justify the intrusion. 11 QUESTION: I notice that Judge Weiner in the 12 case below had a suggested approach, a different approach, 13 that when there's a plausible articulable reason for 14 affecting such an intrusion, it's lawful. 15 MR. DE CARLI: Yes, Your Honor, and I read that 16 as trying to encompass what this Court in its opinion 17 issued last week referred to as vehicular-bound imminent 18 threats to life and limb which would be driving while 19 intoxicated, driving under the influence of drugs or 20 alcohol. 21 QUESTION: Oh, presumably that can generate jail 22 time. 23 MR. DE CARLI: In some cases. In most cases, 24 however, I believe that in some jurisdictions still first 25 offense drunk driving there is no jail time. So I would 7 1 still, we would still argue it would be reasonable, 2 because some of those offenses driving intoxicated and 3 reckless driving amount, in essence, to breaches of the 4 peace, they are by their nature violent, they impose a 5 threat. They threaten the health and safety of others on 6 the road directly and I think -- 7 QUESTION: Does repeated nonuse of a seat belt 8 for minor children constitute a threat to safety? 9 MR. DE CARLI: Justice O'Connor, I think it 10 would be a closer question, but I would still defer to the 11 fact that if the legislature has not increased, has not 12 provided for heightened penalties, for repeat offenders, 13 repeat nonuse of seat belts, that still it is not that 14 limited category of offenses that impose an imminent 15 threat to life and limb on the road. 16 QUESTION: When you say -- go ahead -- 17 QUESTION: Suppose in this case the driver was 18 from another state, could there have been an arrest made. 19 MR. DE CARLI: No, Your Honor, and let me 20 explain why. One, states have already provided for that 21 kind of situation in the uniform violator compact act 22 where if somebody does not appear, then their license can 23 be revoked in that other state. 24 QUESTION: So the risk of nonappearance is not 25 part of the balance that you want the police officer to -- 8 1 MR. DE CARLI: Well, Justice Kennedy, I think 2 the approach to that, there already is a way of dealing 3 with that and that is if a party does not appear, then 4 that's a separate offense, there is a penalty provided for 5 that, a warrant may be issued for that person's arrest, 6 and they are then subject to punishment for that 7 additional offense. 8 QUESTION: Can a police officer in an 9 out-of-state case use the time-honored tradition of giving 10 you a police escort to the station where you pay your 11 fine? 12 MR. DE CARLI: Your Honor -- 13 QUESTION: That's a stop, it's a seizure of 14 sorts. 15 MR. DE CARLI: The problem that we -- 16 QUESTION: That's sort of an old tradition in 17 some of our states. 18 MR. DE CARLI: Well, it depends -- the problem 19 with that approach is it leads to, and in part what 20 respondents, respondents have implicitly made this 21 argument that this was a brief arrest. Ms. Atwater was 22 helped into the police car. What that leads to is it's 23 distinguishing between the degrees of the custodial 24 arrest, even though once that person is removed from the 25 scene, the safety of their car, once under custodial 9 1 arrest, their life -- or excuse me, their liberty and 2 property interests are completely forfeited. 3 QUESTION: Mr. De Carli, a moment ago you said 4 you thought perhaps reckless driving might be a breach of 5 the peace. Is that a term of art, breach of the peace? 6 The briefs indicate that there's considerable differences 7 to what it meant at common law. 8 MR. DE CARLI: Mr. Chief Justice, it is clear at 9 common law that breach of the peace when used in the 10 context of the law of arrest referred to a group of 11 offenses that either involved violence or the type of 12 conduct that would incite immediate violence. 13 QUESTION: The opposing briefs suggest 14 differently. But I recognize also that your briefs also 15 have supporting authority. I'm just not sure whether 16 that's too happy a distinction. What should turn on 17 breach of the peace which is basically a common law 18 concept. 19 MR. DE CARLI: Well, Mr. Chief Justice, I 20 believe that if we look to, again the decision of last 21 week, and other decisions of this Court, Delaware v. 22 Prous, I guess Sitz would be an example, there are certain 23 offenses, in the context of the traffic offenses where by 24 their very nature they impose a grave risk of harm to 25 others on the road. 10 1 QUESTION: What if Texas here had said that this 2 particular offense was, you know, that it could be 10 days 3 in jail or $300 fine? Could the officer have done what he 4 did here? 5 MR. DE CARLI: Mr. Chief Justice, it would be a 6 much closer case then. 7 QUESTION: Could you answer -- answer yes or no 8 and then explain. 9 MR. DE CARLI: Well, let me, part of my 10 vacillation is in -- we proposed a rule, in looking back 11 at that, I now wonder, well, perhaps the correct approach 12 would be to rely exclusively on the common law. The 13 common law provided a clear boundary, breach of the peace, 14 nonbreach of the peace and felonies. 15 QUESTION: The common law as of what date. 16 MR. DE CARLI: As of the adoption of the Fourth 17 Amendment which would be 1791. 18 QUESTION: What is your answer to the Chief 19 Justice's question, yes or no. 20 MR. DE CARLI: Unless there were -- the answer 21 would be no. I'm sorry. 22 QUESTION: What do you make of the nightwalker 23 statute argument that at the same period in which you're 24 arguing there was at least a threshold of immunity set 25 here, it was clear in English law that nightwalkers who 11 1 were not breaching the peace in your sense could be 2 arrested. 3 MR. DE CARLI: Justice Souter, I think the 4 correct, I believe the correct way to look at the 5 nightwalker statutes is this was a time before any 6 lighting, anybody that was walking about in the dead of 7 night it was reasonable to presume that that person was a 8 felon, until -- 9 QUESTION: Yeah, but the fact that the person was 10 a felon, even that he intended to commit a felony, is that 11 what you mean? 12 MR. DE CARLI: Well that the person may have 13 committed a felon or they were up to no good. Nobody 14 walking about in the dead of the night in the 17th century 15 was doing anything other than contemplating criminal acts. 16 I think at the -- that's the way I understand the 17 nightwalker statute. 18 QUESTION: They didn't have insomniacs back 19 then? 20 MR. DE CARLI: I think Justice Kennedy they 21 stayed indoors because it was too dark. 22 QUESTION: You answered the Chief Justice's 23 question that if the state had said we regard not buckling 24 up as very serious, therefore 10 days in jail, then you 25 would have no case to complain about a custodial arrest 12 1 for that, is that so? 2 MR. DE CARLI: Well, Justice Ginsburg, again, it 3 depends on, our case is a core case, I mean it falls under 4 the rule the common law end of any balancing -- 5 QUESTION: But I'm just asking you the question. 6 MR. DE CARLI: Yes. 7 QUESTION: Is it just -- so a seat belt in one 8 state could be one thing if the state chooses to make it a 9 more serious offense, and another thing in another state? 10 MR. DE CARLI: If the line is drawn not based on 11 the common law but as we had proposed in our brief the 12 jailable versus fine only distinction. 13 QUESTION: Now here in this very case, could the 14 officer have said, child endangerment is a felony, so it's 15 not simply the misdemeanor of not buckling up, but you've 16 put your children in danger and therefore the offense is 17 child endangerment which is a felony. 18 MR. DE CARLI: Several responses to that Justice 19 Ginsburg. First, in that instance, probable cause, if the 20 arrest were based on alleged child endangerment there 21 probable cause would act as a restraint because the police 22 officer to justify the arrest would have to establish a 23 certain degree of certainty that the specific conduct was 24 child endangerment. Now, this was not child endangerment 25 for several reasons, one, the legislature has imposed an 13 1 extremely minimal penalty, two, it's not child 2 endangerment because you are set -- by virtue of the fact 3 that if we were to call this child endangerment then not 4 using your turn signal or perhaps speeding or running a 5 red light, those are just as close to any possible harm as 6 not wearing a seat belt. 7 There's a causation problem, in other words. 8 And most importantly is that by, if we truly are concerned 9 about the welfare of the children, then arresting the 10 mother and taking the mother away is inflicting a far 11 greater harm on those children, and it's doing -- 12 QUESTION: Well, the facts here are very 13 unattractive. I mean one doesn't like to think that a 14 mother is going to be stopped for not wearing a seat belt 15 and have her children in tears in the car while the mother 16 is hauled off to jail. You've got the perfect case. 17 MR. DE CARLI: We'd like to think so Justice 18 O'Connor. 19 QUESTION: But I think what we're concerned with 20 is the broader rule because it has millions of 21 permutations and applications across the country. And 22 conceivably the Fourth Amendment at bottom does always 23 require a kind of reasonableness test, and that's why I 24 thought Judge Weiner's approach might make a little sense 25 here. 14 1 MR. DE CARLI: It might. I mean the 2 extraordinary no arrest for fine only offenses absent an 3 articulable fact that explains why an arrest would be 4 justified. 5 QUESTION: So what do you think, Bob, it seems 6 to me that the strongest argument against you has nothing 7 to do with this case, it has to do with the police 8 officers being human. They say to the police officer, 9 look, if somebody commits a crime in your presence you can 10 arrest them. But you can't use -- do an unusual thing, 11 you know, you can't use excessive force, et cetera, but as 12 long as you behave in a normal manner, crime, you see it, 13 arrest them. Anyone can understand that. 14 MR. DE CARLI: Right. 15 QUESTION: And the problem with your side and 16 the people who are supporting it is are they coming up 17 with something that works? I mean, a policeman isn't 18 going to know the common law or breaches of the peace. A 19 police -- they're just not going to understand that. So 20 is there some kind of practical alternative to this simple 21 rule which has in it a way of catching abuses through the 22 nonnormal behavior. 23 MR. DE CARLI: Justice Breyer, I really do 24 believe that in the context of traffic offenses, and I'll 25 explain a little bit later why it's valid to limit a 15 1 holding or a rule to traffic offenses, it is not all that 2 complex because there are only a few offenses that -- in 3 which, most of which this Court has identified in other 4 opinions where the arrest -- where the use of a custodial 5 arrest would indeed further enforcement, I mean, I guess 6 one, drunk driving, driving while intoxicated, reckless 7 driving, closer arguably the unlicensed driver, although 8 -- 9 QUESTION: Speeding. 10 MR. DE CARLI: No, Your Honor. 11 QUESTION: No what. 12 MR. DE CARLI: No, Your Honor, speeding -- it 13 would not be reasonable to arrest a driver for speeding 14 unless the speeding rose to the level of reckless driving. 15 And that's where you have the same probable cause 16 determinations. 17 QUESTION: What if the state does think that -- 18 QUESTION: What if the speeder is from another 19 jurisdiction? 20 MR. DE CARLI: I'm sorry. 21 QUESTION: What if the speeder if from another 22 jurisdiction? 23 MR. DE CARLI: Your Honor, oh, Justice Stevens, 24 again, that returns to the response I believe I gave to 25 Justice O'Connor or Justice Kennedy that in essence 16 1 respondents seek a prophylactic rule in that we are to 2 cede discretion to arrest to police officers on the chance 3 that people from another jurisdiction are going to run 4 away and not pay their fine. 5 QUESTION: I think that's a standard rule for 6 policemen to stop motorists and state if you're from out 7 of the jurisdiction you either pay the fine now or follow 8 me to the courthouse. 9 MR. DE CARLI: But Justice Scalia -- 10 QUESTION: I'm quite sure that's standard 11 procedure in any number of states. And you say that's all 12 bad, you just have to say, well, hope you come back to 13 Wyoming someday. 14 MR. DE CARLI: It's -- Justice Scalia, I think 15 the reason why it's, I mean if we're looking for a bright 16 line rule, the problem that permitting a custodial arrest 17 in that situation would lead to is, if we say, okay, 18 out-of-state person, he's not going to come back to 19 Wyoming, high risk, if you allow the arrest, then what 20 that means is the person is potentially held in custody 21 before a probable cause -- 22 QUESTION: I hate to constitutionalize all this 23 thing, everything becomes a constitutional case. Is there 24 a police chief in Lago Vista? 25 MR. DE CARLI: Yes, yes, Justice Scalia. 17 1 QUESTION: Is he elected? 2 MR. DE CARLI: Yes. 3 QUESTION: Do his constituents think it's a good 4 idea for his officers to arrest women for not having their 5 kids in seat belts. 6 MR. DE CARLI: My understanding is there is a 7 deep divide in the community regarding the issue. 8 QUESTION: But he's not in the case anymore and 9 that raises another question, given the division of the 10 judges, it's really interesting, the district court 11 thought your case was frivolous and then five judges on 12 the court of appeals thought it was very serious. But 13 isn't it almost certain that this Officer Turek would have 14 qualified immunity given -- how could one say that the law 15 was clearly established given the division among the 16 Federal judges. 17 MR. DE CARLI: I have three responses to that, 18 Justice Ginsburg. First, the Fifth Circuit clearly did 19 not address that issue, the en bloc majority. They 20 explicitly refrained from making that determination. But 21 second, even though, yes, it is conceivably -- it would be 22 a tough hurdle to overcome with regard to Officer Turek. 23 However the city still is in the lawsuit and Judge -- 24 QUESTION: But the police chief isn't. He's been 25 dismissed and you're not challenging that. If you're 18 1 relying on a practice or policy of the city to hold the 2 city, where would that policy or practice have come from 3 other than the police chief who has been dismissed? 4 MR. DE CARLI: My understanding is that the -- 5 if it were to be remanded back to the Fifth Circuit, if 6 this Court were to find a Fourth Amendment violation, the 7 Fifth Circuit majority never addressed that -- those 8 specific issues, but it would still be live against the 9 city based on the finding of Judge Sparks that there was a 10 policy on the part of the city. The city had this policy. 11 QUESTION: Which judge made that. 12 MR. DE CARLI: Judge Sparks, Judge Sparks in the 13 -- I guess it would be Appendix -- the third Appendix 14 basically stated that it was a -- a policy was 15 established. A policy was established, but no 16 constitutional violation had been established. 17 QUESTION: This is the judge who thought the 18 claim was frivolous. 19 MR. DE CARLI: Yes, but Judge Sparks is a good 20 judge. And I think part of that resulted from the trial 21 counsel, frankly. 22 QUESTION: Mr. De Carli, let's assume that I 23 don't find your constitutional argument conclusive, at 24 this point I'll be candid to say I'm not sure how to 25 assess it. But I assume that I don't find it conclusive. 19 1 One of the things that I would like to know more about if 2 we have to engage in a reasonableness determination here 3 in setting a standard, is how bad the problem is out 4 there. And one of the things that I know both, I forget 5 whether it's from your brief or from the brief on the 6 other side, in a number of jurisdictions in which arrests 7 for misdemeanors without any distinction, and arrests for 8 even the more minor offenses, some states called them 9 violations, the sub-misdemeanor, but technically criminal 10 offenses, is permitted without warrant if committed in the 11 officer's presence. 12 And the commonness of the practice leads me to 13 question how many horrible cases like this one are there 14 out there? Are we faced with a case in which the facts 15 indeed are about as good for you as I think, you know, 16 they could be, but are we, by the same token, faced with a 17 case which is very rare and should not be the basis for 18 constitutionalizing a general rule? How big is the 19 problem. 20 MR. DE CARLI: Justice Souter, I've tried to 21 determine how big the problem was by going to the 22 Department of Justice, which of course provides the most 23 authoritative statistics. Unfortunately, they don't 24 address the issue. However, anecdotally, there, you know 25 -- well, just a few weeks ago we saw the young girl 20 1 arrested for not -- for eating french fries in the 2 substation. 3 QUESTION: Where did we see this? 4 MR. DE CARLI: In the District of Columbia, I 5 believe. 6 QUESTION: I hadn't seen it myself. 7 MR. DE CARLI: I'm sorry. It was in the -- 8 QUESTION: I didn't see it. 9 QUESTION: He immerses himself in these briefs. 10 MR. DE CARLI: And that's good. 11 QUESTION: It's not a constitutional violation 12 for a police officer to be a jerk. And what we're trying 13 to do is define whether there are some rules that we can 14 work with. And yours seems to me so amorphous, and the 15 brief of the respondents summarized four or five different 16 tests being given by the amicus briefs and they're all 17 different. And you're not even clear that your own tests 18 -- you say on reflection this is adequate -- 19 MR. DE CARLI: Well, Justice Kennedy, all of the 20 tests provided by petitioners and their amici are actually 21 remarkably similar in that they all recognize that there 22 should be a limited amount of discretion for those close 23 cases, however, we can carve out whether that be through 24 offenses that involve -- of imminent threat of harm. Or 25 if we call it a breach of the peace. Or if we draw a 21 1 distinction between fine only and jailable, lines can be 2 drawn. That's one point. To get back to Justice Scalia's 3 comment about the fear of the problem of 4 constitutionalizing everything, I refer to Justice Story's 5 comment that the Fourth Amendment was indeed an embodiment 6 of the common law. 7 QUESTION: What about deterrence? Don't you 8 think people are going to be pretty unlikely to eat french 9 fries on the subway in Washington. 10 MR. DE CARLI: That's correct, Justice Scalia -- 11 QUESTION: And maybe in Lago Vista, not to belt 12 up their kids? 13 MR. DE CARLI: Yes, but the problem -- 14 QUESTION: Well is that worth nothing? 15 MR. DE CARLI: No. But that is confusing 16 punishment with enforcement. Deterrence is a 17 justification for punishment. And police officers should 18 be enforcing laws and not punishing. Mr. Chief Justice, if 19 I may, I'd like to reserve the remainder of my time. 20 ORAL ARGUMENT OF ROGER J. GEORGE 21 ON HALF OF RESPONDENTS 22 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE: Very well, Mr. De Carli. 23 Mr. George we'll hear from you. 24 MR. GEORGE: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it 25 please the Court: 22 1 The problem we're facing on the Fourth Amendment 2 has to include both the seizure and the scope of the 3 seizure and the nature of the seizure. And I want this 4 Court to pay particular attention to the Texas statutory 5 scheme, because the Texas statutory scheme is remarkable 6 in that in traffic violations particularly, as opposed to 7 other kinds of violations, it provides very explicitly 8 that once an officer makes the decision to arrest, as 9 opposed to giving a citation, that officer must 10 immediately and the word in the statute is immediately, 11 take the accused before the nearest magistrate and to have 12 that magistrate determine whether or not the person should 13 have to put up a bond or be released on their own 14 recognizance. That system is exactly the system that is 15 in my opinion specifically authorized by this Court's 16 opinion in U.S. v. Watson, if you read the specific 17 footnote 11 in that opinion, that is the specific kind of 18 procedure that was authorized by this Court. 19 It has the advantages that is the tradition in 20 this country, at least since we've had automobiles, that 21 in rural Texas, where I'm from, the fact that you get -- 22 run a red light in El Paso, and you're from Brady, doesn't 23 -- the people in El Paso are somewhat concerned that 24 they'll ever see you again. It's a little easier to do 25 something about it in today's world of computers and 23 1 instant, relatively instant communication. 2 QUESTION: Mr. George, can I just ask sort of a 3 general question, why wouldn't that interest, and 4 obviously you're certainly entitled to arrest somebody 5 who's about to flee the jurisdiction or something like 6 that, but why wouldn't that interest be accommodated by 7 the statement of Justice Weiner, Judge Weiner in his 8 dissent? There's got to be some reason, any reason, as 9 long as it's plausible and relates to the problem. And 10 the reason there is obvious the guy may not show up to pay 11 the fine. 12 MR. GEORGE: I believe the problem with Judge 13 Weiner's appointment is the problem of being too unclear 14 as to exactly what kind of reasons are good enough 15 reasons. 16 QUESTION: It's about like a Terry stop, that's 17 pretty -- if there's a particular articulable reason to 18 suspect there's a problem here you can make a Terry stop, 19 I don't see that it's that different. That seems to work. 20 MR. GEORGE: It does work in the Terry stop 21 situation and we can -- 22 QUESTION: Why wouldn't it work here? 23 MR. GEORGE: You can argue it was here. I mean 24 this man's -- if you look at page 422 of the record, his 25 police report says I just stopped her a few weeks ago for 24 1 the same violation. That's disputed fact. But that's 2 what he articulated. And your concern about the repeat 3 violators was at least written on the contemporaneous 4 repeat offense report. It's important -- 5 QUESTION: I'm not asking about this case. 6 MR. GEORGE: I understand that. 7 QUESTION: I'm asking about an appropriate 8 workable rule. And I want to know why the Weiner 9 formulation in your view is unworkable. 10 MR. GEORGE: I think -- well, I think it leads 11 to the same problems that we've had to some extent in this 12 Terry stop rules. Some rules, because it has to be 13 coupled in my opinion with this instant immediate 14 appearance before somebody else to make the decision. In 15 this case Judge Thompson in Lago Vista agreed that some 16 bond was required here. 17 QUESTION: I'm not sure that a proper 18 articulable rule -- do you think that an acceptable 19 articulable reason is that there's a breach of the peace 20 in the more narrow sense? You know, the guy's really 21 annoying people and getting boisterous and what not. 22 MR. GEORGE: No. 23 QUESTION: Because I mean it seems to me you 24 don't necessarily have to take him in to stop that. You 25 could go over and tell him, you know, you got a fine and 25 1 if you do it again you're going to get another fine. That 2 might shut him up right away. 3 MR. GEORGE: I absolutely agree with that. And I 4 don't think this Court has, at least if you read U.S. v. 5 Watson, New York v. Payton, Judge White, Justice White's 6 dissent in Welsh v. Wisconsin concurred in by the current 7 Chief Justice all indicated as did the American Law 8 Institute's model code referred to in U.S. v. Watson, all 9 provided that the rule for arrest was, I see the person do 10 it, in fact the ALI rule was, I saw a petty offense 11 happening in front of the officer. 12 In this case, there were five such offenses, 13 driving without the seat belts, no driver's license -- 14 QUESTION: Their suggestion is there be another 15 rule. 16 MR. GEORGE: I understand. 17 QUESTION: And the other rule would be what 18 Justice O'Connor just said. And so my question would be 19 the same, what's wrong with that? I thought frankly your 20 answer to that would be what is the set of arrests to 21 which that rule applies. And then I was going to suggest 22 the set of arrests that are punishable by fine only. 23 MR. GEORGE: Well, I think that the same reason 24 that there's something wrong with that -- 25 QUESTION: Now, what's wrong with that. 26 1 MR. GEORGE: Well, it assumes that the officer 2 knows enough facts at the time to make a determination of 3 what the crime will ultimately be charged. 4 QUESTION: Well, as long as the officer has to 5 have, doesn't the officer can arrest him only if he thinks 6 he's breaking the law. So you say Mr. Policeman, what law 7 was he breaking. And the policeman has to understand that 8 if it's a law that's punishable by a fine only he has to 9 have some reason for arresting the person rather than just 10 citing. 11 MR. GEORGE: Well, as this Court decided not to 12 adopt that rule in Berkimer. 13 QUESTION: My question is why not. 14 MR. GEORGE: The answer is, because for example, 15 much conduct can be both felony and misdemeanor. 16 QUESTION: Well, that's absolutely fine, if the 17 policeman thinks, forget felony/misdemeanor, I agree with 18 you that felony/misdemeanor is not a workable rule. I 19 don't know if others do or not. But felony/misdemeanor 20 falls into the problem that different states define 21 misdemeanor differently and it's so complicated nobody 22 understands it. All right. So that's why I asked the 23 rule that's been suggested by others, it's not mine 24 originally, that if it's punishable by a fine only that's 25 where Justice O'Connor's principle kicks in. Now, what 27 1 would be wrong with that? 2 MR. GEORGE: Because -- same reason. They don't 3 know enough facts. For example, in Texas -- 4 QUESTION: Is that your only reason, Mr. George, 5 just that you're willing to argue this out on a 6 case-by-case basis? I thought part of your argument was 7 that when it says unreasonable seizures in the 8 Constitution it has something in mind and doesn't leave it 9 up to this Court to sit back and decide what's reasonable 10 and unreasonable. I thought your argument was based on 11 the fact that this has never been understood to be the 12 constitutional rule. There has always been authority for 13 the -- for policemen to conduct arrests of this sort. 14 MR. GEORGE: Absolutely. 15 QUESTION: Which, if they're abusive, the 16 sheriff won't get reelected. 17 MR. GEORGE: That's exactly the basis of my 18 argument. 19 QUESTION: Why don't you put that as your first 20 line of defense and then argue on the, you know, on the -- 21 QUESTION: If by chance the first line of 22 defense was breached. 23 QUESTION: Mr. George is trying convince of us 24 that that's the reason -- 25 MR. GEORGE: Thank you Justice Scalia. Returning 28 1 to Justice Breyer. If the first line is breached, let me 2 return to that response. The problem is illustrated by 3 public intoxication in Texas as in other jurisdictions. 4 The number of offenses, the times you have done it changes 5 the penalty. No way to know on the roadside whether this 6 is the first time or the fourth time, if it is the second 7 time in Texas, you go to jail. I mean it's punishable by 8 jail. If it's the first time, it's not. 9 QUESTION: The answer is, if you don't know, you 10 have no articulable reason. That's the answer. That's 11 easy. 12 QUESTION: If you don't know, you don't arrest. 13 The burden is on the officer to be certain that it is the 14 second offense or the third offense, whatever is 15 necessary. 16 MR. GEORGE: Yes, Justice Souter, that -- 17 Justice Breyer asked me why -- what's wrong with the jail 18 versus fine distinction. And in my view it is to put the 19 burden on the officer requires too much of the officer and 20 of course I have my first line of defense again, that is, 21 that has never been -- 22 QUESTION: I know, but in that instance why 23 can't the officer just radio in? We have John Doe, he's 24 intoxicated, does this guy have a record? 25 MR. GEORGE: This Court's opinion in Arizona v. 29 1 Evans in which the communications to the station and the 2 computer system and they called down and they said he has 3 an outstanding warrant but it turned out he didn't have an 4 outstanding warrant. The problem is it assumes that in 5 rural Texas or in other parts of this United States that 6 there will be effective, prompt and accurate communication 7 to -- 8 QUESTION: Well, then you're going to have the 9 same problem when he goes before the magistrate in this 10 little town. They still don't know anything. 11 MR. GEORGE: I understand. But you have an 12 independent nonadversarial determination of what the terms 13 of release ought to be, because we're only talking about 14 whether to release people on their own recognizance for 15 appearance at trial as opposed to requiring some sort of 16 financial security for those people to appear at trial. 17 QUESTION: Yes, but Judge Weiner's rule, it's 18 important to keep in mind, it only kicks in if it's a 19 fine-only offense in the first place, but if there is a 20 reason such concern about appearance at trial, bingo, 21 you're protected. I mean these situations do fall into 22 certain large categories, one is the out-of-town speeders, 23 you could always haul him to the station house, that's 24 been settled for years and years and years as Justice 25 Scalia points out. But what about those where there's 30 1 absolutely no plausible reason for saying I have to make a 2 custodial arrest here. Will you give the officer total 3 absolute discretion just because he doesn't like the 4 person or something of that nature? 5 MR. GEORGE: Well, the discretion of the 6 officer, the answer is no there's not absolute discretion 7 because there's the limits of the equal protection clause, 8 there's other kinds of constitutional limitations. He 9 can't go around arresting only black people or Asian 10 people or some other kind of arrangement, he cannot -- 11 QUESTION: Or women with small children. 12 QUESTION: Can they be held for 48 hours as 13 other arrestees can or do they have to be, do you 14 acknowledge that that's part of your rule that he really 15 does have to be brought before a magistrate immediately. 16 MR. GEORGE: Not in Texas, they can't. If I 17 were in your shoes I would have agreed you for this case 18 in County of Riverside v. -- 19 QUESTION: But that wasn't the decision. People 20 can be held a long time. What happened to the arresting 21 officer in this case? Do you defend that as a reasonable 22 decision? 23 MR. GEORGE: In this case? 24 QUESTION: Yes. 25 MR. GEORGE: On the basis, we're here on a 31 1 summary judgment where he has never been deposed and all 2 we have is arrest reports. 3 QUESTION: Right. 4 MR. GEORGE: So the only thing I have is his 5 arrest report. And on the basis of his arrest report, he 6 says that he was -- she had violated the same statute and 7 he was concerned. 8 QUESTION: Even knowing it was a mother with two 9 small children in a small town and what happens to the 10 children? I mean this is kind of an amazing case, but you 11 think that's fine. 12 MR. GEORGE: Well, it would be a lot better that 13 the children have to deal with having their mother taken 14 before the magistrate than having to deal with the brain 15 damage if they had -- she had stepped on the brake five 16 minutes later, five minutes later, would that 5-year-old 17 standing up in the front seat of a pick-up and she steps 18 on the brake, it is a very serious incident, even at 15 19 miles an hour, assuming that was the actual speed. 20 QUESTION: You don't have to think it's fine to 21 think it's not unconstitutional, do you. 22 MR. GEORGE: No, as I understood -- 23 QUESTION: There are a lot of really stupid 24 things that aren't unconstitutional. 25 MR. GEORGE: Being a jerk is not 32 1 unconstitutional. And assuming that Officer Turek is a 2 jerk, let's just give them that position, and he was a 3 jerk in this instance, that does not create a 4 constitutional violation. 5 QUESTION: It's true, in trying to think this 6 through, and I'm having a difficult time working on this 7 and I'm trying to think it through, and it seemed to me 8 the strongest argument against the Weiner position is that 9 it would lead to writing volume 7 of the treatise on the 10 Fourth Amendment which would have an infinite number of 11 rules in it about when the Terry stop-type justification 12 is enough or isn't enough. And rather than write -- it 13 seems to me we ought to reserve that for there being a 14 real problem. But is there a real problem here? That's 15 why anything you could say in respect to the, what you've 16 read, in doing research for this, as to the scope and 17 nature of the problem in general would be helpful to me. 18 MR. GEORGE: No, there is no real problem. 19 QUESTION: I know you think that, but I wondered 20 if you've come across some things that you could refer me 21 to. 22 MR. GEORGE: No. The only things we have come 23 across are the racial profiling issues. We have the New 24 Jersey experience and we have some of the amici on the 25 other side presenting that problem to this Court and this 33 1 is a prophylactic solution to racial profiling because you 2 never have custodial arrests for traffic violations. It 3 is our judgment if that is the problem, if that's the only 4 problem presented here, we deal with that problem by 5 dealing with the equal protection violation it presents 6 rather than creating, in my opinion, a whole lot more work 7 for this Court and the lower Federal courts on deciding 8 what the appropriate standard would be for this new 9 variation away from probable cause. 10 QUESTION: Mr. George, one of your arguments is 11 the difficulty-of-administration argument, and you said 12 earlier that when we're dealing with a level of offense in 13 which it may be difficult to tell on the side of the road 14 whether this would be subject to arrest or not subject to 15 arrest, the -- in effect the benefit of the doubt should 16 be given to the officer and we shouldn't come up with a 17 rule that in effect would penalize the officer. But why 18 should the benefit of the doubt be given to the officer? 19 Why should the burden of uncertainty, if we're going to 20 draw a line, be a burden that falls on the police rather 21 than -- a burden that falls on the citizen rather than on 22 the police? Why would she make that choice? 23 MR. GEORGE: My first response is that probable 24 cause has been the line that's drawn on all crimes in this 25 country since 1791. And that is -- ought to remain the 34 1 line because it has worked. 2 QUESTION: I realize that. But you were making 3 a different argument when you addressed the possibility of 4 drawing the line differently, your response to that was 5 that may be difficult in some cases, and the burden of 6 that difficulty should not fall on the police. And my 7 question is, assuming a different line were to be drawn, 8 why should the burden fall on the citizen rather than the 9 police? Why shouldn't we simply say, look, if it's going 10 to be -- if there's any question about applying this line, 11 we'll assume that the burden of doubt should be for the 12 benefit of the potential arrestee rather than for the 13 benefit of the police? 14 MR. GEORGE: The answer is, because the 15 difficulty of articulating all the reasons that would be 16 adequate. Now, we can have a -- 17 QUESTION: But that's the premise of the 18 question. We're assuming that the reasons would be hard 19 to articulate. But assume that we feel there is a need on 20 reasonableness grounds to draw such a line, why isn't the 21 answer to the uncertainty of application the answer that 22 was suggested earlier, and that is if the police are not 23 certain in applying this rule, that they have a right to 24 arrest, they should not arrest, and that's the answer to 25 the uncertainty problem. 35 1 MR. GEORGE: Truthfully, I see no reason, if 2 you're going to go down the road of trying to carve out 3 some other exception to probable cause, that the burden of 4 proof not remain on the government. The burden of proof 5 is -- on probable cause is that the police officer has to 6 be able to -- there has to be objective facts that would 7 cause probable cause, a specific violation of a specific 8 statute. The Terry stop, we put the burden on the 9 government. If it's burden shifting, if we're going down 10 this road, if this Court should determine that there needs 11 to be a new volume five for the Fourth Amendment 12 jurisprudence and that this is a problem of some moment in 13 the country and needs that remedy, then I can not 14 articulate a reason why we should bury the burden of 15 proof. 16 QUESTION: There's a point, a procedural point, 17 that I'm curious about, this case was begun by the 18 plaintiffs in the state court, and the police officer, 19 police chief and the city removed it to the Federal court, 20 is there a reason why they did that? 21 MR. GEORGE: I wasn't trial counsel at that time 22 and I do not know the reason. I agree with your earlier 23 question about qualified immunity. I don't believe -- I 24 think there is immunity both for the city and for the 25 individuals here as a matter of law. I grant you that the 36 1 Fifth Circuit did not address that issue. But I think 2 this is a largely academic exercise in here and at this 3 point, I'll reserve the balance of my time for Mr. Taylor, 4 thank you. 5 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE: Very well, Mr. George. Mr. 6 Taylor. 7 ORAL ARGUMENT OF ANDY TAYLOR 8 AS AMICI CURIAE SUPPORTING RESPONDENT 9 MR. TAYLOR: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it 10 please the Court: 11 This Court's teachings has been clear that 12 warrantless arrests of traffic offenders based on probable 13 cause is reasonable, and is a reasonable intrusion under 14 the Fourth Amendment. The court has taught us that in 15 Robinson, in Gustafson, in Wren, and in Knowles, because 16 the question from the constitutional perspective is 17 whether or not probable cause to believe an arrest under 18 that local law has occurred, and once that is met, then 19 all the other questions become policy judgments that the 20 50 states should decide. 21 QUESTION: Let me suggest this, again, going 22 back to, as you can guess, I'm rather intrigued with the 23 descending standard. Basically the descending standard 24 is, if the decision to make a custodial arrest rather than 25 citation is wholly arbitrary, if there's no plausible 37 1 reason or articulable reason can be given for it, then 2 it's arbitrary. Now it seems to me that anything is 3 arbitrary cannot be reasonable within the meaning of the 4 Fourth Amendment. Now why am I wrong about that? 5 MR. TAYLOR: The reason why that premise is 6 incorrect Justice Stevens is this Court's teachings in 7 Gerstein v. Pew and reaffirmed in County of Riverside v. 8 MacLaughlin, once you have probable cause this Court's 9 teachings have been not only can you engage in a full 10 custodial arrest, but likewise you're entitled for a 11 temporary detention for the purpose of administrating the 12 paperwork so that this individual can be booked and then 13 released once a probable cause determination has been made 14 by a magistrate. This Court has rejected the notion that 15 there must be some second reason based on some mini-trial 16 based on the facts presented as to whether or not that 17 decision of that tree to bring into custody is 18 appropriate. 19 All three options to a police officer are 20 reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. The first is to 21 issue a warning, whether it be in writing or oral. Second, 22 to actually arrest and bring into custody, or third to 23 issue a citation instead of actually engaging in a full 24 custodial arrest. This Court has taught us that all three 25 options are equally reasonable under the floor, the 38 1 minimum guidelines and protections that the Fourth 2 Amendment and the federal constitution give, and then it 3 becomes a matter of policy. 4 QUESTION: But you're saying there is no 5 standard that constrains the officer's decision on whether 6 or not to give a citation as opposed to make a custodial 7 arrest. 8 MR. TAYLOR: There is no constitutional 9 standard, it is a policy judgment Justice Stevens, and the 10 different states have approached it in different ways. As 11 you will note some of the amici here have said that it's 12 appropriate under state law to engage in a full custodial 13 arrest. Indeed, if arguing whether or not the state 14 governmental interest is one that should be given credence 15 by this Court, the state of Texas has spoken in the 16 statute, even though the statute in question, the seat 17 belt offense law does not provide for punishment in the 18 form of jail time. They have likewise determined that it 19 is appropriate to have a full custodial arrest in order to 20 enforce the government's interest in that particular law. 21 Therefore, that jurisdiction has made that policy choice. 22 Those policy choices are subject to political 23 accountability. 24 QUESTION: That's set forth specifically in the 25 seat belt law? 39 1 MR. TAYLOR: The traffic rules of the road is a 2 certain codification of state law that includes seat belt 3 offenses and there is a statute in Texas on the books that 4 says for any offense in this traffic code, full custodial 5 arrest is appropriate, save two exceptions, one is for 6 speeding, and two is for the open container law which were 7 the results of political judgments made in the local 8 jurisdiction. 9 Other states have decided that in certain 10 circumstances they will allow the issuances of citation 11 rather than a full custodial arrest based on the 12 circumstances presented to that officer, and he has that 13 discretion to make that judgment call. But if he picks 14 wrong in the view of the folks that have to review it 15 later, in other words, we don't think he made the best 16 decision among all of his options, so long as those 17 options are equally reasonable under the Federal 18 Constitution, then that mistake does not drive a 19 constitutional decision of reasonableness because you 20 can't put that in front of the decision. And so, whereas 21 here, the commission of an offense witnessed personally by 22 the police officer gives rise to probable cause then the 23 constitutional inquiry ends and the policy judgments and 24 decisions will begin. 25 And that's why it would be unworkable as this 40 1 Court in several questions has asked whether or not we can 2 draw lines between fine only and jailable time. In fact, 3 in Welsh v. Wisconsin, one of those offenses in that case 4 was for DWI, but under that jurisdiction's law it was only 5 for jail -- for a fine. Similarly, in United States v. 6 Watson, when dealing with the Prohibition cases, that 7 particular, actually -- Carroll v. United States, that 8 particular case dealt with bootlegging, and that was a 9 misdemeanor fine-only offense. You cannot determine the 10 constitutional question based on the penalty that is 11 associated with a crime, but rather based on whether or 12 not there is an offense for the specific facts that have 13 occurred. If we let the penalty -- 14 QUESTION: I suppose that misdemeanor violators, 15 traffic violators, seat belt and all that stuff, french 16 fries eaters, unlike felons, they're probably not a 17 discreet and into a minority, are they? 18 MR. TAYLOR: That's correct. 19 QUESTION: I mean they're a lot of them out 20 there. I myself have never been guilty of any 21 misdemeanors. But I am told that there are a lot of 22 people out there. And so you can probably expect the 23 political system to be able to protect that category a lot 24 better than you can expect them to protect felons. Is 25 this sheriff still in office, do you know? 41 1 MR. TAYLOR: To my knowledge -- 2 QUESTION: When you say he's been dismissed, I 3 assume that means he's been dismissed from the case. 4 MR. TAYLOR: I meant the former and not the 5 latter. But the point is, Justice Scalia, your question 6 demonstrates that these decisions well, under these 7 circumstances what's the best policy choice is just that, 8 a policy choice and not part of the constitutional rubric 9 of the Fourth Amendment. Those extra protections are for 10 the state's to decide. But the minimum guarantees of 11 liberty in the Fourth Amendment are for this Court to 12 decide, and I would submit that this Court has made it 13 very clear that the decision must be pledged and looked to 14 in terms of probable cause. 15 QUESTION: Mr. Taylor, do you know why local 16 officials took this case out of the hands of Texas courts 17 and put it in the hands of Federal court? 18 MR. TAYLOR: I do not, Your Honor, and the 19 record does not indicate why. One hypothetical suggestion 20 could simply be that the Federal courts would be 21 well-equipped to know the differences between the Federal 22 constitutional floor and the policy ceiling lights that 23 the states may accord on situations such as this. But 24 clearly whereas here probable cause existed, then there 25 was no constitutional infirmity, and this Court has 42 1 rejected time and time again in Berkimer, and in United 2 States v. Robinson and other cases, that we cannot allow 3 the punishment rather than the conduct to give rise to the 4 constitutional infirmity or lack thereof, because 5 otherwise we're going to have conduct which in one state 6 will result in an unconstitutional situation, and in other 7 state a constitutional one. And we cannot have a rule 8 which differs all fifty jurisdictions. 9 QUESTION: Well you have that now on the 10 felony/misdemeanor distinction. Felonies differ, some 11 states classify them as misdemeanors, some classify 12 certain offenses as felonies. It depends -- on your 13 theory, that would make a difference in whether there 14 could be an arrest without a warrant. 15 MR. TAYLOR: Justice Souter, no, the fact that 16 you do not draw a line is why it doesn't matter whether 17 they're felonies or misdemeanors or -- 18 QUESTION: You draw a line on the warrant 19 requirement, I assume you accede to that. 20 MR. TAYLOR: Yes -- 21 QUESTION: Sure. 22 MR. TAYLOR: -- you would have to have a 23 warrant, absent probable cause. 24 QUESTION: So you've got -- so you've got a 25 variation from state to state, even under the scheme that 43 1 you would advocate. 2 MR. TAYLOR: Well, even where a warrant may be 3 desired this Court has not stated as a matter of Fourth 4 Amendment principles that a warrant is required in all 5 circumstances, Gerstein says an on the scene assessment by 6 a police officer of probable cause is enough under our 7 constitutional interpretations of the Fourth Amendment. 8 And then it would be -- 9 QUESTION: If the officer is not -- the point is 10 that when an arrest is made for an offense that is not 11 committed in the officer's presence, then a warrant is 12 going to be required depending on the gravity of the 13 offense, and I presume that is true under the system that 14 you advocate. 15 MR. TAYLOR: Yes, in certain circumstances a 16 warrantless arrest would not be appropriate because 17 there's not probable cause. But that's the touchstone. 18 If there's probable cause, then the arrest is appropriate 19 in all circumstances. In Wren v. United States, this 20 unanimous Court held that the balancing test of the 21 government and the individual is when a probable cause 22 exists always tipped in the constitutional scale for the 23 government. And then only in extraordinary circumstances 24 like warrantless intrusions into homes or serious bodily 25 injure or deadly force do we then have any additional 44 1 concerns. In Knowles v. Iowa this Court made clear that 2 what carried the day in that case was that they hadn't 3 actually arrested the individual. I understand Mr. Chief 4 Justice my time is up. 5 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE: Correct. Thank you. Mr. De 6 Carli, you have three minutes remaining. 7 REBUTTAL ARGUMENT OF ROBERT C. DE CARLI 8 ON BEHALF OF PETITIONERS 9 MR. DE CARLI: Mr. Chief Justice, may it please 10 the Court: 11 What is interesting about this case as some 12 members of this Court have pointed out, is respondents do 13 not defend the reasonableness of the conduct of the 14 officer in question here, instead they attack the 15 workability of potential rules and raise -- and allege 16 that this is not a recurring problem. Two points -- well, 17 a third point also they characterize decisions of this 18 Court far beyond their holdings. The first point, the 19 reoccurrence problem, since certiorari has been taken by 20 this case and I know this is anecdotal, we have received 21 call after call of problems of this sort and to limit it 22 to publically reported incidents, just within the past 23 month, before this argument, a DPS officer arrested a 24 passenger in a vehicle, the passenger was a 17-year-old 25 boy with his mother, and that boy then -- the officer 45 1 asked the boy, do you have ID? Well that boy lived in a 2 small town that did not have driver's ed. He had no 3 driver's license, so that was then used as a justification 4 for arrest. The arrest presumably would be one that would 5 not be treated as a brief one. He spent the night in jail 6 in a holding cell with crack dealers and people accused of 7 violent crimes. I submit that it is a recurring problem 8 and perhaps more on point, if the conduct in this case is 9 condoned, it will be much more likely to be a recurring 10 problem. 11 Secondly, boundaries, Judge Weiner's boundary as 12 some members of the Court have suggested is just as 13 workable as the Terry boundary. It's not going to require 14 a new volume of any treatise -- for one thing it's already 15 a couple pages in Blackstone, which has been around for 16 some time. It's just going to be a footnote. But under 17 either standard, no matter what the standard is, if it's 18 reliance on the probable cause, or, excuse me, reliance on 19 the common law rule or a balancing of the competing 20 interests or any of the rules proposed by petitioners 21 amici, petitioners win. This was unreasonable. And that 22 leads to the fact that again they have offered no 23 explanation for why this arrest furthered any legitimate 24 law enforcement interest. 25 Finally, probable cause as the touchstone, I 46 1 have not, I admit I have not read every Fourth Amendment 2 decision that this Court has written. However, I have 3 never come across a decision saying that probable cause 4 and not reasonableness is the touchstone of the Fourth 5 Amendment. And no decisions have held that anything other 6 than a public felony arrest -- thank you. 7 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE: Thank you, Mr. De Carli, the 8 case is submitted. 9 (Whereupon, at 12:04 p.m., the case in the 10 above-entitled matter was submitted.) 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 47