“Linda Friedman Ramirez, ed., Cultural Issues in Criminal Defense”

A book that criminal defense lawyers representing non-citizens or those with a strong cultural upbringing different than the American majority must have in their library is Linda Friedman Ramirez, ed., Cultural Issues in Criminal Defense (2d ed. 2007). Chapter 7 is “Cultural Issues in Fourth Amendment Motions to Suppress,” and the section headings (without subheadings) are as follows:

§ 7.1 Extraterritorial Law Enforcement Activities
§ 7.2 Fourth Amendment Protections for Citizens and Aliens
§ 7.3 Fourth Amendment Protections at the Border and Its Equivalents
§ 7.4 Checkpoint Stops and Searches
§ 7.5 Culture and Consent to Search

§ 7.5 was the most interesting to me because I read cases nearly every week about a non-English speaking defendant being questioned on the side of the road:

Cultural background and lack of familiarity with the American legal system are also important in determining whether consent to search is valid. The Tenth Circuit, however, rejected the claim of a defendant who asserted that his consent was not voluntary due to his “background and attitude toward police, derived from his experiences in his native Mexico.” The Court concluded that “an intangible characteristic such as attitude toward authority is inherently unverifiable and unquantifiable.” [quoting United States v. Zapata, 997 F.2d 751, 759 (10th Cir. 1993)].

I had a suppression hearing today, with a relatively new AUSA and former career law clerk to a U.S. District Judge, and the same refrain kept coming up: Can you tell us about the consent? What was the defendant’s attitude? How did he answer your questions? Was he compliant? Did he object to the search? My question is: Did he know he could consent to the search once it started? In my limited experience with Mexicans in the U.S. and hearing about Mexican roadblocks for drugs set up without any constitutional safeguards (not to mention police bribery), they fear the police and do not dare question what the police are doing. Therefore, it has to be brought up and it is relevant to the totality of the circumstances, and Zapata is just wrong. Sure, the Tenth Circuit can brush it off 14 years ago, but what about now if somebody makes a decent record on the issue? I think this issue is still open to litigation.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.