WaPo: Explaining Heien and Rodriguez

WaPo: Explaining Heien and Rodriguez by Orin Kerr:

Over at Slate, Mark Joseph Stern has an article trying to explain the Justices’ votes in Rodriguez v. United States, yesterday’s Fourth Amendment case on the length of traffic stops. Stern focuses his attention on Chief Justice Roberts, who ruled for the defense in Rodriguez but for the government in December’s Heien v. North Carolina on reasonable mistakes of law. Stern has a theory for why the Chief Justice could have voted for the defense in one case and the government in the other.

In a single sentence, Stern notes that it’s possible that the Chief Justice simply thought the two cases presented different legal issues. But then Stern settles into his real theory: Something happened to Chief Justice Roberts between Heien in December and Rodriguez in April that fundamentally changed his view of the police. Roberts must have had an “epiphany.” And we need to figure out what caused the epiphany. Here’s Stern:

It could be that in the last few months, Roberts got pulled over—apparently for the first time in his life—and finally grasps how fraught such encounters often are.

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