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Related: About this forumWashington Supreme Court: Lawmakers Can't Legislate Constitutional Rights Away
Source: Forbes
Washington Supreme Court: Lawmakers Cant Legislate Constitutional Rights Away
Nick Sibilla Senior Contributor
Policy
I cover criminal justice, entrepreneurship, and offbeat lawsuits.
Declaring that it was unconstitutional for the Washington State Legislature to mandate warrantless seizures, the Washington Supreme Court unanimously struck down an automatic DUI impound law last week. Our constitution cannot be amended by statute, Justice Steven Gonzalez wrote for the court in State v. Villela. While the legislature can legislatively protect constitutional rights, it cannot legislate them away.
Back in January 2018, Sergeant Paul Snyder pulled over Joel Villela for speeding in Grant County. During the stop, Snyder smelled alcohol on Villelas breath, a suspicion that was only bolstered when Villela refused to take a roadside sobriety test. Snyder promptly arrested Villela for DUI. But he also impounded Villelas car, even though there were two adult passengers inside.
Thanks to Haileys Law, whenever a driver is arrested for DUI, their car must always be impounded, even if another person could drive it away safely or if the car is off the road. In a joint amicus brief, the Institute for Justice, the state chapter of the ACLU, the Washington Defender Association and the Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers described the irrationality of the statute:
Even if a co-owner is sitting in the vehicle, is not under the influence, and is able to drive it away, it must be impounded. Allegedly this is to keep the impaired driver from regaining possession of the vehicle when released from custody. Under the statute, however, the registered owner or co-owner is entitled to proceed immediately to the impound yard and redeem the vehicle without any waiting period. If the owner or co-owner can be trusted to redeem the vehicle without delay, that person is clearly equally trustworthy, as recognized in the case law, to drive it away from the point of arrest.
Not only is the law completely unnecessary, it imposes significant consequences on drivers. A short impound period can easily rack up over $1,000 in storage and towing fees. Those unable to pay can lose their car permanently. Moreover, since drivers of color are more likely to be stopped than white drivers, mandatory impounds would increase and entrench the racial disparities in treatment, the joint amicus brief argued.
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Read more: https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicksibilla/2019/10/24/washington-supreme-court-impounding-cars-without-warrants-violates-right-to-privacy/#2a30855d102a
mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)tymorial
(3,433 posts)And offset operating costs
Thomas Hurt
(13,925 posts)stopdiggin
(12,764 posts)but as the suit illustrates, the intent was clearly as a "punitive" strike .. rather than the "safety" measure they purported.
(And, yes .. the courts have been way, way behind on the forfeiture issue. Which has been rankly unjust, misused, corrupted .. and frankly unconstitutional for years. All with a multitude of examples at their disposal. Their mistake in acceding to the legislative branch.)
Jake Stern
(3,145 posts)That means you knowingly allowed an intoxicated driver to operate your motor vehicle. Why is that not a crime?
On Edit: I don't disagree with asset forfeiture per se, I disagree with it absent a conviction.
I like Ohio's law - they don't impound the car but make them put a special drunk driver tag on the car.
An example of Ohio's Drunk Fuck Plate:
https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_fill,f_auto,fl_progressive,g_center,h_675,pg_1,q_80,w_1200/cwqwqnju8koiuzozq1rt.jpg]