Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Gain That FlavourGain That Flavour

Editor's Pick

Cooper v. United States Brief: Terry Frisks Are Unconstitutional

Clark Neily

police

One of the US Supreme Court’s most significant Fourth Amendment cases was 1968’s Terry v. Ohio. In Terry, the court held that a police officer can frisk people based on reasonable suspicion that they are involved in a crime and have a weapon. Petitioner Nathan Cooper was subjected to a Terry frisk in January 2022 after reports that he was involved in a dispute at his Florida workplace. He is asking the Supreme Court to revisit the Terry decision

Cato filed an amicus brief asking the Supreme Court to grant the petition and end the practice of Terry frisks. Under the common law and at the time of the American Founding, a Terry frisk would have qualified as the seizure of a person. But a person could only lawfully be seized based on probable cause—a higher standard than reasonable suspicion.

Overruling Terry’s authorization of frisks would be a long-overdue course correction that would strengthen the legitimacy of the Supreme Court’s originalist approach to law.

The court should grant Cooper’s petition and restore a critical protection enacted by the people Justice Scalia once referred to as the “fiercely proud men who adopted our Fourth Amendment.”

You May Also Like

Politics

The U.S. has reportedly warned Iran a retaliatory attack on Israel for the recent killing of a senior Hamas leader in Tehran would pose...

Tech News

Image: Getty This week’s earnings reports make two things clear about the viability of the electric vehicle future: EV-only companies are continuing to struggle...

Tech News

Mobile filmmakers can boost their smartphone’s storage capacity by up to 2TB. | Image: Lexar A terabyte of storage can disappear quickly when you’re...

Tech News

Image: Google Google is expected to launch a new weather app alongside the Pixel 9 — but you don’t have to wait to try...