This from the WashingtonPost link:
Quote:In April, the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco
upheld the government's power to conduct searches of an international traveler's laptop without suspicion of wrongdoing. The
Customs policy can be viewed at: Multimedia File Viewing and Clickable Links are available for Registered Members only!! You need to

or

search_authority.ctt/search_authority.pdf.
Quote:Officials said such procedures have long been in place but were disclosed last month because of public interest in the matter.
It has seemed the basic duty of a judge to uphold the law. What the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals did was to uphold a Supreme Court ruling and a 4th Circuit Court ruling.
from this link:
Multimedia File Viewing and Clickable Links are available for Registered Members only!! You need to

or
Quote:...the Supreme Court has called for a reasonable-suspicion standard for certain types of border searches such as those that could cause exceptional damage to property or those conducted in a "particularly offensive manner." Neither of those situations applied in Arnold's case, he said. He also pointed to a decision by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals upholding the warrant-less search of a vehicle that was entering the U.S. from Canada.
As a result, the Fourth Circuit Court held that warrant-less searches were OK because requiring otherwise would have imposed an "unworkable standard" on customs officials. "We are persuaded by the analysis of our sister circuit," O'Scannlain wrote.
This was the case brought to the 9th Circuit Court:
Quote:The case involves a man named Michael Arnold, who was arrested in 2005 on charges of transporting child pornography on his laptop. According to a description of the case in court records, Arnold was returning home from a three-week vacation in the Philippines in July 2005, when he was pulled aside for secondary customs screening at Los Angeles International Airport.
A customs officer who was inspecting Arnold's luggage asked him to start his computer and had it examined by colleagues who found several images of what they believed were child pornography on the computer and in several storage devices that Arnold was carrying with him.
A grand jury later charged Arnold with knowingly transporting child pornography in interstate and foreign commerce, and for knowingly possessing a hard drive and CD-ROMs containing more than one image of child pornography.
Arnold filed a motion asking for the evidence against him to be suppressed, arguing that the search of his computer and storage devices by customs officers had been unreasonable and unwarranted. The district court ruled in his favor on the grounds that reasonable suspicion indeed needed to have existed for customs officials to have conducted the search.
The government filed an appeal against that decision essentially arguing that reasonable suspicion standards did not apply to searches at the border.
In concurring with that view, the Ninth Circuit yesterday rejected Arnold's arguments that reasonable suspicion was needed to search a computer...
If any one of us were to judge this case, would suppressing the evidence and letting this man go also sit right?
It all may make the issue ever so complex framing the situation as below.
Quote:...the Fourth Circuit Court held that warrant-less searches were OK because requiring otherwise would have imposed an "unworkable standard" on customs officials.
It may seem also though that unwarranted searches and seizures are an unworkable standard for law-abiding citizens. I'm confused.