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5 Things You Need To Know About Roadblocks

Posted on November 21st, 2007 in , | 81 Comments

Q. Are roadblocks legal?

A. The US Supreme Court has found roadblocks to be legal for a variety of purposes, the most prominent being so-called “sobriety check points.” There is a longer history of roadblock approvals related to checking vehicles near or at national border crossings.

However, many state courts take a less favorable view of roadblocks based on language in their respective state constitutions. Probably the best example of this is the Michigan case that went to the US Supreme Court, Sitz vs. Michigan, that established the legal precedent for DWI roadblocks.

While the US Supreme Court found DWI roadblocks constitutional under the US Constitution, the case went back to Michigan and the State Supreme court found DWI roadblocks to be in violation of the state’s constitution, and that decision takes precedent, in Michigan, over the decision of the US Supreme Court.

Q. Do I have to answer the questions posed to me at a roadblock?

A. You do not have to answer any questions, particularly questions that would be self-incriminating.

You may be required (forced by threat of arrest) to show your drivers license, vehicle registration, and proof of insurance, if the state requires these items to be present in your vehicle.

However, you cannot be compelled to explain your travel plans, divulge the contents of your vehicle, or in any other way converse with law enforcement officers operating a roadblock.

You can be polite and courteous to the extent of providing the documents you are required to produce. Beyond that, decline to answer any other questions you are asked.

In response to a potentially invasive question you can say something like; “Officer, I know you have your job to do, but I do not approve of roadblocks and I do not wish to have a conversation. I realize I can be required to show you my driver’s license. Would you like to see my drivers license?” End of discussion.

Q. Can they search my car?

A. Your car can only be searched under the following circumstances:

  1. You voluntarily give the police permission to search your vehicle.
  2. The Police have a warrant to search your vehicle.
  3. The police have “probable cause” or “reasonable suspicion” based on a reasonable explanation of why they believe you have illegal items in your vehicle. They must be able to explain what they think they will find and why they think said items are in your vehicle.

If the police use their authority or force to search your vehicle, against your will, and they do not have a warrant or reasonable suspicion to conduct a search they can be (and should be) held criminally and civilly liable for conducting an illegal search. This holds true even if the search reveals the possession of illegal items.

Q. How long can they keep me at a roadblock?

A. One of the consistent rationalizations for roadblocks is that they are minimally intrusive and minimally inconvenient to the motorist. For reasons that escape specific justification the courts seem to find 15 to 20 minutes the maximum amount of time a motorist can be detained by police before the police take formal action against the motorist or allow the motorist to leave.

However, the courts have placed the burden of forcing the issue upon the motorist.

If the motorist does not specifically request to leave, the police can successfully claim the motorist voluntarily remained under their control. Therefore, if the police seem inclined to delay your departure, after they have checked your papers, specifically ask if you may now leave.

If they say “no” you are within your rights to ask for a legitimate explanation for your delay.

If no legitimate explanation is forthcoming you should persist in asking if you may leave. There should be no confusion regarding your intentions and the fact that you are not willingly remaining within control of the police officers.

Q. Can I turn around or turn off to avoid a roadblock?

A. In theory you are allowed to make any legal maneuver, even a U-turn to avoid a roadblock.

In reality, the police operating roadblocks deliberately locate them so it is almost impossible to legally avoid them once you become aware of their presence.

It is also common practice to hold a patrol car in reserve for the specific purpose of harassing motorists who overtly avoid a roadblock.

The National Motorists Association opposes the use of roadblocks, period. The only justification for stopping citizens under a roadblock scenario is to warn them of an unseen peril that could cause injury or death to an unsuspecting motorist.

So-called “sobriety check points,” or seat belt checks, or the myriad of other excuses the government concocts to harass and intimidate its citizens through the use of roadblocks are, in our opinion unconstitutional and in direct contradiction to any honest definition of freedom.


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81 Responses to “5 Things You Need To Know About Roadblocks”

  1. [...] intrusions into my rights. The National Motorist Association also opposes traffic stops from 5 Thing You Need to Know About Roadblocks: The National Motorists Association opposes the use of roadblocks, period. The only justification [...]

  2. jimpeel says:

    If, upon being stopped, you simply roll the window down far enough to slide your license, registration, and proof of financial responsibility through, and roll the window back up after he takes it, you have fulfilled your entire responsibility as an arrested driver.

    You have no more duty as an arrested driver to acknowledge his presence on this earth than he does to protect you from any crime. You do not have to answer any question he poses to you. You, in fact, do not have to look at him.

    Now this does not relieve you from whatever this person, who has the power to harm you on several levels, may do to demonstrate to you that they can make an example of you for others who may attempt this. Abuse of power under color of authority is more common than some would think.

    This person may decide to keep you for an inordinate length of time while writing the citation.

    They may call other officers to the location to intimidate you.

    They may call a K-9 car to the location to sniff you and your property which WILL result in a “hit” thereby requiring your further detention or impounding or confiscation of your property. [fact: The United States Treasury has stated that 92% of all currency in circulation is tainted with cocaine.]

    They may decide that the original cause for the stop is not enough and start looking for other infractions for which to cite you. This can include safety inspections such as using a penny to see if your tires are within legal limits, dirty windows, etc.

    So, yes, you can simply ignore them; but you can rest assured that they will not ignore you. You will become the entire focus of their day.

    • Phil Mckrackin says:

      Quote of jimpeel:”If, upon being stopped, you simply roll the window down far enough to slide your license, registration, and proof of financial responsibility through, and roll the window back up after he takes it, you have fulfilled your entire responsibility as an arrested driver.

      You have no more duty as an arrested driver to acknowledge his presence on this earth than he does to protect you from any crime. You do not have to answer any question he poses to you. You, in fact, do not have to look at him.”

      Acting in a manner as outlined by jimpeel may very well get you a trip to see the judge, for bail or even jail while you are awaiting for your ticket to go to trial. I strongly recomend that you don’t use this particular tactic. Recieving a ticket(appearance ticket) is only 1 way for an arrest of a minor violation or infraction to end. It would not be an abuse of power to follow any of the other ways an arresting officer secures that the arrestee will appear in court. If you refuse to acknowledge the officers presence and refuse to answer his questions he has nothing to gauge that you will appear to answer the ticket against. Therefore, he is obligated to custodial arrest you, take you before the judge who will take your plea of guilty and fine from you if you plea guilty or will set bail for you if you plea not guilty. If you don’t have the bail on you off to the county jail you go. Your car is also searched to inventory and document any belongings that you have in it. If you have something that is illegal an additional charge may be forthcoming. also consider that your car will be towed away to an impound lot at your cost.

    • jimpeel says:

      I never said that you should not sign the citation. That is a written promissory note that you will appear at the appointed date and time. Until you fail to do so, you have not given any cause to believe that you won’t.

      You have but three duties which you SHALL perform when stopped.

      1. You WILL present a valid drivers license;

      2. You WILL present a valid registration for the vehicle you are driving;

      3. You WILL present a valid document ascertaining your financial responsibility.

      Failure to do any of the preceding WILL subject you to further charges on the citation and possibly even arrest.

      I have cited many of the myriad ways that the police can, and possibly WILL, make your life harder. They can do this based on several things:

      You were being uncooperative, even though you have fully complied with the law;

      You were acting suspiciously because of your unwillingness to cooperate, even though you have fully complied with the law;

      The cop felt “hinky” about you, even though you have fully complied with the law;

      All of the above.

      The Supreme Court of the United States (SCotUS) has ruled that a person may not be held suspect for the mere exercise of their Constitutional rights. Of course, the cop has to have “heard” of that ruling. One of your rights under the law, civil and penal, is to remain silent.

      Anyone ever hear of a cop stopping someone for investigation because they were in compliance with the law? They were acting “too lawful”? That can also lead to your bring stopped. “He was driving 2 miles under the speed limit, staying in one lane, and didn’t “bobble” the line at all. Seemed rather suspicious to me. He seemed like he was being too careful.”

  3. bugjackblue says:

    Here’s a fun variation on the roadblock trick; this was in Cary NC on N Harrison southbound at Cary Pkwy. It was a couple of years ago, I hadn’t seen this before nor have I seen it since. I’ve moved away so I don’t know if they still do it there?

    They shunted all cars into the fire dept lot, then would very pleasantly say they’re not stopping motorists on suspicion of doing anything unlawful but rather implementing a federal road safety study. The driver’s participation was totally voluntary. Ok, no problem, what do you want to know? They then asked how long a trip one was making (in my case less than a mile– I was on my way to the supermarket with my dog in the passenger’s seat) and if one had been drinking (which I hadn’t.) Then the kicker– they remind the driver that participation is voluntary but would you mind taking a breathalyzer test? No thank you, I say, I’m happy to have helped in their research but I don’t feel inclined to continue and I’d like to be on my way now. They go away a few seconds, come back with a pamphlet describing the federal study, thank me, and off I go.

    Gotta love this, eh? It’s totally “voluntary” even though there’s a roadblock, they give themselves a few minutes to snoop around to try to establish probable cause, run your plate through the database, and then politely ask for the driver’s voluntary participation in incriminating one’s self. And I imagine there are plenty of drivers who are stupid enough to fall for this…

    • Phil Mckrackin says:

      I would doubt the inclusion of ” participation is voluntary but would you mind taking a breathalyzer test?” I doubt this portion simply because unless they thought the driver had consumed an alcoholic beverage, was impaired or intoxicated it would be a large waste of the certified breathalyer operator’s time not to mention the expense of material to operate the breathalyzer. If they actually did suspect the driver as having consumed an alcoholic beverage being impaired or drunk it would no longer be voluntary participation to take a breathalyzer test. no driver needs to “FALL” for anything the supreme court has ruled that roadblocks don’t impede your 4th amendment rights and once you are there if they suspect you to be drunk or impaired can compell you to take the test. Are you implying that the police were trying to trick you but you were intelligent enough to beat the police roadblock? I am sure that anyone who was not drunk or impaired no matter how low thier IQ did just as well in this respect as you did.

  4. ron says:

    Can I be arrested on mu property 12 inches from my door throwing empty beer bottles on my lawn I was arrested for disturbing the peace for screaming the song AMERICA ron

    • Officer Josh says:

      lol, yes you definitely can be arrested for that.

    • Phil Mckrackin says:

      Yes! you were arrested for the apparently loud rendition of the song America. You can throw beer bottles on your own lawn from your own property.

  5. InfonnomE says:

    fascinating and educational, but would participate in something more on this topic?

  6. Phil Mckrackin says:

    Until the Supreme Court rules that these roadblocks are unconstitutional there has been no assault on or erosion of your liberties. Anyone who says that they are is obviously ignorant of how they are conducted. If there are places where the police overstep thier authority then action needs to be taken against those officers and/or departments. It is wrong to blanketly blame the roadblocks for improper operations of them.

  7. Officer Josh says:

    Hubcap and Joe,

    Its a shame that a few bad apples can deface the entire police force nationwide. I can agree that there are some messed up cops around here because i have heard of some bad things officers i know have done. But you just have to wait until they get caught and it puts shame to the badge i wear and i hate it.

  8. Cedric says:

    Thank you,Joe.that was the point i was trying to make,I cant say for other states,but the liberal government here is by far the worst,senator patricia tiser,a democrate and self proclaimed liberal,got a law passed in virginia,if a cop see,s you without a seatbelt,he can stop and ticket you..they no longer need another reason to to pull you over and than fine you for no seatbelt.Weather you think its the conservatives or liberals,that each ones oppinion iguess,but the laws and harrasment is still wrong…

  9. Jeff says:

    New Jersey is well known for anti-motorist politicians. Remember Senator Borden? in the early 1980s – he was the one who blocked all attempts to eliminate the 55 speed limit.

  10. JOE says:

    Hubcap I don’t know if you can label law enforcement types and their avid supporters as liberal or conservatives. One of my co-workers and I talk traffic control activities a lot at work and he’s a strong conservative and has many reservations about the motives and techniques of law enforcement. You take New Jerseys’ Senator Frank Lautenberg (democrat) for instance. He’s one of the worst enemy’s the driving public has ever seen. Between him and NHTSA I have a hard time figuring out who’s the worst. They feed off each other. Ever watched any of the congressional hearings that NHTSA participates in. There’s only three good words that describe this bunch “traffic safety Nazis’. Drivers need to watch these hearing and get a good sense of who spear heads and encourages all this ticket writing and all the creative ideas they spawn to do even more. Not exactly the kinda guys/gals you’d consider friends unless you like alligators for friends.

    Back to sobriety road checks. If I recall correctly, Justice Thomas wasn’t on the Supreme Court when it authorized the use of sobriety road checks. The decision was a close one and narrowly passed. I believe I read somewhere that Justice Thomas said that had he have been on the court at the time he would have voted against this practice. That probably would have put a end to this trampling of the Constitution. Even when the court did decide to authorize the use of road checks they acknowledged that it was a violation of the constitution but they justified it by saying something like that it was just a “minor convenience” for such a worthy cause.
    When I do testing on aircraft avionics equipment at work there’s an old saying “in’s in and out’s out” You can’t fudge on the specs. A couple millivolts one way or another won’t cut it.

    This is a digital concept, not analog. The bible and constitution are the same way, you either live by it or you don’t. There’s no “well maybe’s” about it. Once you start justifying fudging on the constitution it’s a slippery slope and that’s just what we are seeing. Case in Point; The Patriot Act.
    Mission creep seems to be modus operandi for law enforcement. Sobriety road checks have now expanded into anything they want to make it. Seat belt checks, drug checks, whatever they have a notion to do. Further, if they decide to search your car there’s little you can do about that too. Oh sure you can demand a search warrent but…how long did you say you have to wait along side the road for a search warrant ….you get the idea. What’s another old saying “the path to Hell is paved with the best of intentions”. I’m sure some of LEO’s actions are best intentions but….

    It’s reminds me about one of Jay Leno’s comment during his monologue sometime ago when he was commenting about Iraq writing their own constitution. Jay said “let’em have ours…..we’re not using it!” Unfortunately there’s more truth to that then we’d like to believe. Too many Americans are willing to give up their freedom’s for safety and security. Wise ‘ole Ben Franklin warned us about that. Bottom line; You can’t have your cake and eat it too. I stagger to think how many Americans have given their lives for our freedoms only for us to willfully throw them away. Geesh.

  11. JOE says:

    Hubcap; I’ve seen a movie like that. Can’t remember the name of it. A couple differences here. This type of incident by a actual officer is rare. Impostors ARE NOT. A recent news article says the impostors are on the rise as unmarked vehicle use is. It really calls into question just how concerned law enforcement is about the driving publics’ safety and security when they use this technique just to write more tickets and make more revenue. I’ve heard the excuses….and that’s what they are. chris presented the perfect scenario. I’m really surprised there isn’t more of an outcry about this practice. Of course since the citizenry no longer has any control over it’s law enforcement, what can we do? They pretty much have absolute power and you know what that does.

  12. Hubcap says:

    JOE on Sep 24, 2008 writes:
    “This is a little off the subject but allow me change the ending a little.”

    Let me plug in a TRUE ending to your story:

    Craig Alan Peyer was a California Highway Patrol officer convicted for the 1986 strangulation murder of 20-year-old Cara Knott, a student at San Diego State University.

    On the night of December 27, 1986, Knott was driving from her boyfriend’s home in Escondido to her parents’ home in El Cajon, California on Interstate 15 when Peyer, on duty in a marked CHP patrol car, signalled Knott to pull off the freeway on an isolated offramp. It later came to light that the officer had been previously harassing women drivers in the same area, pulling them over on the same isloated offramp and apparently trying to pick them up as dates. It’s believed that the situation escalated when Knott threatened to report Peyer for unprofessional behavior, and that he killed her and threw her body off an abandoned bridge into the brush below in an attempt to avoid disciplinary action.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craig_Peyer

  13. Hubcap says:

    Cedric, please stop refering to people like Darla and Chris as liberal.

    They are quite clearly conservative in that they want more laws more cops and more restictions on individual freedom. They won’t be happy until they can put a cop in every bedroom.

    Conservatives, not liberals, are the ones who want to tell you who you can have sex with, how much shaving cream you can travel with, and what religion to practice.

    It’s conservatives who wrote and passed the Patriot Act and advocate for a totalitarian security state.

    The only freedom conseravtives want is the freedom for corporations to rape the environment and then get taxpayer bailouts for sending American jobs overseas.

  14. JOE says:

    This is a little off the subject but allow me change the ending a little.

    chris on Aug 18, 2008 SAYS;
    {if your 16 year old daughter is out on the town on your new car and she’s traveling down some lonely stretch of road one saturday night. now, imagine if}
    {a impostor posing as a cop in a unmarked vehicle, like we have around here, stops her and asks her to step out of her car and come back to his car, then he slaps on the cuffs when she gets in his vehicle} …the rest is history. No witness’s, no DNA, no fingerprints, probably no tire prints on the pavement, nothing to solve the case. She’s vanishes in thin air. Not a pretty picture is it? This is the extreme danger that unmarked cop cars represent yet they continue to be used. All to write mistemenor violations.

  15. Jeff says:

    Let’s have random searches of the homes of police officers and politicians so we can find illegal contraband.

  16. JohnJohn says:

    Hey Stupidos lets get real here. Police Roadblocks are unconsitutional and what they are designed for is a mass roundup of motorists and a boatload of revenue for the municipality from citations given out. It is a fundamental violation of ones rights and the mere tip of the iceberg as far as that invasion of rights goes. People die from vehicle related incidents and that is unfortunate but these tactics will not put a dent in those sort of statistics. Its the Big Brother machine inching its way into your homes as well.

  17. Cedric says:

    to chris,talking about blowing smoke out of your ass,why dont you rant some more while your at it,ill repeat myself one more time,if you dont like what you read on here,go somewhere else,like liberal weekly maybe,if you dont agree with what we are talking about,then keep your faul mouth somewere else and let us do our thing,without having to put up your stupidity and ranting and raving..

  18. Stephen says:

    wow chris, talk about bitching and wasting time with senseless rants!
    I appreciate the work you claim to do, though!

  19. chris says:

    ya know, if any of you whine-asses had the balls to actually get out of your beds at 3am and see some of the shit that we see, and the loss of life and property that results from us not doing all we can, then maybe you would get off this site, and spend a little more time with your family. who knows, it might just make you a better person..

  20. chris says:

    i think this site is stupid as hell. ok, i can see the point for a few of your topics, but come on guys. ok, how would you feel if your 16 year old daughter is out on the town on your new car and she’s traveling down some lonely stretch of road one saturday night. now, imagine if you can a fucking drunk driver whose half passed out at the wheel is approaching her. wouldnt you be wishing there was a goddamn roadblock between the two to maybe, um stop the drunken driver? wouldnt that be a novel idea? you know, cops actually taking a stand against drunkards who choose to drive. life is far too short guys. stop your bitching..

  21. Stephen says:

    Another one on whether driving is a right or privilege:

    Amendment IX

    The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

    Amendment X

    The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

    And supported by the aforementioned court decisions.
    Show me a part of the constitution that makes driving or anything else a privilege regulated by the servant civil government, otherwise we are free to live according to our conscience unto God.

  22. TomV says:

    Darla: Not sure from whence you hail, but having a law against something does not make it (necessarily) morally wrong. Laws do make lawbreakers, but they do not make safe societies. For instance, http://tinyurl.com/3ldbf5 is a law on the books right now that makes it illegal for Michiganders, whether private individuals or corporations, to sell an automobile on Sunday. Think of all the “freedom fighters” in the Sunday paper, totally unaware that the long arm of the law could descend upon them at any moment in a sting operation and end their wicked ways! No more brazenly advertising their forbidden wares, no more back-street deals, no more hoping the buyer doesn’t turn them in – it could all be over in a moment, and justice would triumph.

    Or is it just another stupid, unnecessary law that has passed its expiration date but was never taken off of the books?

    Do any of us see other laws like this and give them the respect they are due (zero) and use our heads instead? Sure. Does it expose us to the whim of law enforcement? Sure. Are we “freedom fighters” alone in this position? Not a chance. That ugly feeling that you get, Darla, when it’s your turn to be paced by a cop…wondering if your speedo is calibrated correctly…if you signaled that lane change as is your habit…if you have a bulb burnt out…is a consequence of an abundance of laws that are not respectable or respected, and enforcers who all too often suffer the same description.

    On whether or not driving is a right:
    Schactman v. Dulles 96 App DC 287, 225 F2d 938, at 941, decided that “The right to travel is a well-established common right that does not owe its existence to the federal government. It is recognized by the courts as a natural right.”
    Kent v. Dulles, 357 US 116, 125 linked that same right to the 5th amendment due process clause. In other words, no end-run around this right to try to do away with it.
    Thompson v. Smith, 154 SE 579 has very pertinent text in the decision: “The right of the citizen to travel upon the public highways and to transport his property thereon, either by carriage or by automobile, is not a mere privilege which a city may prohibit or permit at will, but a common law right which he has under the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

    Sorry to bore you with technical details, but I’m kind of into not being trampled. Not by one hoof or a herd.

  23. cedric says:

    To Darla,In the great state of Virginia,they dont advertise in advance when they are going to set up road blocks,which would be kind of stupid considering people would read about it and stay home rather than be harrased,it has nothing to do with doing something illegal,its the point of be subjected to interrigations and harrasment for no cause,and if i want to wear my seat belt i will,if i dont,i wont,thats my right,and you can think what you want,but speed traps are a problem,no matter what your oppion is,but you must be one of those that never speeds or breaks a law,and what i dont understand is people like you and some of these cops get so offended by what we write on here,than quit getting on here and trying to pick arquements and let us express are oppions without having to listen to bleeding heart liberals wine because they think we are all hell raising drunkin speeders

  24. James Young says:

    Darla writes:
    { I appreciate the roadblocks because I see car wrecks and bad drivers on a daily basis.}

    You are assuming that roadblocks are an effective mechanism to combat bad driving rather than as an assault on liberty. That assumption is wrong and not yours to make on my behalf. The liberty envisioned by the creators of this great nation was not subject to the whim of bureaucrats who suspect that somebody somewhere may be doing something wrong.

    {Personally, I think speed traps are made up problems by those who think speeding and driving recklessly are personal rights.}

    Once again you confuse speeding and driving recklessly. Confusion seems to be a recurring theme.




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