{"id":51771,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/does-the-mere-existence-of-an-invalid-arrest-warrant-injure-its-target.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"does-the-mere-existence-of-an-invalid-arrest-warrant-injure-its-target","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/does-the-mere-existence-of-an-invalid-arrest-warrant-injure-its-target.html","title":{"rendered":"Does the Mere Existence of an Invalid Arrest Warrant Injure Its Target?"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        <div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/sherry.colb.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Sherry F. Colb\"><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>Does the Mere Existence of an Invalid Arrest Warrant Injure Its Target?<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By SHERRY F. COLB <\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Wednesday, September 30, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n<p>The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit recently heard  oral argument in the case of <em>Ord v.  District of Columbia<\/em>. Robert L. Ord.  brought the appeal after a district judge dismissed his lawsuit against the  District of Columbia for issuing a warrant for his arrest without probable  cause. <\/p>\n\n  <p>Ord sued the District under 42 U.S.C. \u00a71983, a federal  statute that allows damages awards for constitutional violations. He sought compensatory, punitive,  declaratory, and injunctive relief, and he paired his federal claims with related  state law claims. <\/p>\n  <p>The district judge dismissed the federal cause of  action as unripe and therefore failing the &#8220;case or controversy&#8221; requirement of  Article III of the U.S. Constitution \u2013 a predicate for suing in federal  court. (In addition, the district court  dismissed the state law claims, exercising its discretion to do so once the  federal claims had been eliminated. Ord  may pursue his state claims in state court if he chooses.)<\/p>\n    <!-- 300x250 AD -->\n    \n  <p>On appeal, Ord now challenges the district court&#8217;s finding  that he lacked any &#8220;case or controversy.&#8221;  The trial court based its finding on Ord&#8217;s not having actually been arrested  and on the government&#8217;s dismissal of the warrant and indication that it would  not be prosecuting him. <\/p>\n  <p>But  Ord contends that the simple issuance of the arrest warrant violated the Fourth  Amendment and that he continues to suffer, as a result, from the fear that he  could be arrested at any time.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>The Facts as Alleged  in Ord&#8217;s Complaint<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>A number of background facts, alleged in Ord&#8217;s complaint,  explain how this case arose. Robert Ord  runs a private security company called &#8220;Falken Industries.&#8221; A resident of Virginia, he is designated as a  Special Conservator of the Peace (SCOP) and has the status of a qualified law  enforcement officer in Virginia, which authorizes him to carry a gun. Ord has business in Washington, D.C., which  he is now deterred from conducting by the fear of arrest. <\/p>\n      <p>As Ord states in his complaint (and as the courts must  accept as true for purposes of a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil  Procedure 12), the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) sent out a memo to all  MPD Reserve Corps Members, warning that MPD Reserve Corps Members who also  serve as SCOPs do not thereby have authority to carry a firearm in Washington,  D.C. However, the memo was not sent to  Ord (who is not a member of the MPD Reserve Corps, but only an SCOP). <\/p>\n      <p>After release of this memo, Ord learned that a warrant had  been issued for his arrest on charges of possession of unregistered firearms  and ammunition. In response to this  information, Ord&#8217;s attorney provided evidence of Ord&#8217;s status as an SCOP to the  District, and the Office of the Attorney General formally declared (after  various motions in court by Ord&#8217;s lawyer) that it would not execute the warrant  and would not pursue prosecution of Ord at this time. <\/p>\n      <p><strong>Is This a True Case or Controversy,  Without An Arrest?<\/strong><br>\n  <br>\n        Because Ord was never actually arrested or otherwise  &#8220;seized,&#8221; the District of Columbia claims that he did not suffer a Fourth  Amendment harm. As a result, it says, he  fails to fulfill the &#8220;injury&#8221; requirement necessary to establish that a  plaintiff may litigate a claim in federal court. <\/p>\n      <p>In the District&#8217;s view, the fact that a warrant was issued  did not ever mature into a violation of Ord&#8217;s Fourth Amendment rights (or even  a pre-enforcement threat to Ord&#8217;s constitutional rights that was of sufficient  magnitude to create a case or controversy).  Therefore, the government argues and the trial court concluded, the  federal courts lack jurisdiction over the claim and would be issuing an  &#8220;advisory opinion&#8221; if they were to consider the merits of the case. (The case or controversy requirement is meant  to focus the federal courts on resolving particular, existing disputes between  parties, rather than merely advising the public on the constitutionality of  legislation.). <\/p>\n      <p>Ord responds that he has suffered an injury and is under a  significant threat of prosecution. At  oral argument, his attorney observed that the text of the Fourth Amendment  specifically prohibits the issuance of a warrant in the absence of probable  cause and does not specify that a search or seizure must actually take place as  a prerequisite to a finding of violation. <\/p>\n      <p>The relevant Fourth Amendment language is this: &#8220;no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable  cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place  to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.&#8221; In this case,  according to Ord&#8217;s complaint, a warrant <u>did<\/u> in fact issue without  probable cause.<\/p>\n      <p>Ord suggests, too, that in addition to the arrest warrant,  the memorandum describing as criminal the activities in which he happens to  engage as part of his job chills him from doing business in Washington, D.C.,  even though he has violated no law.  Therefore, he contends, the combination of the arrest warrant and the  fact that D.C. law enforcement appears to consider activities like his to be  criminal gives rise to a legitimate fear on his part of being arrested and  prosecuted if he continues to carry out his (lawful) profession in Washington.<\/p>\n      <p>The government responds that because the memo in question  was not addressed to Ord, and because the government specifically dismissed his  arrest warrant and officially decided not to prosecute him, his experience does  not distinguish him from that of others who worry that government officials  might mistakenly arrest and prosecute them for violating laws which they have not  in fact violated. To accept such a  claim, the government says, would thus vitiate the standing requirement (which is  meant to prevent people from going to federal court just to clarify the law).<\/p>\n      <p><strong>The Argument that  There Is No Injury or Threat of Injury, and Thus No Case or Controversy <\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>The district court&#8217;s arguments regarding the case&#8217;s lack of  ripeness and the plaintiff&#8217;s lack of standing fit well within Article III  precedents. To distinguish oneself from  the crowd (here, the crowd of people who do not like what the government is  doing) and become a federal litigant, one must have suffered a distinctive  injury (or face a credible imminent threat of injury). And the injury of knowing that the government  has engaged in unconstitutional conduct does not, alone, qualify under the  doctrine. <\/p>\n      <p>Though a warrant was issued, and though the issuance may  itself have violated the Fourth Amendment, one might nonetheless say &#8220;no harm,  no foul,&#8221; because the government realized the error of its ways before it  actually interfered with Ord&#8217;s liberty.  The essence of the Fourth Amendment, after all, is about &#8220;[t]he right of  the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against  unreasonable searches and seizures.&#8221; <\/p>\n      <p>Granted, the warrant clause that follows this language in  the Constitution provides the requirements for a valid warrant. But the ultimate objective of the Fourth  Amendment, including the limits it places on access to warrants, is to protect  people from unreasonable searches and seizures.  Where no seizure has taken place, there cannot \u2013 by definition \u2013 have  been an unreasonable one.<\/p>\n      <p>Furthermore, to the extent that Robert Ord is worried about  being arrested in the future, his worries seem no more justified than those of  any other SCOP who operates within Washington, D.C. That is, the fact of the wrongfully-issued  warrant, given its later withdrawal, does not suggest any distinctive danger  for him. And a person who has not yet  been injured must generally, under existing doctrine, be in greater danger of  prosecution to bring a challenge.<\/p>\n      <p><strong>The Argument that There Might Be an  Injury, or Threat of Injury, Here<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>Yet there is something about having an arrest warrant issued  against you that &#8220;feels&#8221; like an injury, and it is worth considering what that  something might be. <\/p>\n      <p>If you found out that police had just now obtained a warrant  for your arrest and were heading over to your house or office to execute the  warrant, you might well feel harmed, even before any officers have  arrived. You would likely feel anxiety,  impending doom, fear of what might ensue, etc.<\/p>\n      <p>Indeed,  such fear might actually be worse than the arrest itself. Psychologists have found, for example, that  many torture victims describe the psychological anguish involved in  anticipating the pain as even worse than the excruciating pain itself. It therefore seems false to suggest that  having a warrant issued for your arrest does not injure you in any way.<\/p>\n  <p>Yet interestingly, Ord could have been one of the many  people who do not know (and therefore cannot feel anxiety) about the warrants  that issue for their arrest. Warrants  are generally issued ex parte (outside the presence of the defendant and his  attorney). Any harm, then, seems tied to  the fact of what Ord knew, rather than the fact of the issuance of the  warrant. Is the injury, then, a product  of what Ord believed (and thus spent money avoiding), rather than of the  reality of the police obtaining an invalid warrant?<\/p>\n      <p>Ironically, of course, if Ord had not learned of the  warrant, then his attorney would not have had the opportunity to intervene and  argue that he should not be arrested, and he might then have actually been  arrested (in which case he would indisputably have had standing to complain  about the Fourth Amendment invalidity of the arrest). <\/p>\n      <p><strong>Is Fourth Amendment Harm About Police  Conduct or Victims&#8217; Beliefs? <\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>This question raises an intriguing possibility: Perhaps every Fourth Amendment violation is  experienced as such only if there is knowledge of the violation on the part of  the &#8220;victim.&#8221; Perhaps any such violation  is accordingly about the victim&#8217;s beliefs, rather than about the actual conduct  of the police. <\/p>\n      <p>To take an example from the search context, imagine that  police \u2013 lacking probable cause and a warrant \u2013 enter your home and look  around. Assume that they are careful and  do not disturb the property, and you are not present and never learn of the  invasion. Have you, in such a case, been  injured? <\/p>\n      <p>Current doctrine would say yes, despite the fact that you do  not know and might never learn of what the police did. It is true that they have carried out an  unlawful search of your premises. But  have they truly injured you, absent your finding out about the search?<\/p>\n      <p>The 1993 film <em>Sliver<\/em> took up this question. In the movie, the  owner and landlord of an apartment building in Manhattan sets up surveillance  equipment throughout the building and is thereby able to monitor what goes on  inside each of his tenants&#8217; homes. He does  not speak with others about the personal information that he has learned from  his surveillance. On occasion, however,  when he discovers criminal or otherwise predatory behavior taking place in one  of the apartments, he intervenes to stop it, by contacting the perpetrator and  issuing a warning. I left the film  wondering exactly how to characterize the harm in watching people&#8217;s private and  personal actions, if the watcher does nothing destructive with the information  and if no one ever learns of the intrusion.<\/p>\n      <p>One answer is that we simply do not (and should not) trust  the good will of either the police or our neighbors. Though it is, in theory, possible for someone  to watch everything we do and not act on that information in a harmful manner,  the possibilities for abuse are legion, and it is therefore appropriate to call  the conduct presumptively harmful across the board. Whether or not a tree falling in an empty  forest makes a sound, there is good reason to worry that the forest may not be  empty. <\/p>\n      <p>One could say the same of drunk driving, which some have  described as an inchoate crime (a crime that has not \u2013 without more \u2013  victimized anyone) that should nonetheless be punished severely, because the  risk of harm is too great to countenance.<\/p>\n      <p>But this answer seems not to capture everything that is  wrong with invasions of privacy. In  watching <em>Sliver<\/em>, I immediately found  myself conflicted <u>despite<\/u> the fact that the protagonist (who watches his  neighbors) seems like a trustworthy person who wants only to help protect the  weak against violence and predation. I  felt that even when he was not doing anything improper with the information,  his watching his neighbors was itself and independently a real injury \u2013 and would  have represented an injury even if no one ever learned of his actions. <\/p>\n      <p>Though there was a risk that the watcher would misuse  information that came into his hands, the presence of that risk did not seem to  exhaust the harm associated with his invasion of his neighbors&#8217; privacy. His very knowledge of others&#8217; personal facts  seemed wrong. <\/p>\n      <p>One might say that if <u>knowing<\/u> about an event would  induce actionable distress in the target of that event, then we ought to view the  event as independently harmful to its target, even if the target never finds  out about it. <\/p>\n      <p><strong>Inchoate Versus  Concrete Harms<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>Part of what the standing and ripeness inquiries in Article  III doctrine are intended to capture is the distinction between an inchoate  injury \u2013 one that has not yet come to fruition \u2013 and an actual injury. To bring a case to federal court, one&#8217;s  injury cannot be purely hypothetical. <\/p>\n      <p>In the case of a search that takes place without the  target&#8217;s knowledge, the harm is not hypothetical \u2013 private places have actually  been exposed to police without justification \u2013 even if the target is unaware of  the harm. In the case of a warrant&#8217;s  issuance without probable cause, by contrast, no search or seizure has yet  taken place. It does seem, then, that  although knowledge may be a necessary part of <u>experiencing<\/u> the injury  inflicted by an unreasonable search, though there is an injury either way, an  actual search or seizure (supported by an invalid warrant) might be a necessary  precondition to there <u>being<\/u> an injury, whether experienced or not.<\/p>\n      <p>At oral argument, Ord&#8217;s attorney suggested that if Ord does  not have standing to challenge the issuance of an invalid arrest warrant  against him, then there will be no mechanism for stopping the government from  obtaining invalid arrest warrants at will, despite the fact that the Fourth  Amendment explicitly prohibits their issuance. <\/p>\n      <p>One  potential response to this complaint is that as soon as police execute an  invalid warrant and arrest a person unlawfully, they will have triggered the  target&#8217;s right to bring them to court for violating the Fourth Amendment. And if they never act, then the issuance of  the warrant may seem irrelevant.<\/p>\n  <p>But is this response persuasive? It may be difficult to appreciate the harm in  Ord&#8217;s case, because the government subsequently withdrew the warrant, but  imagine that it had not done so. Imagine  instead that the police obtained the warrant and held onto it, planning to  execute it at some future point, if the desire arose. We could then see more clearly that the  potential arrest (and the warrant authorizing that arrest) would be hanging  over the plaintiff&#8217;s head and threatening his liberty for the duration of its  existence. <\/p>\n      <p>The injury, in other words, would be real, but perhaps would  end at the point that the warrant was withdrawn. On this logic, the plaintiff should be able  to bring his damages suit for the injury that was inflicted by the issuance of  the warrant and that continued until the point at which the warrant was  withdrawn. The withdrawal of the warrant  might signal the end of the injury, but it does not thereby negate the injury that  was previously inflicted. Ord might have  difficulty proving any substantial monetary damages for this injury, to be  sure, but it would be an injury nonetheless.<\/p>\n      <p><strong>Standing and Physical  Injury: Why Abstract Injuries May Count,  Too<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>In many contexts, the sorts of injury that might be  inflicted by one person on another are quite concrete. A wrong-doer commits violence against or steals  from his target, for example. But the  Fourth Amendment inherently recognizes that injuries can be more abstract than  that and still constitute real injuries. <\/p>\n      <p>When police carry out illegal searches and seizures, they  may do so without ever alerting their target \u2013 especially if the target turns  out to be innocent of any wrongdoing (and therefore unlikely to confront the  results of the searches in a later criminal prosecution). But what the Fourth Amendment guarantees is  &#8220;[t]he right of the people to be secure,&#8221;  and it seems inaccurate to say that a person is truly secure from  unreasonable seizures when the police are presently in possession of an invalid  warrant for his arrest. One might even  describe that state of affairs as the very opposite of security.<\/p>\n  <hr size=\"1\">\n  <p class=\"authorfoot\">\n<a name=\"bio\"><\/a>Sherry F. Colb, a FindLaw columnist, is Professor  of Law and Charles Evans Hughes Scholar at Cornell Law   School. Her book, <i>When Sex Counts:  Making Babies and Making Law<\/i>, is available on Amazon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\">\n                    <g id=\"thumbs-up\" clip-path=\"url(#clip0_604_3418)\">\n           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