Appeals Court: Police do not need a reason to place Americans on a Suspicious Person List

MassPrivateI

Day by day, year by year our justice system proves the Constitution has essentially become worthless.

Yesterday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in California ruled that police do not need a reason to place a person on the Suspicious Person List.

The ruling explains how President George W. Bush created Fusion Centers whose primary mission was to identify “suspicious Americans.”  

In October 2007, President George W. Bush issued a National Strategy for Information Sharing concerning terrorism-related information. The Strategy created fusion centers that would ensure Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) were disseminated to and evaluated by appropriate government authorities, and identify requirements to support a unified process for reporting, tracking, and accessing SARs. The nationwide effort to standardize this information sharing was called the Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative.”

According to the ruling, Americans can be considered suspicious for doing things like taking pictures of public art, buying a computer, practicing your religion, etc.

image credit: Reason

“Private guards prevented Prigoff, a professional photographer, from taking photographs of a work of public art near Boston, an incident that resulted in the creation of multiple SARs. The FBI then visited Prigoff’s home and questioned a neighbor about him.”

 Being put on an SAR list is similar to the FDA’s drug manufacturing list


The Ninth Circuit claimed that being placed on an SAR list is similar to determining whether a pharmacy is manufacturing drugs!

“The Functional Standard is similar to the Food & Drug Administration’s policy guide at issue in Professionals and Patients for Customized Care. The FDA promulgated a policy utilizing nine factors to help the agency determine whether to initiate an enforcement action against a pharmacy engaged in drug manufacturing.

“The Fifth Circuit noted that although the nine factors assisted the FDA in identifying pharmacies engaged in the manufacture of  drugs, the ultimate  decision whether to bring an enforcement action remained with the agency. Likewise, the Functional Standard aids agencies in determining whether an individual is engaged in suspicious activity, but the final decision to disseminate an SAR rests in the analyst’s discretion.”

What does that mean to the average American?

It means that you, your family, friends or neighbors could be labeled a “suspicious person” based on the whims of local police and a DHS officer.

No one know really knows what factors law enforcement uses in determining if a person should be put on an SAR list. But we do know that the Ninth Circuit ruled that law enforcement does not need to have “reasonable suspicion” to put Americans on a Suspicious Person List.

“Tips and leads required only ‘mere suspicion,’ a lower standard than the reasonable suspicion required for criminal intelligence data,” U.S. Circuit Judge Milan Smith said.

“We will . . . uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may reasonably be discerned.” Motor Vehicle, 463 U.S. at 43. From the outset, the ISE has consistently pronounced that an ISE-SAR need not meet the reasonable suspicion standard in order to expand the base of information gathered.

Welcome to America, a nation of paranoid police ready to brand you and your family suspicious for any reason.

https://massprivatei.blogspot.com/2019/01/appeals-court-police-do-not-need-reason.html

7 thoughts on “Appeals Court: Police do not need a reason to place Americans on a Suspicious Person List

  1. WOW. I WOKE UP FEELING ALL SUSPICIOUS THIS MORNING. MUS BE THE SLEEPIN PILLS…………
    YOU KNOW, THE BLUE ONES THAT KEEP YOU FROM PEEIN ON YER FEET………….

  2. In other words, do something to piss off a cop such as make a joke about the color of his off-duty t-shirt and you’ll find yourself on some “list”…as my retired cop friend told me years ago, just about every cop now is a psychopath.

    One thing the Rolling Stones got right, in the song “Sympathy for the Devil”: “every cop is a criminal…”

  3. So does “Hey big sexy, I can’t wait for you to grope my nutsack.” considered a sign that I might be a terrorist?

    Unfrigginbelievable…..

  4. I just saw the official list of “AMERICANS WHO ARE ABSOLUTELY NOT SUSPICIOUS PERSONS.” It only had 535 names on it, all of whom take up residence in a strange area known as D.C.

    .

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