A Fourth Amendment for the Poor Alone: Subconstitutional Status and the Myth of the Inviolate Home

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW Indiana Law Journal Pub Date : 2010-10-05 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.1687938
Jordan C. Budd
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

For much of our nation’s history, the poor have faced pervasive discrimination in the exercise of fundamental rights. Nowhere has the impairment been more severe than in the area of privacy. This Article considers the enduring legacy of this tradition with respect to the Fourth Amendment right to domestic privacy. Far from a matter of receding historical interest, the diminution of the poor’s right to privacy has accelerated in recent years and now represents a powerful theme within the jurisprudence of poverty. Triggering this development has been a series of challenges to aggressive administrative practices adopted by localities in the wake of federal welfare-reform legislation. As a precondition to public assistance, some jurisdictions now require that all applicants submit to a suspicionless home search by law-enforcement investigators seeking evidence of welfare fraud. In turning back challenges to these intrusions, contemporary courts have significantly curtailed the protections of the Fourth Amendment as applied to the poor.While the courts that sanction these practices disclaim any sort of poverty-based classification underlying their analysis, no other rationale withstands scrutiny. Neither precedent nor the principled extension of existing doctrine justifies recent outcomes or explains why the holdings should not be applied to authorize a vast - and, thus, unacceptable - expansion of suspicionless search practices directed at the homes of the less destitute. The developing jurisprudence accordingly represents an implicit concession that the poor constitute a subconstitutional class for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Framed most charitably, the decisions understand poverty as a condition of moral culpability and thus accept it as a surrogate for the individualized suspicion that otherwise would be required to justify the intrusions at issue. The premise of the dissolute poor, tracing back centuries, remains alive and well in American law, and we have a bifurcated Fourth Amendment to prove its enduring vitality.
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专为穷人制定的第四修正案:非宪法地位和不可侵犯家庭的神话
在我国历史的大部分时间里,穷人在行使基本权利时都面临着普遍的歧视。在隐私领域受到的损害最为严重。本文考虑了这一传统在第四修正案中关于家庭隐私权的持久遗产。近年来,穷人隐私权的削弱加速了,这远不是历史兴趣消退的问题,现在已经成为贫困法学中的一个强有力的主题。在联邦福利改革立法之后,地方政府采取了一系列激进的行政做法,引发了这一发展。作为获得公共援助的先决条件,一些司法管辖区现在要求所有申请人接受执法调查人员的无嫌疑搜查,以寻找福利欺诈的证据。在拒绝对这些侵犯的挑战时,当代法院大大削弱了第四修正案对穷人的保护。虽然批准这些做法的法院否认任何基于贫困的分类作为其分析的基础,但没有任何其他理由经得起审查。无论是先例还是现有原则的原则性延伸,都不能证明最近的结果是合理的,也不能解释为什么不应将这些规定用于授权大规模——因此是不可接受的——扩大针对不那么贫困的家庭的毫无疑问的搜查行动。因此,发展中的法理学代表了一种隐含的让步,即穷人为第四修正案的目的构成了一个次宪法阶层。这些决定以最仁慈的方式将贫困理解为道德罪责的一个条件,因此接受贫困作为个人怀疑的替代品,否则就需要证明有争议的侵犯是正当的。放荡的穷人的前提,可以追溯到几个世纪,在美国法律中仍然存在,并且很好地存在,我们有一个分岔的第四修正案来证明它的持久生命力。
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1925, the Indiana Law Journal is a general-interest academic legal journal. The Indiana Law Journal is published quarterly by students of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law — Bloomington. The opportunity to become a member of the Journal is available to all students at the end of their first-year. Members are selected in one of two ways. First, students in the top of their class academically are automatically invited to become members. Second, a blind-graded writing competition is held to fill the remaining slots. This competition tests students" Bluebook skills and legal writing ability. Overall, approximately thirty-five offers are extended each year. Candidates who accept their offers make a two-year commitment to the Journal.
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