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Federal Appeals Court Rebukes Florida Cops for Using SWAT-Style Raids to Check Barbers' Licenses
Reason.com ^ | September 17, 2014 | Jacob Sullum

Posted on 09/18/2014 6:11:42 AM PDT by Scoutmaster

Today a federal appeals court rebuked police in Orange County, Florida, for mounting a warrantless, SWAT-style raid on a barbership under the pretense of assisting state inspectors.

"We have twice held, on facts disturbingly similar to those presented here, that a criminal raid executed under the guise of an administrative inspection is constitutionally unreasonable," says the decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. "We hope that the third time will be the charm."

On August 19, 2010, two inspectors from the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) visited the Strictly Skillz Barbershop in Orlando and found everything in order: All of the barbers working there were properly licensed, and all of the work stations complied with state regulations. Two days later, even though no violations had been discovered and even though the DBPR is authorized to conduct such inspections only once every two years, the inspectors called again, this time accompanied by "between eight and ten officers, including narcotics agents," who "rushed into" the barbershop "like [a] SWAT team." Some of them wore masks and bulletproof vests and had their guns drawn. Meanwhile, police cars blocked off the parking lot.

The officers ordered all the customers to leave, announcing that the shop was "closed down indefinitely." They handcuffed the owner, Brian Berry, and two barbers who rented chairs from him, then proceeded to search the work stations and a storage room. They demanded the barbers' driver's licenses and checked for outstanding warrants. One of the inspectors, Amanda Fields, asked for the same paperwork she had seen two days earlier, going through the motions of verifying (again) that the barbers were not cutting hair without a license (a second-degree misdemeanor). Finding no regulatory violations or contraband, the officers released Berry and the others after about an hour.

Although ostensibly justified as a regulatory inspection, the raid on Strictly Skillz, like similar sweeps of other barbershops that same day, was part of an operation hatched by Fields and Cpl. Keith Vidler of the Orange County Sheriff's Office (OCSO), who hoped to find drugs, "gather intelligence," and "interview potential confidential informants." The barbershops chosen for the sweeps "were apparently selected because they or barbers within them had on previous occasions failed to cooperate with DBPR inspectors," the court says. "All of the targeted barbershops were businesses that serviced primarily African-American and Hispanic clientele."

The 11th Circuit concludes that the Strictly Skillz raid, as described by Berry and the other plaintiffs, was "clearly established to be illegal from its inception," violating state law as well as the Fourth Amendment. "The facts of this case—when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs—adequately establish that the 'inspection' of Strictly Skillz amounted to an unconstitutional search," the court says, "and that the unconstitutionality of such a search was clearly established at the time that the search was executed." Hence a federal judge was right to rule that Vidler and Deputy Travis Leslie do not deserve qualified immunity.

At this stage of the case, where Vidler and Leslie are trying to get the lawsuit dismissed based on the qualified immunity enjoyed by officers who do not blatantly disregard well-established constitutional law, judges are supposed to assume that the plaintiffs can prove the facts they allege. But there seems to be little real dispute about what the cops did that day; the exact number of officers involved, for example, is not going to be crucial in judging whether the search was legal.

"The August 21 search was executed with a tremendous and disproportionate show of force, and no evidence exists that such force was justified," the court says. "Despite the fact that neither OCSO nor the DBPR had any reason to believe that the inspection of Strictly Skillz posed a threat to officer safety, the record indicates that several OCSO officers entered the barbershop wearing masks and bulletproof vests, and with guns drawn; surrounded the building and blocked all of the exits; forced all of the children and other customers to leave; announced that the business was 'closed down indefinitely'; and handcuffed and conducted pat-down searches of the employees while the officers searched the premises. Such a search, which bears no resemblance to a routine inspection for barbering licenses, is certainly not reasonable in scope and execution....The show of force and search were all the more unreasonable in view of the fact that DBPR inspectors visited Strictly Skillz a mere two days before the search and had already determined that the barbershop and its employees were in compliance with state regulations."

Radley Balko noted the Florida barbershop raids, along with other examples of criminal searches disguised as regulatory inspections, back in 2010.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: donutwatch; florida; leosoutofcontrol; police; swat
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See also:

Deputies involved in Orange County barber shop raids to stand trial - WFTV.com

1 posted on 09/18/2014 6:11:43 AM PDT by Scoutmaster
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To: Scoutmaster

Kudos to the judge. This is a step in the right direction.


2 posted on 09/18/2014 6:13:26 AM PDT by DarkSavant
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To: Scoutmaster

“criminal raid”

Good call.


3 posted on 09/18/2014 6:15:45 AM PDT by moovova
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To: Scoutmaster
"A Sheriff's Office investigation found no wrongdoing, and the two deputies in the civil case are still employed at the Sheriff's Office."

Of course.

4 posted on 09/18/2014 6:19:59 AM PDT by Paladin2
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To: DarkSavant

The prosecutor who forwarded the search warrant, and the judge who signed them....need to be named, and put onto the front page of the local paper. This is third-world stuff....what you’d expect out of Bolivia.


5 posted on 09/18/2014 6:21:29 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: moovova

Anyone still naive enough to think the USSA is a “free” country?

Even the Free Sh*t Army know better than that.


6 posted on 09/18/2014 6:23:39 AM PDT by OldArmy52 (The question is not whether Obama ever lies, but whether he ever tells the truth.)
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To: Scoutmaster; Alaska Wolf; DCBryan1; Slings and Arrows; Doomonyou; napscoordinator; Shimmer1; ...
JBT Ping list


7 posted on 09/18/2014 6:24:55 AM PDT by null and void (Only God Himself watches you more closely than the US government.)
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To: pepsionice
I don't believe a search warrant was involved - and therefore no prosecutor or judge.

I believe the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation was exercising 'its warrantless right' to conduct inspections of licensed professionals.

Sorry, I just threw up a little in my mouth.

8 posted on 09/18/2014 6:25:28 AM PDT by Scoutmaster (I'd rather be at Philmont)
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To: pepsionice

I do not know the facts of the case but the article indicates that it was a warrantless (illegal) search.


9 posted on 09/18/2014 6:28:01 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: Scoutmaster

Prolly would have been a blood bath if this had been a dog grooming business.


10 posted on 09/18/2014 6:28:10 AM PDT by Carthego delenda est
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To: Scoutmaster

They should get prison time.


11 posted on 09/18/2014 6:29:59 AM PDT by sport
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To: pepsionice

There was no warrant.


12 posted on 09/18/2014 6:30:49 AM PDT by Mr. Lucky
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To: Carthego delenda est

+1


13 posted on 09/18/2014 6:31:28 AM PDT by Scoutmaster (I'd rather be at Philmont)
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To: pepsionice

I wanna know who signed an affidavit that there was a crime that had been committed and that someone in the barber shop committed it. THAT is the basis of a search warrant. Where is the affidavit??


14 posted on 09/18/2014 6:35:03 AM PDT by CodeToad (Romney is a raisin cookie looking for chocolate chip cookie votes.)
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To: Scoutmaster

BWB: Barbering While Black?


15 posted on 09/18/2014 6:35:18 AM PDT by Cletus.D.Yokel (Catastrophic Anthropogenic Climate Alteration: The acronym explains the science.)
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To: Carthego delenda est

“Prolly would have been a blood bath if this had been a dog grooming business.”

LOL!!! Very funny! :-)


16 posted on 09/18/2014 6:35:57 AM PDT by MNGal
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To: pepsionice

The first sentence in the article states it was warrantless raid.

Although technically warrantless is not proper word as written.


17 posted on 09/18/2014 6:36:14 AM PDT by PoloSec ( Believe the Gospel: how that Christ died for our sins, was buried and rose again)
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To: Paladin2

Here you have some black men that trained to get a skill, opened their own business and are trying to make an honest living and the P.D. uses SWAT tactics to check licenses? Aren’t there real criminals they should be focusing on? We live in a crazy world. Unless there’s something illegal going on like drug dealing out of the barber shop the cops need to keep their noses out of the regulatory enforcement business IMO...


18 posted on 09/18/2014 6:40:19 AM PDT by jsanders2001
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To: null and void

A camera pointed at the “police-department HMMV” receives an AR-15 point DIRECTLY back!

Chilling...

Tell me, why wouldn’t I immediately fire on this threat to my safety and life?


19 posted on 09/18/2014 6:41:23 AM PDT by Cletus.D.Yokel (Catastrophic Anthropogenic Climate Alteration: The acronym explains the science.)
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To: jsanders2001

I believe that the majority of ‘professional licensing’ regulations are not designed to protect the consumer, but rather to benefit licensed professionals by creating a barrier to competition.


20 posted on 09/18/2014 6:45:05 AM PDT by Scoutmaster (I'd rather be at Philmont)
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