SPECIAL REPORT:
Mistakes the police make . . . and how they can help you:
1. Stopping a vehicle on the basis of an
anonymous call. An officer can not rely on a phone call to stop you, if
he does not have a name and address for the caller.
2. Following a driver into his residence
without an invitation or without enough information to justify the
entry. Your home is protected under the fourth amendment.
3. Basing an arrest on the statements of the
driver alone. The officer must have independent evidence to corroborate
these statements. This often arises when he has not seen you in
physical control of your car.
4. Detaining a driver longer than is
reasonable to investigate. The constitution does not allow officers to
hold you without limit.
5. Stopping a vehicle without an articulable
suspicion. An officer can not stop you just because he thinks you are
suspicious.
6. Stopping a vehicle because it stops in
the middle of the street or it is driving too slow. Unless there is a
specific traffic ordinance you are violating, such as impeding traffic,
it is quite likely unlawful for an officer to stop you.
7. Weaving within a lane. The statute only
requires you to drive as nearly straight as is practical within a
single lane.
Some cases hold that one weave into the shoulder is not enough reason
for a stop.
8. Stopping a vehicle based on a
misperceived violation of a law. The officer must be right about his
interpretation of the law.
9. Failing to follow the rules of the
Department of Health and Intoxilyzer operation manual. These failures
may invalidate any alcohol testing.
10. Stopping at an improper roadblock. There
are guidelines that must be followed to validate the stop.
11. Stopping a vehicle just to check the
driver's license and registration. There must be an actual traffic
violation or an articulable suspicion of a crime.
12. Stopping a vehicle without being able to
identify it as the one actually committing a traffic infraction.
Officers must be able to convince the Court that they stopped the right
car.
13. Stopping a vehicle for no reason at all.
It's done. Officers sometimes do not show up in Court on these.
14. Blocking a vehicle's exit without
justification. Officers may not restrict a drivers freedom to leave
without a reason.
North
Carolina DWI Front Page