“Our current presumption has the practical effect of depriving marijuana users … of their Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
From the Carolina Journal
The newest member of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals used a North Carolina case Wednesday to discuss the potential legal ramifications of changing its stance on marijuana.
Justice Nicole Berner offered her commentary in an eight-page concurring opinion in United States v. in Carson. Berner was nominated to the 4th Circuit in 2024 by then-President Joe Biden.
Appeals judges upheld Jermaine Derrick Carson Jr.’s conviction for being a felon in possession of a firearm. The court rejected Carson’s arguments that the evidence against him should be suppressed. It contained evidence from Asheville police detective Steven Escobedo’s search of Carson during a traffic stop.
Berner supported the majority decision. However, much of his consensus was devoted to the connection between marijuana and law enforcement pursuits.
“I agree with my colleagues that our precedent in United States v. Sakyi dictates the outcome of this case,” Berner wrote, citing a 1998 4th Circuit precedent.
“Sakyi created a presumption that a police officer has reasonable suspicion to search a suspect for a weapon during a traffic stop when he reasonably suspects that illegal drugs are in the car,” Berner explained. “Applying this binding precedent, we are left only to conclude that Escobedo did not violate Carson’s Fourth Amendment rights when he went to look for Carson’s weapons because Escobedo reasonably suspected that marijuana was in the car.”
“The Sakyi presumption is based on a simple premise: ‘where there are drugs, there are almost always guns,'” Berner wrote. “This premise that a person suspected of being near illegal drugs is believed to be carrying a gun can no longer hold in this era of widespread legalization of marijuana.”
“In the nearly thirty years since Sakyi was decided, the alleged link between marijuana use and gun ownership has weakened,” he added. “In fact, the Government admitted as much in oral arguments.”
“The legal landscape surrounding the use of marijuana, both medical and recreational, has changed significantly at both the state and federal levels,” Berner continued. “Forty-seven states and the District of Columbia currently allow the medical use of marijuana. Twenty-four states, including a number within the Fourth Circuit, have legalized the recreational use of marijuana. Although federal law continues to criminalize marijuana, the federal government has “largely allowed the production and sale of marijuana under state law, and has allowed marijuana businesses to develop.”
“Sakyi believes that people who use and distribute illegal drugs will carry weapons for protection,” Berner argued. “In the wake of changes in federal law and widespread state legalization, safety concerns are now absent for many marijuana users. A person in Maryland, for example, can walk into a dispensary and legally purchase marijuana without the need for the type of protection that Sakyi based its nexus analysis on.”
Berner highlighted the actions of Asheville police in Carson’s case.
“The facts of this case demonstrate an unassailable disconnect between marijuana use and dangerousness,” the judge wrote. “The officers themselves repeatedly assured Carson and the other occupants of the car that they ‘were not the weed police.’ In fact, even though marijuana remains illegal in North Carolina, the Asheville Police Department no longer charges people with possession of marijuana for personal use. This approach follows the lead of the Department of Justice, which ordered federal prosecutors to drop marijuana charges more than a decade ago.”
Government prosecutors are now in an “awkward position” to suggest that “the millions of Americans who now regularly use marijuana are dangerous,” Berner wrote. The recent Supreme Court decision in United States v. to Heman it emphasizes the need to revise our belief. There, the Court held unconstitutional a law criminalizing the possession of weapons that applied to occasional marijuana users.’
“The court expressly rejected the view that the link between dangerousness and marijuana use could be maintained given the evolving legal and social landscape,” the agreement continued. “However, under our circuit law, reasonable suspicion to search for weapons remains whenever a police officer detects the odor of marijuana.”
The 4th Circuit’s “view is contrary to the decisions of our sister circuits,” Berner argued. A three-judge 4th Circuit panel was unable to change that view.
“As a result, Sakyi connects us, and I agree with my colleagues in their specific opinion,” Berner. he wrote. “I write separately to emphasize that our current presumption has the practical effect of denying those who use marijuana, even in states where it has been legalized under state law, as well as those who find themselves in close proximity to others who use marijuana, their Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
“As marijuana laws and social mores continue to evolve, this presumption may not survive constitutional scrutiny,” Berner added.
This story was first published by the Carolina Journal.
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