I have two questions (and I apologize if either has already been covered above):
1) If the police officer asks for your name and you give it, is the officer authorized to follow up and obtain some form of I.D. as verification?
2) I understand how, under the Terry decision, police may stop you (and even frisk in certain situations) if they have "reasonable suspicion" of unlawful activity. Is the requirement to provide a name when asked governed by the same "reasonable suspicion" standard?
If the answer to # 1 is "no" and # 2 is "yes" then I suppose I don't have any real problem with this ruling. After all, police have been conducting legal Terry-stops since 1968.
On the other hand, if the answers are reversed, then police will certainly use the ruling to "boot-strap" justification for previously impermissible stop and frisks.
Possible scenarios:
Me: "Why did you stop me officer?"
Police Officer: "No reason. What's your name?"
Me: "John Doe"
Police Officer: "Prove it. Show me some I.D."
Me: "Sorry, I was just out walking my dog, I didn't bring my wallet."
Police Officer: "No I.D.? Then you'll have to come with us ..."
Or,
Me: "Wait a minute. You asked my name and I told you. If you have no reason to stop me, then why should it be on me to prove anything? I'm leaving."
Police Officer: "I don't need a reason. And, not only that, I think you might be giving me a false name, so I'm going to pat you down for I.D., and if by chance I discover some other contraband in the process, I'll arrest you for that, too."
*Although I still haven't read the opinion, the more I think about this the more I suspect the police are going to be held to the same "reasonable suspicion" standard noted in Terry before being allowed to ask for I.D. As I recall, the courts have traditionally defined non-suspicious questioning as "voluntary encounters" and the citizen has always been free to walk away without providing any information. If my interpretation is not correct, I'm sure the legal community would have gone nuts already and I haven't heard anything so far.
1) If the police officer asks for your name and you give it, is the officer authorized to follow up and obtain some form of I.D. as verification?
2) I understand how, under the Terry decision, police may stop you (and even frisk in certain situations) if they have "reasonable suspicion" of unlawful activity. Is the requirement to provide a name when asked governed by the same "reasonable suspicion" standard?
If the answer to # 1 is "no" and # 2 is "yes" then I suppose I don't have any real problem with this ruling. After all, police have been conducting legal Terry-stops since 1968.
On the other hand, if the answers are reversed, then police will certainly use the ruling to "boot-strap" justification for previously impermissible stop and frisks.
Possible scenarios:
Me: "Why did you stop me officer?"
Police Officer: "No reason. What's your name?"
Me: "John Doe"
Police Officer: "Prove it. Show me some I.D."
Me: "Sorry, I was just out walking my dog, I didn't bring my wallet."
Police Officer: "No I.D.? Then you'll have to come with us ..."
Or,
Me: "Wait a minute. You asked my name and I told you. If you have no reason to stop me, then why should it be on me to prove anything? I'm leaving."
Police Officer: "I don't need a reason. And, not only that, I think you might be giving me a false name, so I'm going to pat you down for I.D., and if by chance I discover some other contraband in the process, I'll arrest you for that, too."
*Although I still haven't read the opinion, the more I think about this the more I suspect the police are going to be held to the same "reasonable suspicion" standard noted in Terry before being allowed to ask for I.D. As I recall, the courts have traditionally defined non-suspicious questioning as "voluntary encounters" and the citizen has always been free to walk away without providing any information. If my interpretation is not correct, I'm sure the legal community would have gone nuts already and I haven't heard anything so far.