By Christopher Orlet on 8.22.05 @ 12:06AM
Individual Rights and the Constitution take a summer holiday.
It was a dark and terrible day for freedom.
On Wednesday last the Circuit Court in Monroe County (Illinois)
dismissed my motion
to have the state seat belt law declared unconstitutional. The
judge didn't even bother to look at my briefs, err... that is, the
arguments I had spent weeks researching. In fact, he seemed to find
the whole idea rather silly. (Commerce Clause and seatbelts? What's
the state's attorney got to say about this? The law's the law?
Right. Next case!)
It had seemed simple enough. The seatbelt law was bad law. Here
in the glorious land of the free, adult Americans should be allowed
to make their own decisions about their well-being, whether it's
enjoying a fine Don Diego cigar or choking down Quarter Pounders at
McDonald's. It's strictly a private matter, a matter of common
sense. (Haw, Haw! the lawyers are guffawing. Since when does common
sense play a part in the legislative or justice systems? Are you
not familiar with the gun laws or the Americans with Disabilities
Act that requires million-dollar elevators in homeless shelters, or
what about an education system required to throw away precious
resources on uneducable or delinquent children?)
So I threw common sense to the winds and based my motion to
dismiss on the grounds that the seat belt law violated the Commerce
Clause. A stretch, I realize, but all of the good arguments --
right to privacy, due process -- had been shot down by previous
courts, courts that could find in the U.S. Constitution a right to
commit homicide on the unborn, but no right to jeopardize your own
life sans safety belts. Besides, it was the only argument
left.
Briefly I argued that previous courts had found that anything
that slows or hampers interstate commerce is a violation of the
Commerce Clause -- actually something the U.S. Supreme Court has
termed the "Dormant Commerce Clause," presumably because the Court
has put the Clause on ice. I argued that out-of-state motorists or
truckers entering Illinois are subject to having their operations
disrupted, their costs increased, and their service slowed if they
are suspected of noncompliance with the seat belt law. And I noted
that this has created a situation in which the Illinois seat belt
statute is "inimical to the national commerce."
As the courtroom emptied, I heroically plodded on, boldly
arguing that motorists involved in interstate commerce are subject
to having their vehicle stopped by police anytime, day or night,
merely on the sneaking suspicion that a seat belt is not being
used. More, primary enforcement, as is currently Illinois law,
encourages the use of random roadblocks, which slows and disrupts
interstate commerce (though it does provide cops with a lucrative
source of overtime pay). Finally I argued that the law is not
applied evenly since it does not apply to buses or delivery
business vehicles, but only to automobile drivers.
Sensing that I was losing my audience, I concluded by citing
three examples of case law in which the U.S. Supreme Court held
that states cannot -- out of safety concerns -- reduce the number
of cars in a train, limit the size of trucks, or demand contoured
mudflaps on tractor-trailers, because these measures "disrupt
interstate commerce." Good arguments, I thought, though apparently
not good enough.
In the end the court found that the state's cynical so-called
safety concerns trumped Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3 of the U.S.
Constitution. (Question: If the State of Illinois is so concerned
with safety why doesn't it require motorcyclists to wear helmets?
And why pass the law only after the feds threatened to withhold
millions in highway dollars?) In his reluctance to overturn a bad
law, the judge had in fact ignored U.S. Supreme Court precedent and
showed his contempt for (or ignorance of) the formerly unassailable
Commerce Clause.
Oh well.
For what it's worth, the trial received some good local
publicity in the St. Louis newspaper. The Post-Dispatch's
columnist and local television pundit Bill McClellan created a stir as he schlepped through the
courthouse on his way to cover my trial. "Hey, it's the guy from
TV!" And "We love you on Donnybrook" (a local
Crossfire-type show). So much for my 15 minutes
of fame.
After going down on the constitutional issue, I figured what the
hell and pleaded guilty of the miserable crime of not wearing a
seat belt. I do not anticipate an appeal. Not this time. Perhaps
someone else will take up the fight. Perhaps some day you too will
forget to buckle up and get ticketed, and rather than simply pay
the fine like the other sheep, you will demand your day in court.
If so, you could do worse than dust off the Dormant Commerce
Clause. For what it's worth you'll have common sense, the U.S.
Constitution, and me on your side.
Christopher Orlet, a frequent contributor, runs the
Existential Journalist blog.
topics:
Education, Television, Business, Constitution, Law, Supreme Court