OPINION
Shannon Graves and eight other “exotic dancers” were arrested in Ohio at various times and on various charges,' ranging from prostitution to drug distribution to assault to witness intimidation. R. 122 at 1 n.I; see Graves v. Mahoning County,
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This case implicates the often-tricky interaction between the' Fourth Amendment’s two operative clauses. The first clause, the Reasonableness Clause, limits the government’s power 1 to search ' and seize. “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,” it says, “shall not be violated.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. The second clause, the Warrant Clause, describes the process officials must undertake before issuing a warrant, They must have “probable cause,” it says, “supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describings the place to' be- searched, and the persons* or things to be seized.” Id;
II.
The plaintiffs allege' that court clerks in Mahoning County issued arrest warrants that violate the Warrant Clause. To satisfy .this clause’s requirements, a neutral and detached magistrate must independently determine that- probable cause exists after weighing the evidence supplied by the police. See Whiteley v. Warden,
The plaintiffs have a point. Although they are wrong about the power of county court clerks, who may issue arrest warrants, see Shadwick v. City of Tampa,
III.
But that does not mean the plaintiffs prevail. To establish a cognizable Fourth Amendment claim, the plaintiffs must show a violation hot of the Warrant Clause but of the Reasonableness Clause. “[F]or § 1983 liability” imFourth Amendment cases/“the seizure must be'unrea-; sonable.’ ” Brower v. County of Inyo,
The Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures,” not warrantless ones. See Brigham City v. Stuart,
The seizure at issue in today’s case — an arrest — does not require a warrant. War-rantless arrests were “taken for granted at the founding,” Moore,
That means arrests are “reasonable” when the officer had “probable cause to believe that a criminal offense has been or is being committed.” Devenpeck v. Alford,
The plaintiffs’ complaint fails to account for this imperative.. They never allege that they were arrested without probable cause. Without facts going to this “crucial question,” Draper v. United States,
IV.
The plaintiffs respond that “Whiteley is clearly controlling on this point.” Appellants’ Br. 15 (quotation omitted). They are right — but for the wrong reason. Whiteley held, in the plaintiffs’ favor, that an officer’s conclusory complaint rendered the arrest warrant defective under the Fourth Amendment.
The plaintiffs add that the district court should have allowed them leave to amend their complaint. But the district
In the category, of too little too late, the plaintiffs contend, in one paragraph in their appellate brief, that they- “were arrested by police officers who lacked any probable ckuse to arrest [them] independent of the facially invalid arrest warrant.” Appellants’ Br. 19.' But they conceded at oral argument that they did not make that allegation in the complaint, where it needs to be to get past a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. In the absence of allegations of “particular (and material) facts” establishing a claim, Omnicare, Inc. v. Laborers Dist. Council Constr. Indus. Pension Fund, — U.S. -,
All of this, we appreciate, may fail to come to grips with a lurking concern: If the police may arrest individuals without a valid warrant, why go' through the trouble of obtaining one? A partial answer exists in the search context. A reviewing court is more likely to find a warrantless search unreasonable than a search with a warrant. See United States v. Ventresca,
Büt there is no equivalent to exclusion in the'seizure context. You can’t “exclude” an arrest, and courts don’t release people just “because the officers fáiled to secure a warrant.”' Gerstein v. Pugh,
One is that police officers still have a-law-enforcement explanation for obtaining a seizure - warrant. As with searches, courts more often will deem seizures reasonable when they’re associated with a warrant. Officers want their seizures to be reasonable not because they’re worried about excluding the arrest, but because they’re worried about excluding evidence discovered in a search incident to the arrest. These searches often turn up the most critical evidence in the case. See, e.g., Herring v. United States,
Still another reason‘is that other laws may require officers to obtain a warrant. The Fourth Amendment, like*'other Bill of Rights provisions,, sets a national floor. Federal, state, and'local statutes, and state constitutions, may (and frequently do) establish protections beyond that floor. Ohio, to use one example, appears to impose a warrant requirement for misdemeanor arrests when the crime is not “committed in the officer’s presence.” State v. Henderson,
One more reason is that the Fourth Amendment requires a prompt judicial determination: of probable cause (génerally within 48 hours) after warrant-less arrest. County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
That is not a complete answer, to be sure. Even if obtaining arrest warrants frequently will' be the best practice, that does not mean it will be the practice that happens. “[B]ut the Constitution does not require police to follow the best recommended practices,” which leaves a gap “between the wise and the compulsory.” Gramenos,
That leaves one other point—also not made by the claimants—but worth mentioning. ' Many of the plaintiffs’ arrests were for misdemeanors,' most commonly for prostitution. See Ohio Rev.Code § 2907.25(A), (C)(1). These alleged misdemeanors, according to the complaint, were committed outside the presence of the arresting officers. And it’s an open question at the Supreme Court,' it iurhs out, “whether the Fourth Amendment” requires officers to get a warrant “for purposes of misdemeanor arrests” committed “[outside], the[ir] presence.” Atwater v. City of Lago Vista,
But. it’s not an open question at our-court. The “requirement that a .misdemeanor must have occurred in the officer’s presence to justify a warrantless arrest,” we have explained, “is; pot mandated by the Fourth Amendment.” United States v. Smith,
. Other circuits agree with our approach. See, e.g., Budnick v. Barnstable Cty. Bar Advocates, Inc.,
All the while, though, no court has devoted much more than a line or two to this issue.
There are, to be sure, some sound reasons for our court’s position, as all of this company suggests. The Supreme Court has rejected a similar rule — that constables could constitutionally arrest without a warrant only for breaches of the peace. Atwater,
But there are valid competing arguments that deserve to be addressed at some point. The common law, most sources say, prohibited an officer from “mak[ing] a [warrantless] arrest for a misdemeanor [unless] the crime was committed in his presence.” Gramenos,
What was reasonable at common law often tells us what is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. It. “sheds light on the obviously relevant, .if not -entirely
Some state courts, following this logic, have constitutionalized the common law rule. They have held that statutes that “authorize[ ] an arrest, -without a warrant, for a misdemeanor not committed in the presence of the officer making the arrest” are unconstitutional, Polk v. State,
With sound arguments on each side, it’s no wonder that the Court has left the question opén, even while deciding related questions about warrantless arrests. See, e.g., Moore,
For these reasons, we affirm.
