By the time the 911 dispatcher in Dane County picked up the phone to receive a call, the connection had been broken. The dispatcher called back; no one answered. Police were alerted, and three officers soon arrived at the house from which the call had been placed. They entered without permission and questioned the four occupants: David Hanson, his wife Karen, and their daughters Kari (then 15 years old) and Kelly (13). Eventually they learned that during a heated argument David had bumped Karen, who dialed 911. David was arrested for domestic battery. Karen refused to cooperate with the prosecution, which was dismissed. David then filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, contending that the police violated the fourth, fifth, and fourteenth amendments to the Constitution. But the district court granted summary judgment to the defendants.
According to David, the police violated the fourth amendment by entering without probable cause and refusing to leave as soon as Karen asked them to go. Like the district judge, we think that a 911 call provides probable cause for entry, if a call back goes unanswered. The 911 line is supposed to be used for emergencies only. A lack of an answer on the return of an incomplete emergency call implies that the caller is unable to pick up the phone— because of injury, illness (a heart attack, for example), or a threat of violence. See
United States v. Jenkins,
Karen asked the police to leave, but officers who have probable cause need not cancel an investigation on request. The fourth amendment does not contain a least-restrictive-alternative rule. See
Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives’ Association,
And, given the lack of cooperation by David and Karen, it was also reasonable for the officers to ask Kari and Kelly for information. This questioning was civil and ended promptly after the daughters said that they did not know what their parents had been arguing about and did not believe that a physical altercation had occurred.
David insists that the questions to his daughters violated principles of substantive due process. Yet the daughters are not plaintiffs, either directly or through a next friend. David’s suit depends on his rights, not theirs. Substantive due process is a doctrine limited to impingement on fundamental rights, see
Washington v. Glucksberg,
Although “familial relations” are fundamental, see
Troxel v. Granville,
David’s arrest did more to separate members of the family than a few minutes’ questioning of his daughters could do, but he does not contend that arrests of people with children are unconstitutional; brief questioning thus cannot be unconstitutional either. That the questioning took place out of the parents’ presence does not change the analysis. Private questioning of witnesses reduces the risk that a suspect (such as David) would induce a witness to give untruthful answers. See
Davis v. Washington,
This leaves David’s contention that the police violated his privilege against self-incrimination when they questioned him without first delivering the warnings that
Miranda v. Arizona,
It is unnecessary to decide whether the balance of objective indicators points toward a finding of “custodial interrogation,” because the privilege against self-incrimination, and thus the
Miranda
doctrine, concerns the use of compelled statements in criminal prosecutions. Police cannot “violate
Miranda,
” despite colloquial usage. The constitutional rule is the privilege; the
Miranda
warnings are designed to ensure that the privilege is not waived without understanding (and, if the suspect requests it, legal assistance). There’s nothing wrong with compelling people to speak. It is done all the time through formal grants of immunity. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 6001-05. And the results of interrogation without
Miranda
warnings are admissible in civil cases, something that would be impossible if the interrogation itself violated the Constitution. See
Baxter v. Palmigiano,
We know from
Chavez v. Martinez,
Affirmed
