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- W882795429 abstract "You shall have the same rule for the sojourner and for the native, for I am the LORD your God.- Leviticus 24:22 1I. INTRODUCTIONPeople who read law review articles usually have the resources to temporarily abscond from society on a whim, perhaps to the nearest trailhead, and begin a trek through the woods. Such readers, if they choose a well-maintained frequented by long-distance hikers, may come across a simple, three-sided cabin known as a shelter. There they might find a grimy and unwashed bunch, talking amongst themselves using jargon such as blazes and trail angels.2 Some may recognize them as thru-hikers3 and wonder long the scrawny, bearded, and overloaded travelers have been at it. But some may ask if these apparent vagabonds have not taken residence in the humble shelter out of necessity. In fact, many individuals leave the urban streets for hiking trails where their appearance and drifting lifestyle are not as quickly frowned upon.People often confuse long-distance backpackers with squatters. A visitor to the wealthy community of Kent, Connecticut, once asked a shop owner how a town like Kent could have such a serious problem, referring to the numerous Appalachian hikers who walk to Kent from the wilderness for resupplying and refreshments.4 While a benign misunderstanding may be comical, park rangers warn that failing to distinguish genuine hikers from squatters can have fatal consequences. Consider, for example, Gary Michael Hilton, an apparently homeless predator who spent months migrating up and down the Appalachian Trail before abducting and murdering a twenty-four-year-old experienced hiker, Meredith Emerson, on the Appalachian at Blood Mountain in North Georgia.5 Of course, not all denizens of the backcountry are dangerous, just as some recreational hikers have their own criminal proclivities.6 The intersection of the and recreational hikers is no coincidence. On the one hand, those who have the means to live comfortably often look for ways to live more simply, even if only as a temporary escape from their complicated lives, and thus venture into the woods with just a few necessities of life.7 On the other hand, those who have nothing except the necessities of life may make their way to the campsites and hiking trails in the backcountry because society has deemed it appropriate to sleep on the ground in the wilderness, but not in the city. In fact, about seven percent of the nation's people live in rural areas.8This combination produces an interesting legal result in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. When the privileged decide to live like the homeless, they bring with them their expectations of constitutional protections, and courts generally respect these expectations as the expectations of privacy that society is willing to afford.9 This suggests that individuals should enjoy the de facto protection created by outdoorsmen's expectations of privacy. Even though society might not otherwise give individuals the rights associated with reasonable expectations of privacy, the deserve such rights because they live similarly to recreational outdoorsmen.Thus, greater Fourth Amendment protections for the may be a secondary implication of society's appreciation for outdoor recreation. However, the fact that those protections are secondary raises the question of whether basing Fourth Amendment protections for one (small and marginalized) segment of society on what everyone else deems to be reasonable lends enough constitutional protection to the in general. Indeed, society most likely does not deem the actions and choices of people to be reasonable; this public bias may forestall any fair evaluation of behavior.10 Consider, for example, the testimony of Gary Wayne Grimes, a man who claims to have been unreasonably attacked by a police dog while sleeping next to a building one night. …" @default.
- W882795429 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W882795429 date "2013-04-01" @default.
- W882795429 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W882795429 title "Life on Streets and Trails: Fourth Amendment Rights for the Homeless and the Homeward Bound" @default.
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