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Hawaii County Files Trespassing Charges Against Census Worker Russell Haas

Census

MARK NIESSE   07/ 5/10 03:17 PM ET   AP

HONOLULU — In these divisive times, Census worker Russell Haas has come to expect some resistance when he goes door to door to count the residents of the rugged communities near Hawaii's Kilauea volcano. He didn't expect to get arrested.

An attempt to get one resident, a county police officer, to fill out Census forms landed Haas in the back of a patrol car with a trespassing charge.

The case is now in federal court, the latest example of disputes this year between Census workers and residents who don't want to deal with them. It has created a rare instance in which federal prosecutors have stepped in to serve as criminal defense attorneys.

"I was trained to encourage everybody to be in the Census," said Haas, 57, a former New Jersey police officer.

The case hearkens back to an argument that is as old as the nation itself: the tension between federal powers granted under the Constitution, such as census taking, and a state's right to govern itself.

Whether it's state attorneys' general opposing a new health care law or Arizona's immigration law, challenges to federal authority abound. And for the past year, many Census workers have seen it face to face, when they pull open gates or ring a doorbell.

Nationwide, they have met more hostility than they did in the last count a decade ago. The agency tallied 436 incidents involving assaults or threats against its 635,000 enumerators through June 29, more than double the 181 incidents in 2000.

The increase came amid the resurgence of anti-government sentiment in the past year.

The Census intends to finish its count by the end of August, said Celeste Jimenez of the Los Angeles Regional Census Center.

"It is important for residents to participate," she said. "It affects how over $400 billion of federal funding are allocated each year to states for infrastructure and services such as hospitals, job training centers, schools, emergency services."

Hawaii had one of the nation's lowest response rates in the 2000 count, and officials focused on getting a more accurate tally in 2010. They've tried to encourage people, especially Native Hawaiians, to be counted so the state gets its fair share of federal dollars.

In the Big Island's Puna district – a craggy rural area where residents value privacy, independence and the simple life – Haas said he anticipated some resistance, especially from the area's Vietnam War veterans and marijuana growers.

Instead, most of them took the census forms without a fight, "even the angry ones," he said.

When he went out on March 20, he said, he found trouble when a resident refused to accept Census forms and told Haas to leave his fenced property. Census workers are told in their manuals that they should do their best to gain access to areas surrounded by gates.

"When this guy showed me his badge, I went, 'Dude, you have to be in the Census, what are you talking about?'" Haas said.

The resident continued to refuse to take the Census, and Haas said he waited outside a chain-link fence while the resident called his co-workers at the Hawaii County Police Department.

When police arrived, instead of asking the resident to accept the forms as required by federal law, the officers crumpled the papers into Haas' chest and handcuffed him, Haas said. The department hasn't released the name of the officer who told Haas to leave his property.

Haas said he told officers that it was his duty to leave the Census forms with the resident, and that he would leave as soon as he did it.

The officers were enforcing state law and had not been trained on the federal Census law, Hawaii County Police Maj. Sam Thomas said.

When the case goes to U.S. District Court on July 22, Hawaii County Deputy Prosecutor Roland Talon will argue that Haas overstepped his authority by opening the resident's unlocked fence, entering his property and refusing to leave until he had been asked several times.

"There were other measures that he could have taken which would not have risen to the level of him trespassing onto the property," Talon said in an interview.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Larry Butrick claims Haas is protected by the U.S. Constitution for actions taken in his capacity as a federal employee. Butrick filed a motion asking the judge to dismiss the case.

"Haas was instructed that when dealing with a reluctant respondent he was to strive to gain the respondent's cooperation and try to be persuasive," Butrick wrote in the motion. "Haas was told to be persistent in his attempt to talk to respondents."

Census officials weren't aware of any other case where federal lawyers are defending an arrested employee.

Whatever the outcome, Haas hopes his ordeal sends a message.

"I'm looking to get the word out that the Census is a good thing to the public, so that next time, in 2020, everyone will just participate," Haas said.

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HONOLULU — In these divisive times, Census worker Russell Haas has come to expect some resistance when he goes door to door to count the residents of the rugged communities near Hawaii's Kilauea...
HONOLULU — In these divisive times, Census worker Russell Haas has come to expect some resistance when he goes door to door to count the residents of the rugged communities near Hawaii's Kilauea...
Filed by T.J. Ortenzi  | 
 
 
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06:54 AM on 07/07/2010
A minority group of Americans being denied their basic civil rights.

Blatant Bigotry.

Republicans celebrate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Slash14
Liberalism makes me laugh!
05:04 PM on 07/06/2010
I was all for Acorn conducting the Census. If they had they would of filled it out for me and I would not have had to do it. I probably would not of seen a census worker or got a census in the Mail. But, they would of sent one in for me
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
GoDogGo
A fiscally realistic, socially progressive citizen
06:34 PM on 07/06/2010
Are you such a lazy human being that you can't fill out a 30 second form and send it in? Or stand at your door and let a census worker write it down for you? Or are you so igno/rant that you can't understand the importance of a census to any democratic society for appropriating resources?

If you can't even contribute such a tiny thing to the workings of our country, why call yourself a citizen at all? Because you are plainly not practicing an iota of citizenship.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack2011
06:47 PM on 07/06/2010
Um, he was being sarcastic and throwing a jab at Acorn.
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thaggas
JackpotFishyPoopyPants
04:40 PM on 07/06/2010
I wonder if the right realizes that without a census, Jesus wouldn't have been born in Bethlehem and not in manger. There would be no nativity industry and my kids wouldn't get the role of "camel #3" every year.

God bless the census.
01:33 PM on 07/06/2010
As a person who is currently creating a family tree using information online, I love the Census records! I can't wait for the 1940 US Census to be released so I can update information on family members no longer here, but who were alive in 1940.

There was absolutely nothing in this census request that impinges on your personal liberties or your rights as a citizen. It only asked for the names of the people living at your address on April 1, 2010. No social security numbers, no other identifying information. The government already has most of your personal information on file anyway. This census exercise is to count the American people and divvy up the federal government's support for local infrastructure and services.
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thaggas
JackpotFishyPoopyPants
04:42 PM on 07/06/2010
It's just people bitter about Obama winning the election. They hide their r@cism behind some false anger towards the government spending/taxing/asking too much.

Quite ridiculous. Where was this anger towards the 2000 census? Hidden in the backwoods of Appalachia.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Slash14
Liberalism makes me laugh!
05:11 PM on 07/06/2010
Did not want to do the Census then either. Has nothing to do with BHO's race. again the left starts with its race baiting. Surprised it took this long.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
01:05 PM on 07/06/2010
As a police officer, this guy should be familiar with the concept of "Governmental Tort Immunity ".

It would serve him right to be arrested for trespassing next time he responds to a noise complaint.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Slash14
Liberalism makes me laugh!
05:07 PM on 07/06/2010
So what your saying is that the Police should not respond to any call. Hmmmm? I bet you change your mind when someone is stealing your car
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
11:24 PM on 07/06/2010
That is obviously NOT what I said, so I will give you the long version.

Public servants performing their duties in good faith are given a degree of immunity from nuisance charges under a doctrine called "Governmental Tort Immunity ". Each layer of government has it's own laws implementing this doctrine.

Police officers are more protected than most others under this doctrine because of the nature and extent of their interaction with civilians. This country police officer should know full well about the doctrine - and that as a fellow public servant performing his duties in good faith, the Census worker shares that immunity.

In short: the same legal doctrine that protects the county police officer from trespassing charges in the normal performance of his duties also protects the Census worker from trespassing charges in the normal performance of his duties.

Arresting the police officer for trespassing while performing his duties in good faith would be exactly the same scenario as his arresting the Census worker for trespassing while performing his duties in good faith - and the charges against him should be thrown out just as quickly as his charges against the Census worker.

Because the county police officer used his authority in bad faith when having the Census worker arrested, he is not protected from charges in this incident.

He could be charged with filing a false report, abuse of police authority, or even harassment.
12:21 PM on 07/06/2010
"There were other measures that he could have taken which would not have risen to the level of him trespassing onto the property," Talon said in an interview.

There were other measures that he (the off-duty cop) could have taken which would not have risen to the level of putting him in handcuffs.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
GoDogGo
A fiscally realistic, socially progressive citizen
12:41 PM on 07/06/2010
Like taking 60 seconds to fill the form out like the rest of us non-moro/ns did and put it back in his mailbox.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Slash14
Liberalism makes me laugh!
05:12 PM on 07/06/2010
Like the paperboy, I mean census worker leaving when asked
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack2011
12:18 PM on 07/06/2010
The 2010 Census is one of the shortest forms in history.

The very first U.S. Census was managed under Thomas Jefferson.

Name of the head of each household.
How many free white males age 16 and older.
How many free white males under age 16.
How many free white females.
How many of all other free persons.
How many slaves.

Some states added questions on occupation.
12:10 PM on 07/06/2010
The best thing about this story, is as a Census worker myself, I found all the wealthy neighborhoods filled it out without any problems. The poorer neighborhoods fought me the whole way, yelling,screaming and threatening me. The result: rich neighborhoods get more money for roads, schools and better representation in government. While the poor neighborhoods ... get NOTHING! It makes me laugh. It really does. And we wonder why some areas of the city never get any better.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack2011
12:48 PM on 07/06/2010
Exactly. Try doing a survey to get grant funding for an infrastructure project like a new waterline for a low-income street. The residents mostly refuse to fill out the survey. The result is - NO NEW WATERLINE for them. Ha.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack2011
12:49 PM on 07/06/2010
Fanned.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lauren Wilson
11:57 AM on 07/06/2010
There's a shot in one's own foot if I ever saw one...funds allocated to States for Police Departments...aren't those determined by the Census?
11:56 AM on 07/06/2010
'residents value privacy, independence and the simple life – Haas said he anticipated some resistance, especially from the area's Vietnam War veterans and marijuana growers.'

and how much federal money do these rugged individuals consume?
11:55 AM on 07/06/2010
As a federal employee, Census workers are told they have a right to enter a property with an unlocked gate however, with that said, the census worker exercised poor judgement. If someone asks you to leave their property, out of respect and courtesy, you leave. The federal government has been doing the census for a long, long time. The state courts will be trumped and I predict the case will be thrown out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Slash14
Liberalism makes me laugh!
05:21 PM on 07/06/2010
That is correct the Census worker has no authority! None at all! The case will and should be thrown out of court.The Census worker should also be canned for not listening to the property owner
11:22 AM on 07/06/2010
"The officers were enforcing state law and had not been trained on the federal Census law, Hawaii County Police Maj. Sam Thomas said." What an excuse!

I'm not a police officer and I haven't been "trained on the federal Census law," but I'm aware of the legal ramifications for not filling out the forms. I expect nothing less from my local law enforcement. This is police brutality.

If found guilty, the officer involved should be charged with obtaining census information from his district as part of his sentence, unpaid, of course. Let him take the heat from his friends and neighbors who refuse to comply with the law he thumbed his nose at.
11:53 AM on 07/06/2010
even if he were a salesman this is overkill
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ampoliros
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
11:22 AM on 07/06/2010
I wouldn't fill out no Obamacensus neither! Beck told me they was gonna use those forms to take my guns and force me to buy health care, which I wont need when I'm in the FEMA Deth Camp.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
GoDogGo
A fiscally realistic, socially progressive citizen
12:39 PM on 07/06/2010
Don't forget Granny's Deth Camp. We're gonna get her too!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Slash14
Liberalism makes me laugh!
05:23 PM on 07/06/2010
No they are usining the IRS to force health care on us. Get it right
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
11:04 AM on 07/06/2010
LOL, i hope they pay him for being locked up.
11:07 AM on 07/06/2010
well, technically, isn't he still on the clock?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
11:19 AM on 07/06/2010
lol yup he needs his d-308
10:57 AM on 07/06/2010
You Americans are soooo patriotic, but when it comes to an actual sense of citizen "duty", so many of you fail.....

Of course the irony is the cop is supposed to also represent the government.

And the government is supposed to represent the people: we should send the memo to your nihilistic anti-themselves teabagger nutjobs...
11:31 AM on 07/06/2010
"You Americans"... apprently this is none of your business. But if your idea of citizenship is to be subserviant, then by all means do so. Some of us have no desire to kneel before the almighty government.
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sharpstick
Jesus = The world's most famous liberal, socialist
12:01 PM on 07/06/2010
Enough already! You are clearly a Beck watching right wing paranoid. In other words, you are operating on delusion. You claim you don't want the govt to know your phone number, well they have it. Your name? They got that. Whether you live in a house? Got that one too. How much you make? Got it. This principle you are supposedly standing up for doesn't exist. You are just another weak minded person unable to hold more than one thought in your head and thus it makes you easy prey for the right wing and religion. You should really shake yourself before you waste your life on stoopidity.
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Danish5666
What makes life worthwhile isn't measured by GDP
12:33 PM on 07/06/2010
Apparently you don't have any concept of what citizenship is.