First off, let me say that I respect the majority of LEOs. I have an application in with the Chattanooga PD. I've helped teach DT to police officers. I hold a profound respect for what I would call natural law and a certain amount of respect somewhat less than total for societal law. I will also say that I was commissioned in the USAR a long time ago. That caveat is so that people understand that I look at things from the POV of a trained leader.
A couple of classic videos about talking to the police and not doing it.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4097602514885833865#http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6014022229458915912#One thing that I constantly tell people who get upset at LEOs is that LEOs are human beings, too. That means they do good things and bad things, smart things and foolish things. And are just as vulnerable to things like peer pressure, mob mentality and the Group Monkey Dance syndrome as the rest of us.
Repeatedly, I see that many events that end in tragic overreactions are contributed to by the officer who should have been in charge failing to act in that manner. LEOs act in chaotic situations. The more variables, ie people, in a situation, the more chaotic it is. A senior officer's job is to stay as calm as possible and try to navigate the chaos and restore order. On more than one occasion, officers questioned after an exhange of fire, when asked why they were firing at a vehicle, responded with something along the lines of: Because the man next to me was shooting.
One of the hardest lessons for NCOs and Officers in the military to learn is that shooting is for privates. Supervisors should fire only when they must do so. As a platoon leader, if I am shooting, I control one weapon. If I am managing, I control 30 of them. Plus artillery and air support. When you have 3 or more officers, someone needs to step back and be in charge.
This is also true of civilians on the workplace, etc.
This is my view of how to protect yourself from unreasonable search and seizure and no-knock warrants, etc. Someone earlier in the topic mentioned blending with the sheep. I mostly agree. It's called the passive defense. Or as Guru Crafty has said: Avoid doing stupid things in stupid places with stupid people. It protects you from villains. But it also keeps you from being mistaken for a villain. It is a very common human tendency, for good reason, to think that, if it walks like a duck and talks like a duck and hangs around with a bunch of other ducks, it is probably a duck. It is pattern recognition that aids survival.
The first guideline: Try not to do anything illegal. This is actually impossible in our society. Our patchwork of a legal system with the emphasis on lawyers and hair splitting means that almost anyone can be charged with some sort of crime at any time. Just try to drive the speed limit in a city. Even if other drivers do not rear-end you in a fit of road rage, the police notice you. DEA Officers have admitted, in news interviews, that they view anyone driving the speed limit as suspicious.
Second guideline: Do not do anything to attract attention more than necessary. Keep your vehicle reasonably clean. Keep your registration and tag sticker current. Keep your city and county stickers current if you need to have them. Keep headlights, tail lights and break lights in proper working order. All of those are cheap and easy to fix. If you can afford to buy a handgun or medical marijuana or a bottle of scotch or DVDs or dinner for 2 at a restaurant, you can afford to have them working properly.
Keep your vehicle interior reasonably clean and neat. If you have locking boxes, keep them shut and locked. Have a locking box in your trunk and keep it locked with a sturdy lock. Don't have empty or opened containers of alcohol in your vehicle even if you have not had a drink in 2 or three days. Dress neatly. It doesn't have to be expensively. Just neatly. If you have a beard or goattee, keep it trimmed. Even if you have long hair, keep it maintained. Talk respectfully. Look respectfully. Smile.
If stopped by an officer, be calm and polite. Remember that the officer is probably at least a little scared of you. If you can calm the officer down, it can only help you. Pop hazard lights, pull over as soon as it is safe, kill the ignition and leave your hands on the wheel. If it is at night, turn on the overhead light. Do not fumble for license, registration or anything else. Do not even roll down the window if it is up. Wait for instructions from the officer. Smile.
Politely refuse the search if asked. Don't be confrontational. If pulled over incorrectly, don't attempt to hold court on the side of the road. Hold court in the courthouse.
Personal story I was pulled over by an LEO for running a red light. I thought this was improbable because I had been behind the officer at the traffic signal and had not had to drive around or through him. I told the officer this. He said, not politely, that I had indeed run the red light. I immediately smiled and said, thank you. I took the citation. I showed up in court. There was no officer. I spoke with the judge. I discovered that the officer had suffered a heart attack later that evening. In all likely hood, the officer was in pre-cardiac arrest, was not thinking clearly, and genuinely believed I had run the traffic light. So, when you are pulled over, remember that you may not be cuffed, but detaining you is an arrest. Act like it. And you don't know if the officer is sick with the flu, suffering heat stroke or otherwise impaired.
If an officer attempts comedian of the year award with you or starts harassing you, swallow your pride, take the verbal and psychological hits with a smile and let your lawyer hit him back later, in court. And remember that verbal judo works both ways. If the officer attacks you, well, you'll have to make the decision on how to act for yourself. I'm not going to make it for you because I probably won't be there.
As far as your residence goes, follow similar guidelines. A generally neat and weill maintained house or apartment. Have good windows and doors with sturdy locks. The heavy duty, insulated doors and windows that lower heating bills can also stop criminals. And, should the police show up at the wrong address to serve a no-knock warrant at 3am, the delay in gaining entry because of security doors and windows, buys you time to wake up and analyze the situation.
If you have firearms, have a secure storage device. Gun safes are not THAT expensive. If the police decide they want to seize your firearms during an arrest, all you have to do is invoke your right to remain silent and to have legal counsel and wait. They might get your ready shotgun and handgun. But the rest of the collection is behind a 15 minute determined entry attack lock. Hopefully, by the time the police get the equipment needed and can break into the safe, your lawyer will have been notified by someone and can check to see if they've followed procedure.
The best line of defense we have is our brain that helps us make wise choices.
Without advocating illegal activities, look at it this way. Smoking marijuana, drinking beer, etc, is a choice. Doing either of those things while driving is also a choice. A stupid and unsafe choice. Honestly, eating fast food while driving is stupid and dangerous. So is talking on our phones, swapping CDs, browsing through the iPod, etc.
As an aside, I remember a lady I met complaining that bicycles frustrated her when she was driving. They took up her lane and slowed her down. She just wanted to run them over. With a smile, I asked her, "Is your time so valuable that 10 minutes of it is worth killing someone over?" As soon as I put it to her like that, she backpedaled.
The point of that digression: Are we that strapped for time that we can't hold off on the phone call from Mom for 2 minutes. That we can't wait a bit before eating so we can stop and just eat? If you are the sort of person who can't wait 10 or 15 minutes to get home to have a drink of beer or smoke marijuana, then you do not need to be doing those things at all. If our time for any of those things is THAT short, we probably need to re-evaluate how we are spending our time and what our priorities are.
As Terry Pratchett wrote in a novel: Rules are meant to make your think before you break them.
The important part is that we do think.
When we deal with police officers, do we really want to die because we got caught up in the barking ego dance?