542 U.S. 177 (U.S. Supreme Court 2004)
Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court is a cornerstone case at the intersection of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments and day-to-day policing.
During a valid Terry stop supported by reasonable suspicion, may a state, through a stop-and-identify statute, compel a suspect to disclose his name without violating the Fourth Amendment or the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination?
Under Terry v. Ohio, officers may conduct a brief investigatory stop based on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and may make inquiries reasonably related to the justification for the stop. A state may, by narrowly drawn statute, require a lawfully detained person to identify himself during such a stop without offending the Fourth Amendment, provided the demand is reasonably related in scope to the circumstances justifying the stop and does not impose open-ended or vague requirements (as in Kolender v. Lawson). Compelled disclosure of one's name generally does not violate the Fifth Amendment unless the suspect shows a "real and appreciable" risk that the disclosure would be incriminating—i.e., could be used in a criminal prosecution or lead to evidence of a crime; absent such a showing, the privilege does not apply (see, e.g., Hoffman v. United States).
Yes. The Supreme Court held that, during a valid Terry stop, a state may compel a suspect to disclose his name pursuant to a stop-and-identify statute without violating the Fourth Amendment. The Court further held that, on the record presented, compelling Hiibel to disclose his name did not violate the Fifth Amendment because he failed to demonstrate a real and appreciable risk of self-incrimination.
Hiibel confirms that stop-and-identify statutes are constitutional when applied during valid Terry stops and limited to requiring a suspect to state his name. It reconciles Terry's allowance of brief investigatory questioning with prior uncertainty left by Brown v. Texas and limits Kolender v. Lawson to statutes plagued by vagueness or excessive officer discretion. The case teaches that constitutional outcomes often turn on narrow statutory language and contextual facts: reasonable suspicion must justify the stop, the identification demand must be closely tied to the stop's purpose, and the Fifth Amendment privilege requires a concrete showing of incrimination risk. For practice, Hiibel guides officers' on-the-street conduct and informs defense counsel about when silence is protected and when refusal to identify can itself be an offense—particularly in jurisdictions with stop-and-identify laws.