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- <text id=89TT2448>
- <title>
- Sep. 18, 1989: A Threat To Freedom?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 18, 1989 Torching The Amazon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- A Threat to Freedom?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Civil liberties could be a casualty of Bush's war on drugs
- </p>
- <p> When George Bush outlined his new antidrug strategy last
- week, he put the stress on bringing home the war on narcotics.
- Zeroing in on domestic drug consumption, the President's battle
- plan called for harsher penalties for users and stepped-up law
- enforcement. In Canton, Ohio, officials have already taken a
- step in that direction. Last month the city council passed a law
- making it a crime for anyone to be in any area, including the
- city's public parks, where drugs or drug paraphernalia are being
- sold. There was just one problem: people merely passing through
- a park where drug sales were taking place could be subject to
- arrest.
- </p>
- <p> "The real victim (in the drug war) is going to be the
- constitutional rights of the majority of citizens," complains
- Harvey Gittler, executive director of Ohio's A.C.L.U. In
- response to the objections of civil libertarians, the Canton
- council is meeting this week to scale back its new ordinance.
- But there are indications that Americans are in a mood to fight
- drugs, even if that means sacrificing some constitutional
- guarantees. In a Washington Post-ABC News poll last week, 62%
- of those questioned said they would be willing to give up "a few
- of the freedoms we have in this country" to reduce illegal drug
- use significantly. Majorities said they favored mandatory drug
- tests for all citizens, police searches of the homes of
- suspected drug dealers without a court order, and random police
- checks of cars on the highway.
- </p>
- <p> Though Bush added little that is new to the roster of
- antidrug strategies, some of the approaches he emphasized are
- likely to fuel further debate over whether constitutional
- guarantees will be a casualty of the war against drugs. A decade
- of stepped-up antidrug efforts has already left its mark on
- American law and life. Powerful state and federal forfeiture
- laws permit the confiscation before trial of virtually any kind
- of property remotely involved in or "intended for use" in drug
- transactions. Drug-sniffing dogs search hallways in Houston
- public schools. Public housing officials in some cities have
- evicted the families of suspected drug users. Already, 43% of
- all businesses with 1,000 employees or more have drug-testing
- programs.
- </p>
- <p> In his speech last week, Bush called for even more drug
- testing. But some legal scholars complain that random drug
- testing of all employees, whether or not they are suspected of
- using illegal substances, disregards the venerable notion of
- "probable cause" -- that a search can be triggered only by a
- well-founded suspicion of criminal action by a particular
- individual. "When you start saying a search satisfies the Fourth
- Amendment even though it's not based on any focused suspicion
- at all, you've ripped the heart out of the Fourth Amendment,"
- insists University of Michigan law professor Yale Kamisar.
- </p>
- <p> During its most recent term, the Supreme Court for the
- first time outlined the situations in which workplace drug
- testing would be permissible. The court approved testing for
- railway workers involved in major accidents and for customs
- employees seeking jobs that involve narcotics interdiction or
- require them to carry a gun. Some civil libertarians were
- encouraged by the fact that the rulings were narrowly crafted
- to apply only to well-defined groups of workers, leaving open
- the possibility that the court would not approve more
- wide-ranging testing.
- </p>
- <p> But some legal experts have also begun to talk about an
- emerging "drug exception" to the Fourth Amendment ban on
- unreasonable searches and seizures -- a willingness by courts,
- where drugs are concerned, to permit searches they might
- otherwise disallow. In recent years, for example, the Supreme
- Court has allowed expanded use of so-called drug-courier
- profiles -- descriptions of a smuggler's characteristic behavior
- and appearance -- as a basis upon which to stop and question
- suspects, despite complaints that such profiles give police
- license to stop blacks and Hispanics. It has also upheld the
- right of police to inspect a drug suspect's garbage without a
- warrant. "There is a sense that what they're dealing with is the
- rights of drug dealers," says UCLA law professor Peter Arenella.
- "But they're dealing in all our rights."
- </p>
- <p> Law-enforcement officials maintain that fears of rampant
- intrusions into privacy are exaggerated. "Concern that police
- or federal agents will be searching everybody's trash is kind
- of ridiculous," says Federal District Judge Robert Bonner,
- former U.S. Attorney in Los Angeles. Administration drug czar
- William Bennett says he was "infuriated" by criticisms last week
- that the Administration's program relied too heavily on law
- enforcement at the expense of treatment. Complains Bennett: "If
- anything like this kind of situation were going on in the
- suburbs, residents would raise holy hell and say, `Call in the
- police!' But if we're talking about the inner city, people are
- saying, `Well, this sounds repressive.'"
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes the push and pull between tough tactics and
- constitutional requirements result in a compromise. For years,
- drug dealers had made Chicago's public housing projects their
- roosting ground, selling from apartments and raking the hallways
- with gunfire during turf wars. Last September the Chicago
- Housing Authority launched "Operation Clean Sweep." Housing
- authority agents and police made surprise apartment visits
- looking for unauthorized residents, many of them alleged drug
- dealers who had moved in with girlfriends. But some inspectors
- tended to treat tenants like students in a dormitory, demanding
- that visitors leave by midnight and nosing through drawers, in
- effect conducting searches without a warrant.
- </p>
- <p> A suit filed by the A.C.L.U. resulted last month in a
- modification of those tactics. Visitors may now obtain guest
- cards allowing them to stay in a building for as long as two
- weeks. And housing agents and police have agreed to stop house
- and body searches. But the sweeps go on, to the relief of
- tenants. "It's so much better since the sweeps," says Delores
- Wilson, president of a tenants group. "Before, you could hear
- machine-gun fire all during the day." The danger is that as they
- search for a way out of the drug crisis, many other Americans
- would settle for a similar trade-off: less freedom for more
- security.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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