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- Xref: sparky alt.drugs:18488 talk.politics.drugs:7490
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- Path: sparky!uunet!comp.vuw.ac.nz!canterbury.ac.nz!cantva!civl097
- From: civl097@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
- Subject: Pittsburgh 1991 article pt.II
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.101026.1@csc.canterbury.ac.nz>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cantva.canterbury.ac.nz
- Organization: University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 21:10:26 GMT
- Lines: 456
-
- This is a repost of the 1991 posting:
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Before beginning the second article, a few comments. I have been very
- gratified by the *large* response these articles have generated. I've
- gotten about 60 mail messages since posting the first one. Keep the
- messages coming. It's nice to know I'm not alone and crazy.
-
- This is originally posted to alt.drugs and misc.legal. There is no
- need to post it there again. /bernie\, cosell@bbn.com, has volunteered
- to post it to talk.politics.drugs, since I have no posting access
- there. Actually, he mentioned it in passing, and I just volunteered
- him, but wait a day or so before posting it there. Other than that,
- post it where ever you like.
-
- For those of you who have requested that I mail you the articles,
- please see what you can get from your news system, and send a request
- next week. I'll keep all of them online.
-
- The Pittsburgh Press is a major newspaper, I believe the largest is
- Allegheny County. It is not a special interest tabloid. I can't find
- any circulation numbers, strangely, but I imagine it is well into the
- hundreds of thousands. it was established June 23, 1884. That's 1884,
- not 1984. The authors of this series Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat
- Flaherty have won pulitzer's for something unspecified.
-
- Finally, for those of you who can buy the paper, please do. There are
- some good pictures, and peripheral articles, which I don't have time
- to type in.
-
- I apologize for the numerous typos. Dammit, Jim, I'm a programmer, not
- a typist.
-
-
- Please read this.
-
- Just when you think that you can no longer be surprised by the WoD,
- you get this article. I was amazed.
-
- And now, the article....
-
- This article appeared on the FRONT PAGE; in fact, it was the
- HEADLINE!!!
-
-
- --------------------------
- The Pittsburgh Press
- Monday, August 12, 1991
-
- P R E S U M E D G U I L T Y
- The Law's Victims in the War on Drugs
-
- Drug agents far more likely to stop minorities
-
- By Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty
-
- Part Two: The way you look
-
- Look around you carefully the next time you're at any of the nations
- big airports, bus stations, train terminals, or on a major highway
- because there may be a government agent watching you. If you're black,
- Hispanic, Asian or look like a "hippie," you can almost count on it.
-
- The men and women doing the spying are drug agents, the
- frontline troops in the governments war on narcotics. They count their
- victories in the number of people they stop because they suspect
- they're carrying drugs or drug money.
-
- But each year in the hunt for suspects, thousands of guiltless
- citizens are stopped, most often because of their skin color.
-
- A 10-month Pittsburgh Press investigation of drug seizure and
- forfeiture included an examination of court records on 121 "drug
- courier" stops where money was seized and no drugs were discovered.
- The Pittsburgh Press found that black, Hispanic and Asian people
- accounted for 77 percent of the cases.
-
- In making stops, drug agents use a profile, a set of
- speculative behavioral traits that gauge the suspect's appearance,
- demeanor and willingness to look a police officer in the eye.
-
- For years, the drug courier profile counted race as a
- principal indicator of the likelihood of a person's carrying drugs.
-
- But today the word "profile" isn't officially mentioned by
- police. Seeing the word scrawled in a police report or hearing it from
- a witness chair instantly unnerves prosecutors and makes defense
- lawyers giddy. Both sides know the racial implications can raise
- constitutional challenges.
-
- Even so, ar away from the courtrooms, the practice persists.
-
- In Memphis, Tenn., in 1989, drug officers have testified,
- about 75 percent of the people they stopped in the airport were black.
- The latest figures available from the Air Transport Association show
- that for that year only 4 percent of the flying public was black.
-
- In Eagle County, Colo., the 60-mile-long strip on Interstate
- 70 that winds and dips past Vail and other ski areas is the setting of
- a class-action suit that charges race was the main element of the
- profile used in drug stops.
-
- According to court documents in one of the cases that led to
- the suit, the sheriff and two deputies testified that "being black or
- Hispanic was and is a factor" in their drug courier profile.
-
- Lawyer David Lane says that 500 people -- primarilty Hispanic
- and black motorists -- were stopped and searched by Eagle County's
- High Country (ED: What an appropriate name :-)) Drug Task Force during
- 1989 and 1990. Each time, Lane charged, the task force used an
- inconstitutional profile based on race, ethnicity and out-of-state
- license plates.
-
- Byron Boudreaux was one of those stopped.
-
- Boudreaux was driving from Oklahoma to a new job in Canada
- when Sgt. James Perry and three other task force officers pulled him
- over.
-
- "Sgt. Perry told me that I was stopped because my car fit the
- description of someone trafficking drugs in the area," Boudreaux says.
- He let the officers search his car.
-
- "Listen, I was a black man travelling alone up in the
- mountains of Eagle County and surrounded by four police officers. I
- was going to be as cooperative as I could," he recalls.
-
- For almost an hour the officers unloaded and searched the
- suitcases, laundry baskets, and boxes that were wedged into Bodreaux's
- car. Nothing was found.
-
- "I was stopped because I was black, and that's not a great
- testament to our law enforcement system," says Boudreaux, who is now
- an assistant basketball coach at Queens College in Charlotte, N.C.
-
- In a federal trial stemming from another stop Perry made on
- the same road a few months later, he testfied that because of
- "astigmatism and color blindness" he was unable to distinguish among
- black, Hispanic and white people.
-
- U.S. District Court Judge Jim Carrigan didn't buy it and
- called the seargeant's testimony "incredible.
-
- "If this nation were to win its war on drugs at the cost of
- sacrificing its citizens' constitutional rights, it would be a Pyrrhic
- victory indeed," Carrigan wrote in a court opinion. "If the rule of
- law rather than the rule of man is to prevail, there cannot be one set
- of search and seizure rules applicable to some and a different set
- applicable to others."
-
- Livelihood in jeopardy
-
- In Nashville, Tenn., Willie Jones has no doubt that police
- still use a profile based on race.
-
- Jones, owner of a landscaping service, thought the ticket
- agent at the American Airlines counter in Nashville Metro Airport
- reacted strangely when he paid for his round-trip ticket to Houston.
-
- "She said no one ever paid in cash anymore and she'd have to
- go in the back and check on what to do," Jones says.
-
- What Jones didn't know is that in Nashville -- as in other
- airports -- many airline employees double as piad informers for the
- police.
-
- The Drug Enforcement Administration usually pays them 10
- percent of any money seized, says Capt, Judy Bawcum, head of the
- Nashville police division that runs the airport unit.
-
- Jones got his ticket. Ten minutes later, as he waited for his
- plane, two drug team members stopped him.
-
- "They flashed their badges and asked if I was carrying drugs
- or a large amount of money. I told them I didn't have any drugs, but I
- had money on me to go buy some plants for my business," Jones says.
-
- They searched his overnight bag and found nothing. They patted
- him down and felt a bulge. Jones pulled out a black plastic wallet
- hidden under his shirt. It held $9,600.
-
- "I explained that I was going to Houston to order some
- shrubbery for my nursery. I do it twice a year and pay cash because
- that's the way the growers want it," says the father of three girls.
-
- The drug agents took his money.
-
- "They said I was going to buy drugs with it, and the dogs
- sniffed it and said it had drugs on it," Jones says. He never saw the
- dog.
-
- The officers didn't arrest Jones, but they kept the money.
- They gave him a DEA receipt for cash. But under the heading of amount
- and desription, Sgt. Claude Byrum wrote, "Unspecified amount of U.S.
- currency."
-
- Jones says losing the money almost put him out of business.
-
- "That was to buy my stock. I'm known for having a good
- selection fo unusual plants. That's why I go South twice a year to buy
- them. Now, I've got to do it piecemeal, run out after I'm paid for a
- job and buy plants for the next one," he says.
-
- Jones has receipts for three years showing that each fall and
- spring he buys plants from nurseries in other states.
-
- "I just don't understand the government. I don't smoke. I
- don't drink. I don't wear gold chains and jewelry, and I don't get
- into trouble with the police," he says. "I didn't know it was against
- the law for a 42-year-old black man to have money in his pocket."
-
- Tennessee police records confirm that the only charge ever
- filed against Jones was for drag racing 15 years ago.
-
- "DEA says I have to pay $900, 10 percent of the money they
- took from me, just to have the right to try to get it back," Jones
- says.
-
- His lawyer, E.E. "Bo" Edwards filled out government forms
- documenting that his client couldn't afford the $900 bond.
-
- "If I'm going to feed my children, I need my truck, and the
- only way I can get that $900 is to sell it," Jones says.
-
- It's been more than five months, and the only thing Jones has
- recieved for DEA are letters saying that his application to proceed
- without paying the $900 bond was deficient. "But they never told us
- what those deficiencies were," says Edwards.
-
- Jones is nearly resigned to losing the money. "I don't think
- I'll ever get it back. But I think the only reason they thought I was
- a drug dealer was because I'm black, and that bothers me."
-
- It also bothers his lawyer.
-
- "Of course he was stopped because he was black. No cop in his
- right mind would try that with a white businessman. Those seizure laws
- give law enforcement a license to hunt, and the target of choice for
- many cops is those they believe are least capable of protecting
- themselves: blacks, Hispanics, and poor whites," Edwards says.
-
- Money still held
-
- In Buffalo, N.Y., on Oct. 9, Juana Lopez, a dark-skinned
- Dominican, had just gotten off a bus from New York City when she was
- stopped in the terminal by drug agents who wanted to search her
- luggage.
-
- They found no drugs, but DEA Agent Bruce Johnson found $4,750
- in cash wrapped with rubber bands in her purse. the money, the
- 28-year-old womand said, was to pay legal fees or bail for her
- common-law husband. After he began questioning her, Johnson realized
- that he had arrested the husband for drugs two months earlier in the
- same bus station.
-
- Johnson called the office of attorney Mark Mahoney, where Ms.
- Lopez said she was heading, and verified her appointment.
-
- Johnson then told the woman she was free to go, but her money
- would stay with him because a drug dog had reacted to it.
-
- Ms. Lopez has receipts showing the money was obtained legally
- -- a third of it was borrowed, another third came from the sale of
- jewelry that belonged to her and her husband, and the rest from her
- savings as a hair stylist in the Bronx.
-
- It has been more than nine months since the money was taken,
- and Assistant U.S. atorney Richard Kaufman says that the investigation
- is continuing.
-
- Robert Clark, a Mobile, Ala., lawyer who has defended many
- travellers, says profile stops are the new form of racism.
-
- "In the South in the 30's, we used to hang black folks. Now,
- given any excuse at all, even legal money in their pockets, we just
- seize them to death," he says.
-
- Trivial pursuit
-
- "If you took all the racial elements out of profiles," you'd
- be left with nothing, says Nashville lawyer Edwards, who heads a new
- National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers task force to
- investigate forfeiture law abuses.
-
- "It would outrage the public to learn the trivial indicators
- that police use as the basis for interfering with the roght of the
- innocent."
-
- Examination of more than 310 affadavits for seizure and
- profiles used by 28 different agencies reveals a conflicting colection
- or traits that agents say they use to hunt down traffickers.
-
- Guidlines for DEA drug task force agents in three adjacent
- states give conflicting advice on when officers are supposed to become
- suspicios.
-
- Agents in Illinois are told its suspicious if their subjects
- are among the first people off a plane, because it shows they're in a
- hurry.
-
- In Michigan, the DEA says that being thje last off a plane is
- suspicios because the subject is trying to appear unconcerned.
-
- And in Ohio, agents are told suspicion should surface when
- suspects deplane in the middle of a group they may be trying to lose
- themsleves in the crowd.
-
- One of the most mentioned indicators is that suspects were
- travelling to or from a source city for drugs.
-
- But a list of cities favored by drug couriers gleaned from the
- DEA affadavits amounts to a compendium of every major community in the
- United States.
-
- Seeming to be nervous, looking around, pacing, looking at a
- watch, making a phone call -- all things that business travellers
- routinely do, especially those who are late or don't like to fly --
- sound alarms to waiting drug agents.
-
- Some agents cahnge their mind about what makes them suspicios.
-
- In Tennessee, an agent told a judge he was leery of a man
- because he "walked quickly through the airport." Six weeks later, in
- another affadavit, the same agent said his suspicions were aroused
- because the suspect "walked with intentional slowness after getting
- off the bus."
-
- In Albequerque, N.M., people have been stopped because they
- were standing on the train platform watching people.
-
- Whether you look at a police officer can be construed to be a
- suspicios sign. One Maryland said he was wary because the subject
- "deliberately did not look at me when he drove by my position." Yet
- another Maryland trooper testified that he stopped a man because the
- "driver stared at me when he passed."
-
- Too much baggage, or not enough will draw the attention of the
- law.
-
- You could be in trouble with drug agents if you're sitting in
- first class and don't look as if you belong there.
-
- DEA agent Paul Markonni, who is considered the "father" of the
- drug courier profile, testified in a Florida court about why he
- stopped a man.
-
- "We do see some real slimeballs, you know, some real dirtbags,
- that obviously could not afford, unless they were doing something, to
- fly first class," he told the court.
-
- The newest extention of drug courier profiles are pagers and
- cellular telephones.
-
- Based on the few cases that have reached the courts, the
- communication devices -- which are carried by business people, nervous
- parents and patients waiting for a transplant as well as drug couriers
- -- are primarily suspicios when they are found on the belts or in the
- suitcases of minorities or long-haired whites.
-
- for police intent on stopping someone, any reason will do.
-
- "If they're black, Hispanic, Asian or look like a hippie,
- that's a stereotype, and the police will find some way to stop them if
- that's their intent," says San Antonio lawyer Gerald Goldstein.
-
- The perfect profile
-
- A DEA agent thought that former New York Giants center Kevin
- Belcher matched his profile. When Belcher got off a flight from
- Detroit on March 2, he was stopped by DEA's Dallas/Fort Worth Airport
- Narcotics Task Force.
-
- The Texas officers had been called a short while earlier by a
- DEA agent at Detroit's Metro Airport. A security screener had spotted
- a big, black man carrying a large amount of money in his jacket
- pocket, the Detroit agent reported to his southern colleagues.
-
- Belcher was questioned about the purpose of the trip and was
- asked whether he had any money. He gave the agents $18,265.
-
- Belcher explained that he was going to El Past to buy some
- classic old cars -- "1968 or '69 Camaros are what I'm looking for."
- Belcher, whose professional football career ended after a near-fatal
- traffic accident in New Jersey, told the agents he owned four Victory
- Lane Quick Oil Change outlets in Michigan. The money came from sales,
- he said, and cash was what auctioneers demanded.
-
- A drug-sniffing dog was called, it reacted, and the money was
- seized.
-
- Agent Rick Watson to Belcher he was free to go "but that I was
- going to detain the monies to determine the origin of them."
-
- In his seizure affadavit, Watson listed the matches he made
- between Belcher and the profile of "other narcotic currency couriers
- encountered af DFW airport."
-
- Included in Watson's profile was that Belcher had bought a
- one-way ticket on the date of travel; was traveling to a "source"
- city, El Paso, "where drug dealers have long been known to be
- exporting large amounts of marijuana to other parts of the country";
- and was carrying $100, $50, $20, $10, and $5 bills, "which is
- consistent with drug asset seizures."
-
- Watson made no mention as to what denomination other than $1
- bills was left for non-drug traffickers to carry.
-
- "The drug courier profile can be absolutely anything that the
- police officer decides it is at that moment," says Albequerque defense
- lawyer Nancy Hollander, one of the nation's leading authorities on
- drug profile stops.
-
- Wide net cast
-
- Officials are reluctant to reveal how many inncocent people
- are ensnared each day by profile stops. Most police departments say
- they don't keep that information. Those that do are reluctant to
- discuss it.
-
- "We don't like to talk much about what we seize at the
- (Nashville) airport because it might stir up the public and make the
- airport officials unhappy because we are somehow harrassing people. It
- would be great if we could keep the whole operation secret," says
- Capt. Bawcum, in charge of the Airport's drug team.
-
- Capt. Rudy Sandoval, commander of Denver's vice bereau, says
- he doesn't keep the airport numbers but estimated his police searched
- more than 2,000 people in 1990, but arrested on 49 and seized money
- from fewer than 50.
-
- At Pittsburgh's airport, numbers are kept. The team searched
- 527 people last year, and arrested 49.
-
- A fedral court judge in Buffalo, N.Y., says police stop to
- mant innocent people to catch to few crooks.
-
- Judge George Pratt said he was shocked that police charged on
- 10 of the 600 people stopped in 1989 in the Buffalo airport and
- decried encroaching on the constitutional rights of 590 innocent
- people.
-
- In his opinion in the case, Pratt said that by conducting
- unreasonable searches: "It appears that they have sacrificed the
- Fourth Amendment by detaining 590 innocent people in order to arrest
- 10 who are not -- all in the name of the 'war on drugs.' When, pray
- tell, will it end? Where are we going?"--
- Shawn Valentine Hernan |Wizard-wanna-be | STOP
- Computing and Information Services|Systems & Networks |the war on drugs!
- University of Pittsburgh |valentin@unix.cis.pitt.edu| It is a
- (412) 624-6425 |valentin@PITTVMS.BITNET | WITCHHUNT!
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- reposted by:-
- Brandon Hutchison,University of Canterbury,Christchurch
- New Zealand
-
-