Drug WarRant by Pete Guither Heading Image

Last updated:
7/1/07; 9:59:25 AM


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Monday, June 11, 2007

I want some of these!

Marijuana Policy Project is giving every House lawmaker a set of these playing cards with 52 reasons why you should support medical marijuana access.

It's a gimmick, sure, but it's a good one, and it might actually get Congress' attention while they're busy playing War.

(The joker is sadly hilarious.)

2:07:53 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



Law enforcement lying and stealing -- SOP

This is a pretty amazing story.
Ascension Alverez-Tejeda and his girlfriend drove up to a traffic light. As the light turned green, the car in front of them lurched forward, then stalled. Alverez-Tejeda managed to stop in time, but the truck behind him tapped his bumper. As Alverez-Tejeda got out to inspect the damage, two officers pulled up in a police cruiser and arrested the truck driver for drunk driving. The officers got Alverez-Tejeda and his girl- friend to drive to a nearby parking lot, leave the keys in the car and get into the cruiser for processing. Just then, out of nowhere, someone snuck into their car and drove off with it. As the couple stood by in shock, the police jumped into their cruiser and chased after the car thief with sirens blaring. The police then returned to the parking lot, told the couple that the thief had gotten away and dropped them off at a local hotel.

The whole incident was staged.

Everyone mentioned above except Alverez-Tejeda and his girlfriend were police (or working for them). It was all an elaborate ruse to search the car without tipping off the drug conspirators.

This was a case that went to the 9th Circuit Court on whether this was an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment, and the court ruled that it was not.

It's certainly an interesting case, and a little disturbing, but it's not the huge Fourth Amendment debacle that a few are making it out to be.

What some commenters online are failing to notice is that both parties agreed that the government in this case had more than enough probable cause (from wiretaps, etc) to legally search the car. This was not a fishing expedition in the sense that we're used to examining. The only question was how they went about getting the car to do the search. So the court was examining whether the nature of the seizure (pretending to steal the car instead of just taking it) was unreasonable, and ruled it wasn't.

And quite frankly, compared to the violence of home invasion as part of the drug war, this ruse involving a tap of the bumper seems less of a constitutional concern to me.

This doesn't meant that I like it. Just that I don't think the 9th Circuit was wrong in this case, given the current weakness of the Fourth Amendment.

However, I also think that law enforcement should consider carefully the ramifications of their actions. They probably considered this operation to be a crafty or cute idea (and I can imagine the high-fives afterwards with the car "thief.") But what does it say to the public that they serve?

One of the serious repercussions of the drug war is the fact that, in the eyes of the public, law enforcement has become a force to be feared, not trusted. An agency of lies and corruption that will take your friends away. That breakdown in the perception of law enforcement's status with the public makes it easier for violent crime to exist, and is destructive to communities.

Every time that law enforcement uses techniques such as lying and stealing as part of their standard operating procedure, they drive a further wedge into their relationship with their employers and feed the societal sickness we are experiencing.

___

Note that this thought was articulated by Kozinski within the 9th circuit opinion:

If people can't trust the representations of government officials, the phrase "I'm from the government and I'm here to help" will become even more terrifying.

Full 9th Circuit opinion here (pdf). Articles at Wired Blog, Volokh, Daily Kos.

[Thanks, Tom]


9:05:05 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Understanding Colombia

If you've had a hard time really understanding what the dynamics are in Colombia politically and how they relate to the drug war, this opinion piece from the Council on Hemispheric Affairs gives an excellent analysis.

8:30:16 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []





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There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

Drug WarRant
© Copyright 2007 Pete Guither. Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
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Last update: 7/1/07; 9:59:25 AM.
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