Pubdate: Sun, 01 Oct 2000 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2000 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Interact.html Section: Perspective, page 1 Author: Robyn Blumner RESIST INSIDIOUS SEARCHES How does it happen? How does freedom get taken from a people for whom it's a birthright without any fuss, without any outcry? Only with the best of intentions. As the U.S. Supreme Court opens its term Monday, a cattle car of good intentions will be pitted against a few constitutional principles, some of which are hanging on for dear life. There are two cases in particular that have the potential of nailing the coffin shut on our Fourth Amendment right to be free from dragnet searches, where entire populations are searched just to see if anyone has violated the law. So, please, let's all pay attention. One case involves a municipal hospital in Charleston, S.C., which, with the cooperation of local law enforcement initiated a policy in 1989 of testing certain pregnant women for the presence of cocaine. The motives of the hospital were unimpeachable - to protect the unborn babies - but the urine test was done without the informed consent of the mothers who were mostly poor and black. Any woman testing positive for illicit drugs was arrested. Some were carted off to jail in shackles, still bleeding from giving birth. Others were jailed until they went into labor, then sent to the hospital in handcuffs. With the help of public interest groups, 10 of these women sued on the grounds that their constitutional tights were violated when their bodily fluids were searched without their consent or any evidence they had engaged in a criminal act. The city of Charleston said its hospital shouldn't need probable cause to do a urinalysis. It argued the primary purpose of the drug screen was not the criminal prosecution of drug-abusing mothers but the protection and health of viable fetuses and should therefore fall under the "special need" exception to the Fourth Amendment. In 1999 a federal appellate court agreed, and the appeal of that ruling will be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 4 in the case of Ferguson vs. City of Charleston. What is this "special need" exception to the Fourth Amendment? Ifs a concocted legal doctrine designed to give the court cover whenever it gouges our rights. Arguably the most important protection we have against abusive police practices is our right to demand that every search by government is justified by evidence of individual guilt The "special need" exception obliterates this by allowing dragnet searches if they are intended to address an important public purpose that isn't related to crime detection. The doctrine has been used to approve universal drug screens for high school athletes and roadblocks to ferret out illegal immigrants and drivers who are intoxicated. If that sounds like sophistry, it is. Of course catching drunken drivers in a roadblock has a public-safety function, but it is also a way to enforce the law. The protection of public safety is the function of virtually every criminal law. So approving an exception to probable cause for public safety is like carving the Fourth Amendment into a Halloween jack-o-lantern -- the center has been hollowed out and the teeth are an illusion. The other case before the court to be argued Tuesday, takes the issue of how far the government can go with suspicionless searches even further. In City of Indianapolis vs. Edmond, city police followed the example of other cities and states, including Florida, by setting up a drug interdiction roadblock. Police would stop motorists, demand their licenses and registrations, peer into the cars interiors and escort drug-sniffing dogs around the cars. The checkpoint was not based on any particulized suspicion -- anyone driving along that road could be detained until he satisfied police of his innocence. Of the 1,161 cars stopped, 55 led to drug-related arrests. The city argues this roadblock should be deemed constitutionally valid since it isn't much different from those set up to catch drunken drivers. Its purpose, after all, is public safety, to keep drugs off city streets. Well if a car-to-car search is acceptable to find drugs, why not go house-to-house? Why not make "public safety" the government , equivalent of "open sesame"? While it would be nice to have drug-free streets, giving up all constraints on police is too high a price. Joe Upstanding may have little interest in the rights of addicted mothers and drug dealers, but at some point he's got to start realizing that whence go their rights so go his. Our collective neglect has already contributed to a reality in which police and other agencies of government have license to invade our privacy in all manner of ways without a whit of justification. And it can get worse. Without our vigilance, without our demanding that justices who care about civil liberties be put on the bench, an authoritarian nightmare will continue to be built on good intentions. And well only have ourselves to blame. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake