Pubdate: Wed, 06 Dec 2000 Source: Waco Tribune-Herald (TX) Contact: http://accesswaco.com/news/index.html Forum: http://www.accesswaco.com/cgi-bin/pforum/show?ROOT=7 ROADSIDE INTRUSION Society needs to be protected from criminals, but it also needs to be protected from the police who act as agents of the government. An efficient way to control crime is to give the police unlimited powers. Police states, whether they operate under right-wing dictators or left-wing totalitarian regimes, efficiently control crime, but they do so at the expense of individual liberties. From its founding, the United States has always cherished individual liberties, even when this basic principle made the job of law enforcement officers more difficult. The Supreme Court recently reaffirmed this important principle when it ruled that the Indianapolis police did not have the right to set up roadblocks on city streets in an effort to combat illegal drugs. There is little doubt that the roadblocks are an easy and effective way to nab suspects. But roadblocks also intruded upon the privacy and individual liberties of citizens not involved with illegal drugs. In a 6-3 decision written by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, the court barred routine traffic stops used as a drug-fighting tactic. The tactic worked. Indianapolis police used the roadblocks about six times in 1998. They stopped more than 1,100 vehicles. Drug-sniffing dogs smelled around the vehicles. If the dogs indicated that they smelled drugs, the police would order a search. In all, Indianapolis police made more than 100 arrests for drug-related crimes. That's the good part. The bad part is that to make 100 arrests, 1,000 innocent citizens were treated as criminal suspects. The court properly ruled that the roadblocks violated the Fourth Amendment requirement that searches and seizures be reasonable. Individual citizens need to be suspected of a crime before police can conduct searches. The court failed to add clarity to the exceptions it has allowed such as roadblocks to check for drunken driving or to check for illegal aliens along borders. Those exceptions were allowed to protect the public from immediate risks caused by drunken drivers and to maintain the nation's border integrity. The court made a good decision to not expand these exceptions to include drug roadblocks. If vehicle stops were permitted, police could expand that exception to include stopping pedestrians as they walk down the street and anywhere they gather in public. Justice O'Connor was right when she spoke for the 6-3 majority and said, "stops can only be justified by some quantum of individualized suspicion." Otherwise, she wisely warned, "the Fourth Amendment would do little to prevent such intrusions from becoming a routine part of American life." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart