Pubdate: Sat, 12 Feb 2000 Source: Halifax Daily News (CN NS) Copyright: 2000 The Daily News. Contact: http://www.hfxnews.southam.ca/ Author: Brent Jewers RAVE KIDS AREN'T CRIMINALS To the editor: How naive does the Halifax Regional Police Department believe the public to be? On Feb. 9, Const. Frank Bowes said, "We don't feel that we have to defend ourselves for officers doing their work, and doing it properly." Well, that would be a noble and just stance if you were chasing down a bank robber, or grilling a man suspected of murder, but the police victimized children who they knew did not have drugs. The police know who the dealers are. The police simply can't admit it when they have done wrong. I think I will call in a drug tip when there is another police get-together and we'll see how quickly the cops are made to remove their drawers. They raided that party with the intention of harming the rave scene. They want to show parents who are upset that they are tough on drugs. They should have chosen a known crack house or two in the city if they wanted to impress anybody. These kids had some pot. And no charges have been laid. If they meant what they said about doing their duty, they would lay charges. Otherwise, they are strip-searching babies for nothing. Kids have been smoking pot for longer than the rave scene has existed, and hurting that scene won't keep kids from smoking it. Pat Duncan, a lawyer specializing in police matters, compared the search to an armed suspect being searched in a crack house: "Are police just supposed to wait for his lawyer to show up, with him still having a gun in his pants?" Again, very true, if that were the case. But nobody at the rave had a gun. Nobody there had crack. I don't believe any of those violated 14-year-old girls will ever own either. They are kids. You rarely see people fight at a rave, so comparing it to crack and guns is unfair. Kids dance. Some get high. Parents, policing your kids is your responsibility. Raise your kids better, so the police don't feel obligated to strip them of their dignity. The police did not need to see any young girls naked to know who had drugs. Kids are still going to party, raves will go on, and the kids who get high and get caught with the proverbial "gun in their pants" will only find better ways to hide their pot. And for those of you who don't know, most raves are set up by young people who are learning a whole lot about business. Halifax is No. 3 in Canada on the rave scene, and we should be proud that these "misguided" kids are learning how to be responsible. They have to hire staff, DJs, find venues and print and sell tickets. Don't bother defending your position, coppers. There is no defence. Brent Jewers, Dartmouth - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea