Pubdate: Fri, 26 May 2000 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2000 Richmond Newspapers Inc. Contact: P.O. Box 85333, Richmond, VA 23293 Fax: (804) 775-8072 Feedback: http://www.gatewayva.com/feedback/totheeditor.shtml Website: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ DRUG-CRAZY Drugs can lead you to do awful things -- and can do serious damage to you -- even when you don't take them. Just look at a bill making its way through Congress. The Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act, sponsored by Republican Orrin Hatch and Democrat Dianne Feinstein, contains a couple of provisions that endanger the rights of all Americans. The first provision would loosen the rules governing police searches. It would permit the police to search your residence, vehicle, or workplace and to take "intangible evidence" (by making a copy of your computer's hard drive, for example) without telling you. The entirely reasonable justification for the change: Notifying someone running a methamphetamine lab before a search gives him time to destroy the evidence or flee the state. Yet the cardinal question to ask about any new law, or any change in existing law, is not "How do supporters say the law will be used?" but "How could the law be used?" And the change in notification requirements does not apply only to drug dealers. It is not hard to imagine a pliable judge approving search warrants for numerous residences in a high-crime neighborhood where the police are not sure which house (if any) hides the stuff. The homes of perfectly innocent citizens could be searched, and they might never learn of it. The second provision attempts to crack down on drugs by cracking down on speech. It would punish persons who so much as mention an Internet site that sells drug paraphernalia. Even anti-drug crusaders who listed some drug-related Web sites as examples of the heinous stuff out there would be breaking the law. The bill also would make it illegal to tell someone how to produce drugs. Thus, someone writing to a relative where marijuana has been decriminalized about a Web site with advice on growing the weed could face criminal prosecution. Talk about Reefer Madness. Several versions of the meth bill are floating around; one piggybacks on a bankruptcy measure. Congress could reduce such redundancy and increase efficiency if it simply found a copy of the Bill of Rights and borrowed one of those rubber stamps for marking things cancelled. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk