http://www.drugpolicy.org/news/DailyNews/10_12_01WaltersAction.html Pubdate: Sun, 21 Oct 2001 Source: Detroit News (MI) Copyright: 2001, The Detroit News Contact: http://www.detnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126 Author: Nolan Finley Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/ashcroft.htm (Ashcroft, John) http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) TAKE A LESSON FROM THE DRUG WAR BEFORE EXCHANGING LIBERTY FOR SECURITY Americans profess to love liberty above all else, but when threatened, we too often hurl our liberties on the barricades. Once again, we are allowing an atmosphere of fear to be used as an opportunity to chisel away at our freedoms. The House and Senate are near agreement on a package of anti-terrorism bills that will greatly expand police powers and greatly diminish privacy and due process protections. Had the House not adjourned at mid-week due to the anthrax scare, a bill would already be on its way to the president. Hopefully, Congress is using the furlough to take a second look at the long-term impact. Our generation has already allowed the 25-year drug war to horribly erode the Constitution. Protections against illegal search and seizure and self-incrimination aren't strong enough to keep you from being yanked off the job without cause and forced to take a drug test -- unless you work for the government. The sanctity of property rights is weaker than the forfeiture laws that allow prosecutors to seize and sell your car simply on suspicion of a crime. Search warrant safeguards are now twisted into a pretzel of exceptions and rationalizations that give police broad authority to snoop and trespass. The result? No less dope, but a lot less civil liberties. We seem to have learned little from that miserable failure, and are ready again to empty the drawers of the Fourth and Fifth amendments. Atty. Gen, John Ashcroft is asking Congress for a laundry list of insidious measures like the sneak and peak provision, which would open the doors of a home or business to officers who could sort through personal belongings, take photographs, examine computer hard drives, without ever notifying the owner. The lack of notification makes it awfully tough to mount a constitutional challenge to the search. The new anti-liberty bills would also greatly expand surveillance powers, particularly on the Internet. The government wants to monitor the Web for suspicious activity and intercept e-mail without warrants. Also under assault are probable cause provisions limiting when the government can eavesdrop. The current standard of suspicion that a crime has been, or is about to be, commited would evaporate. Non-citizens would lose most due process rights, and could be detained indefinitely if the attorney general -- not a judge -- suspects they are involved in or know about terrorism. The burden of proof would be on the accused, not the accuser. You may think all this is reasonable given the present danger. But even Ashcroft acknowledged that had these laws been in place prior to Sept. 11, they may not have prevented the attacks. "Anyone who thinks we can surrender some civil liberties and be safer is being misled," said Timothy Lynch of the Libertarian Cato Institute. "Because of the gradual chipping away at the safeguards of the Constitution, the next generation is not going to have the constitutional rights we have, and certainly not the ones our grandparents had." Many in Congress who might normally rise in defense of civil liberties are silent for fear of seeming unpatriotic. Lovers of liberty should remind them that preserving our ability to pass to our children the rights and freedoms our parents passed to us is the highest form of patriotism. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake