Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jul 2002 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2002 News-Journal Corp Contact: http://www.n-jcenter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 POLICING SHOULDN'T SUBVERT INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS It hasn't been a good year for privacy rights and protections against unreasonable police intrusions. Then again it hasn't been a good couple of decades. Since the mid-1980s and in the name of the war on drugs, the United States Supreme Court has whittled the Fourth Amendment down to skeletal, brittle principles. In the term just ended, the court opened the way to random drug testing of all pupils involved in extracurricular activities. Whether it's choir, cheerleading or the football team doesn't make a difference, nor does age: Even middle-school pupils are fair game for urine samples. The court also backed police officers' increasingly common practice of interrogating people and searching their belongings without a warrant, so long as people submit voluntarily. But cops don't have to tell people that they have a right to refuse being searched or interrogated. In both cases the court has expanded police powers at the expense of individual rights, for no greater purpose than chasing after dope. It won't stop at dope. The narrower view of the Fourth Amendment will be taken by police and school disciplinarians as vindication for a slew of intrusive practices that have until now taken advantage of gray areas in the law. Dope-sniffing dogs, locker searches and even lockdowns are permissible in schools with or without reasonable cause. The ruling on drug testing will give principals yet one more tool to leverage discipline with intimidation, but toward a much larger portion of the student body. A 1995 Supreme Court ruling had endorsed random drug testing only so long as it was limited to athletes. The reasoning was dubious then -- extracurricular activities are no less a part of the educational experience for being voluntary, so why single out athletes? -- and it is dubious now. The school's "custodial responsibility and authority," to quote from Justice Clarence Thomas' opinion, does not make it an arm of the police department or a substitute for parental authority. But that, in fact, is what the ruling sanctions while maintaining that artificial distinction between those students involved in extracurricular activities and those not. How random the tests will be will decide their fate in the long run. School officials are rightly worried about a new brand of lawsuit, the kind that claims discrimination, favoritism, invasion of privacy during random testing. But no school is forced to drug test. The fewer intrusions, the better, both for the bottom line (drug tests are expensive) and for the message schools impart on youngsters. Schools should be teaching the values of the Bill of Rights, not showing how to skirt its principles. They still can, with policies severely limiting drug testing or avoiding it. The same reasoning applies to policing. Expanded police powers shouldn't translate into policing dragnets. The "voluntary" question- and-search case is especially relevant here because the Volusia County Beach Patrol has been accosting individuals, interviewing them and taking their picture without permission for years, under the guise of preventive police work. Few questioned the practice, which took advantage of one of those legal gray areas. Gray no more. Still, not everyone knows his or her rights, and few people are willing to challenge the authority of a police shield. That the encounter is "voluntary" doesn't make a difference. The tone is still set by the police officer, not by an individual's right to be left alone. But tones are set by wise police policies, too. It is still the wisest policy to respect individual rights first. Even down to its barest bones, the Fourth Amendment says no less. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth