Pubdate: Sat, 21 Dec 2002 Source: The Dominion Post (WV) Copyright: 2002 The Dominion Post Contact: http://www.dominionpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1426 Author: Associated Press Cited: ACLU http://www.aclu.org/ NORML http://www.norml.org/ ACLU SUES STATE POLICE, BARBOUR COUNTY DEPUTIES Authorities Set Up Checkpoint Near Rally for Marijuana Reform in Summer of 2001 CHARLESTON -- The American Civil Liberties Union sued State Police and the Barbour County Sheriff's Department Thursday for allegedly operating an illegal drug roadblock last year. The lawsuit, filed by ACLU attorneys Allan Karlin and Jason Huber on behalf of Thomas Thacker and Brett Gasper, accuses police of operating the checkpoint near a rally organized by marijuana law reform advocates. "The authorities established this roadblock without cause and in clear violation of the fundamental Fourth Amendment right of all Americans to be free from arbitrary government intrusion," said Andrew Schneider, executive director of ACLU West Virginia. "The state officials who authorized this roadblock apparently chose to ignore a U.S. Supreme Court ruling from only a few months prior to this incident which found that such roadblocks were unconstitutional." Thacker and Gasper said police violated their constitutional rights on July 28, 2001, when they stopped and searched them for drugs on the way to a Barbour County festival sponsored by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. Police violated Thacker and Gasper's rights to assemble and to due process of law when they used specially trained dogs to search them without their consent and without lawful justification on their way to the political rally, according to the lawsuit. "I was asked if my car could be searched, and when I said no, the drug dogs were brought on the scene to pressure me to waive my constitutional rights," Gasper said. "I don't like drugs, and I especially don't like big German shepherds in my face, or dirty looks from policemen or insinuating remarks from the same." The officers ran the checkpoint "in a manner that singled out and discriminated against NORML members, supporters and other festival attendees," according to the lawsuit. "Members of law enforcement shouldn't have to violate the law to enforce the law," Schneider said. Neither Thacker nor Gasper was charged as a result of the search, Schneider said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake