Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jun 2003 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2003 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Gwen Filosa, Staff Writer JUDGES OK BAN ON TRAPPINGS OF RAVES No Inalienable Right to Glow Sticks, They Say Saying a federal judge overstepped his bounds by blocking the government's ban on glow sticks and pacifiers during raves at the State Palace Theater, an appeals court Friday tossed out a decision that sided with the American Civil Liberties Union. U.S. District Judge Thomas Porteous can't stop federal prosecutors from enforcing a condition of a plea bargain made in the criminal case against the rave promoters, a unanimous three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. The court sent the case back to Porteous to be dismissed and took a swipe at the ACLU. "Concerning the First Amendment, they have not explained the significance of vapor rub," Judge Rhesa Hawkins Barksdale noted, referring to the mentholated product that Ecstasy users sometimes inhale for an added sensation during raves. Acting U.S. Attorney Jim Letten called the ruling a vindication for the government, which he said went after raves in the interest of public safety. "The ACLU stuck its nose where it didn't belong," Letten said. "And the 5th Circuit said, 'You represent a third party. You do not have a right to interfere in a judicial process.' " The 23-page decision revisits the 2001 high-profile government investigation into the promoters of raves, all-night dance parties notorious for attracting illicit drugs such as Ecstasy, a synthetic drug with hallucinogenic properties. Accused of violating the federal "crack house" law, the corporation behind the New Orleans rave scene pleaded guilty in August 2001 and accepted a $100,000 fine and five years' probation. Barbecue of New Orleans, whose president is Robert Brunet of Metairie, also agreed to ban glow sticks, vapor rub, pacifiers, dust masks and other rave accouterments from future parties. That's when the ACLU stepped in with a civil lawsuit that charged the government was violating the First Amendment rights of those who thronged to the laser-light-filled techno dances. In February, Porteous agreed with the ACLU. While the government's push to rid raves of drugs is "pure," he said, it went against the Constitution's intent. "The government cannot keep legal items out of places because of illegal activities they associate with those items," Porteous wrote. But the government only asked Barbecue to "take reasonable steps to prohibit" glow sticks and the lot from the theater, the appeals court said Friday. "It does not require their confiscation," the decision says. At a December 2001 hearing before Porteous, one of the three plaintiffs, Clayton Smith, testified that security guards made him throw away his glow sticks at the door. While the ACLU and rave defenders claimed that federal agents went too far in their narcotics investigation, the appeals court made note of the rash of drug overdoses, including one 17-year-old girl's death, that plagued the State Palace Theater between 1997 and 2000. Seventy people were taken from the theater on Canal Street to hospitals for drug overdoses, the court said. DEA agents made 50 buys of Ecstasy or other drugs during undercover stings at seven raves. Prosecutors said Brunet and his corporation came up with the ban on its own, but the ACLU countered that the men were bullied by the threat of a criminal trial. Smith said the pacifier has become a symbol of the rave counterculture and not a sign of drug use. The symbol evolved because Ecstasy users are known to grind their teeth, making pacifiers a comfort during their highs. Under then-U.S. Attorney Eddie Jordan, federal prosecutors secured indictments against Brunet, his brother Brian Brunet and party promoter Donnie Estopinal. They applied the "crack house" law in a novel way, accusing the men of using the theater as a drug haven. The federal law was created to combat the crack cocaine scourge of the 1980s, allowing agents to arrest owners of property used as crack houses. Jordan resigned, and later became Orleans Parish district attorney, before the plea bargain was signed. Joining Barksdale in the opinion were Judges Will Garwood and Jerry E. Smith. Garwood and Smith were both appointed by President Reagan, and Barksdale was appointed by former President Bush. Porteous was appointed by President Clinton. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake