Pubdate: Sun, 22 Jun 2003 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2003 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: Robyn Blumner NEW LAW ISN'T JUST ANTIDRUG, ITS ANTIPARTY I have to admit, I've never been to a rave party. For me, not only have those days come and gone, they never were. I know about them, though. Rave parties are loud, raucous affairs, where young adults dance into the early morning to the pounding beat of electronic music. And there is often drug use, the methamphetamine known as Ecstasy to be exact. The trick in a free society, where cultural expression -- even the annoyingly unmelodic kind -- must be allowed to flourish, is to punish illegal behavior without disturbing the exuberance of art and expression. But communities and law enforcement aren't interested in such deftness. It is far easier to go after the rave parties themselves than to focus on the actual drug dealers inside. Close the raves and you solve the problem. The "war on drugs" shakes hands with the culture war, making both prohibitionists and moralists happy -- all who matter from a political vantage. The government's antagonism toward raves has been apparent for years. In an information bulletin put out by the Department of Justice in 2001, the department described raves as commercialized events that were "little more than an exploitation of American youth." The bulletin listed ways that communities and law enforcement agencies were "curtail[ing] rave activity," such as by strictly enforcing fire codes, enacting juvenile curfews and establishing new licensing rules for large public gatherings. Yet, even in the face of this kind of hostility, the rave culture has thrived. So in April, Congress added another arrow to the quiver of the anti-rave effort. The Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act, formerly known as the RAVE Act, passed without a single hearing. Sen. Joe Biden, D-Delaware, inserted it into the popular Amber Alert bill, the bill creating a nationwide kidnapping early-warning system, during the conference committee. It had not been part of either the Senate or House versions. The law threatens dance club owners and event promoters with 20 years in prison and $250,000 fines if prosecutors can show they intentionally allowed drug use on the premises. Critics warned that such stiff penalties and the mere fear of prosecution would sharply curtail the rave scene. But the law's defenders and Biden in particular insisted that it would be so narrowly applied there would be no chilling effect. "The purpose of my legislation," said Biden to his colleagues in Congress, "is not to prosecute legitimate, law-abiding managers of . . . venues because of incidental drug use at their events." Biden said his bill would only impact "rogue promoters" who put on events "for the purpose of" illicit drug use. Ah, promises, promises. Put a broadly written law in the hands of police and the rational constraints claimed by the law's sponsors can easily go poof. It didn't take long for the nightmare scenario laid out by the law's opponents to come true. Last month, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent hand-delivered a copy of the law to the manager of the Fraternal Order of Eagles Lodge in Billings, Mont., just a few hours before the local chapters of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and Students for a Sensible Drug Policy were scheduled to hold a benefit concert. The money raised was to go to underwrite a campaign to get a medical marijuana initiative on the 2004 ballot. According to media reports about the incident, the Eagles Lodge manager wasn't threatened or told to cancel the concert by Special Agent in Charge Jeff Sweetin, who runs the DEA's Rocky Mountain Division, but she was told if there was drug use on the premises the owners could be fined $250,000. Not surprisingly, the lodge canceled the event. In trying to figure out whether this is the start of a trend, and we will soon find the DEA at the door of rave clubs and drug-legalization fund-raising events waving around the new law for effect, I spoke with Will Glaspy, a DEA spokesman in Washington. He refused to discuss the specifics of the Billings incident but said the law should be used against an "owner or promoter who is putting on an event in order to facilitate drug trafficking," implying that the Billings case was an aberration. But when asked if the Billings case would be the subject of an internal investigation, Glaspy refused to say. He also refused to say whether the DEA had guidelines narrowly construing what was illegal under the Rave Act. Biden's office says it wants better answers than these and is formally asking for an accounting. What is needed is safe harbor language. Give club owners a list of actions they can take to protect themselves from liability, such as hiring security guards to watch for drug activity in the club. Certainty is the key. Otherwise, raves will be driven further underground. The drug use won't end, but the basic health precautions that legitimate businesses provide will. Music, dancing and subculture expression are just the newest victims of the drug war. So party on, that is, until the government knocks on your door to tell you about a new law . . . - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)