Pubdate: Tue, 15 Feb 2005 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2005 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Gary Wisby LAWMAKER WANTS TO KEEP DRUG DOGS ON A LEASH "Reasonable belief" that drugs are in someone's car would be needed, not "ear-piercing or dreadlocks," for police in Illinois to use drug-sniffing dogs under a bill filed Monday by Rep. Monique Davis (D-Chicago). The measure is a response to a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision based on an Illinois case. Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan argued in favor of the dogs' use before the high court, which agreed with her in overruling an Illinois Supreme Court decision. "In my opinion, this will lead to a police state," Davis said, subjecting "innocent motorists, college students and especially people of color to the harassing, frightening and embarrassing experience of a dog search." Police need more evidence than "ear-piercing and dreadlocks" to pull a driver over and call in the dogs, she said. Davis cited protections in the U.S. and Illinois constitutions against searches and seizures that lack probable cause. Driving With Pot On Jan. 24, the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the conviction of Roy Caballes, who had 270 pounds of marijuana in his car when a state trooper stopped him on Interstate 80 driving 6 mph over the speed limit. A police dog detected drugs when it sniffed the outside of the car. Madigan argued, and the court agreed 6-2, that the sniffing produced probable cause for a search. The trooper reportedly summoned a K-9 unit when Caballes, of Las Vegas, appeared nervous. But Daniel Coyne of the Chicago Council of Lawyers, who joined Davis at a news conference, said the real reason was that Caballes was "a Hispanic man wearing a suit." Sniffer dogs aren't foolproof, Coyne added, noting that one study found 75 percent of all the currency in the United States is contaminated with drugs. The Illinois State Police reported that of 3,720 dog-sniff tests of vehicles, 325 -- fewer than 1 in 10 -- detected drugs in 2000, said Ed Yohnka of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois. Maria Valdez of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund said racial profiling of motorists is a major problem, especially in the suburbs. "You can imagine the fear of people, especially with children in the car, when the dogs are brought in," she said. "Many of them come from countries where dogs are used to intimidate folks." Madigan's office said troopers using K-9 units last year seized $134 million in drugs, including 3.34 million grams of marijuana and 998,000 grams of cocaine. She said in a statement that drug-sniffing dogs play an "indispensable" role. "Although such units are used infrequently, their impact . . . has been extremely significant." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth