Pubdate: Tue, 01 May 2007 Source: Diamondback, The (U of MD Edu) Copyright: 2007 Diamondback Contact: http://www.diamondbackonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/758 Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.ssdp.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?219 (Students for Sensible Drug Policy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) FEAR FACTOR Our View: University Police must exercise extreme caution in using Facebook to crack down on campus crime. Without a doubt, University Police have a job: keep our campus safe and do their best to prevent illegal activities. While Students for Sensible Drug Policy feels the police do not have a right to go undercover and get information on students via resources such as Facebook, we have to acknowledge the police have a right to use every resource legally available to them in order to combat illegal activities. However, it is also essential to keep in mind that these sneaky tactics do not create a better atmosphere of cooperation between students and University Police but rather drive a wedge further between the two. These actions by the police create a lack of trust among students toward police, calling into question whether police and students share the same paths toward increased safety and crime prevention. Are the police officers going undercover on Facebook doing the university a service? Probably not. Seeking out students assumed to be engaging in illegal activities based on their Facebook interests and group connections tells the student body no one is safe from guilt by association. Consider a student who has never smoked marijuana but joins a SSDP Facebook group. Should this student now worry he is under police surveillance? This may be a limited situation, but, as the saying goes, we're on a slippery slope that is truly Orwellian in its approach. What seems perfectly conceivable based on the tactics reported in today's issue of The Diamondback, as well as other tactics used to discover and break up underage drinking parties in the past, is that University Police are on a mission. And that mission is to dispel any notion that the university is a party school. Combined with stringent Resident Life-imposed consequences that boot students from dorms for possessing pot (which SSDP and NORML Terps have been fighting for more than a year), it's clear that university administrators have narrowed their view of the kinds of students they want on this campus. Criminality should never be condoned, but college students being college students is something else entirely. Consequences imposed as a result of underhanded tactics, and stringent, unbending policies are not likely to change the actions of students anytime soon. We urge the administration to order University Police to ease up on the crackdown and begin concentrating on prevention efforts. While we recognize the right of police to use every means possible to combat illegal behavior, we question whether they reserve these tactics for the worst offenders and whether their efforts have any impact on the real scourges on our community: robbery, burglary and the notoriously underreported acquaintance-rape. Changing this university's mild reputation as a party school shouldn't translate to imposing harsh consequences on students whose punishment in the criminal courts would likely be no more than probation for first time offenders. It means keeping the campus safe from those who abuse and overindulge. If police do not relax their aggressive tactics, they risk losing the trust of students and their position as a partner in the community. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake