Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Website: http://www.gateway-va.com/ Copyright: 1998, Richmond Newspapers Inc. Pubdate: 15 Dec 1998 Contact: (804) 775-8072 Author: Charles W. Peraino MUST STATE BECOME A CRIMINAL TO FIGHT DRUGS? Editor, Times-Dispatch: To incarcerate a U.S. citizen, to enter that person's private body parts, and to X-ray her on the slight pretext that she may be smuggling drugs, as the government did to Gwendolyn Richards [December 3 news story, "Customs' Drug Searches Prompt Suits"] is state-enforced rape in the same category with such human rights violations as torture and political imprisonment. It is state gangsterism. In order to fight against drugs, the state becomes the criminal. Some acts are so immoral that they never can be justified on public policy reasons alone and should not be used except under the most extreme circumstances. What Ms. Richards went through is one of those acts. Such searches are anti-American. Conservatives should be outraged by this practically unlimited use of state power. These searches are discriminatory in racial, social, and other ways. Our judges, politicians, and policy-makers need to ask themselves two questions: Would they support such barbaric behavior if the Customs Handbook cited three-piece suits as reasonable suspicion instead of baggy clothing and sunglasses? Does the seizure of 850 pounds of cocaine and 803 pounds of heroin a year justify behavior so heinous and criminal that it would leave an innocent person mentally scarred for life? As for me, as an American believer in democratic principles, it scares me to death that the power to abuse me in the most inhuman, undignified, and immoral way is in the hands of our government. Charles W. Peraino Richmond - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski