Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Contact: http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/ Copyright: 1998 The Capital Times Author: Catherine Alexander, Madison Pubdate: Tue, 15 Dec 1998 Page 11A of The Capital Times DRUG SEARCHES UNCONSTITUTIONAL Dear Editor: I read the piece in TCT about the tactics of U.S. Customs looking for concealed drugs on airline passengers with disbelief. I am not a lawyer or a constitutional expert, but it seems perfectly clear to anyone from a reading of the constitution that these searches are the very kind forbidden under the phrase "unreasonable" searches and seizures. Three-quarters of those searched were carrying no drugs. The law has evolved to require probable cause, a warrant, and so on as necessary safeguards under the law. The customs people say it is necessary because of the increase in drug trafficking. So the end justifies the means, whatever the means are? Is this where we are in the "war" against drugs? There is also the arbitrary seizure of property by police when the property is suspected of being involved in a drug trade even when no conviction has been obtained (sometimes the property when belonging to a previous owner may have been involved in drugs but the present owner is completely innocent). It seems to me that, in the name of the war against drugs, charred holes are being burned into the Bill of Rights. Surely, there are better ways of dealing with a social problem such as drug use, more worthy of a just and civilized society. Why isn't there more outrage? Is it because the victims are seen as undeserving drug offenders even though many victims are innocent? If so, I would remind people of the piece about the Nazis and the Jews that goes something like this: They came for the Jews but I said nothing because I was not a Jew; they came for for [various other groups], but I said nothing because I was not one of them; when they came for me, there was no one left to speak for me. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck