Pubdate: Tue, 20 Oct 1998 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Contact: Brenda Payton, BEAT FEET STILL VIOLATES BASIC RIGHTS I have been a consistent critic of Oakland's Beat Feet ordinance. The law allows police officers to seize cars allegedly used to in the street purchase of drugs or the solicitation of prostitutes. I oppose it because it allows the seizure of property before a person is convicted of any crime. It is the first such law in California. When an Alameda County Superior Court judge upheld the law earlier this month, its proponents called the ruling a vindication, and some wondered if I would change my position. Don't count of it. It's hardly the first time I've disagreed with a court ruling. For one thing, the ruling was narrowly focused. The ACLU, representing the citizen who brought the lawsuit against the city, argued the Beat Feet ordinance violates state law. A state law allows vehicle seizures only after a person has been convicted of a crime. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Henry E. Needham Jr. rejected the ACLU challenge, ruling the state law does not preempt the city ordinance. Hiss decision freed the city to re-institute Beat Feet. Spokespersons for the ACLU said the organization will appeal the ruling. But even if this law were eventually upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, I would oppose it. It is a tricky evasion of the right to due process and a violation of the basic principle that a person is innocent until proven guilty. The city and county lawyers argue that because the law is a blight ordinance under civil law, and not a criminal statute, the guarantees of a trial and conviction before punishment don't apply. However they classify the law, it allow a person to suffer a major punishment -- seizure of his or her vehicle -- without the benefit of a trial. What if the police officer makes a mistake about which vehicle was allegedly involved in the illicit activity? Under the ordinance, a person has the right to file a claim and have a hearing to prove his or her innocence. However, our system of justice provides that a person is innocent until proven guilty, not guilty until proven innocent. The ACLU points out that 176 of the nearly 100 vehicle seizures have invoked the alleged purchase of $10 to $30 worth of marijuana. That means in almost one-fifth of the cases, people have lost their cars over minuscule amounts of marijuana. If they were tried for purchasing such small amounts of the drug, they would receive a maximum fine of $100. How can city officials justify such an excessive punishment? The answer is the community response to the court ruling. Residents of East Oakland neighborhoods plagued by street drug dealing were in court and let out a cheer at the judge's decision. The city press release announcing the "vindication" of the ordinance discussed the decay and blight that results from street drug sales and prostitution. Supports often point out the majority of the people caught in the Beat Feet stings are from out of town. I've tried to make this argument repeatedly over the years Here goes another attempt. Crime and urban decay do not justify the violation of constitutional protections. In fact, authoritarian societies always use the protection of public safety as the rationale for the restriction of individual rights. But once those rights are lost, they are not easily reclaimed. During the War on Drugs, urban neighborhoods already have experience random and frequent police stops of young men that have bred a dangerous distrust and dislike of police officers. These activities have undermined a belief in our justice system. These areas are already victimized by poverty and the attendant crime. They don's need to be additionally victimized by a loss of individual rights. Further, the laws we have on the books have been effective in reducing crime. Why do we want the dubious distinction of being the city that leads the way in establishing unnecessary laws that violate individual rights? I'll never agree with that. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry