Pubdate: Tue, 06 Apr 1999 Source: Meriden Record-Journal, The (CT) Copyright: 1999, The Record-Journal Publishing Co. Address: 11 CrownStreet, P.O. Box 915, Meriden, CT 06450 Fax: (203) 639-0210 Feedback: http://www.record-journal.com/rj/contacts/letters.html Website: http://www.record-journal.com/ 'PAT DOWN' The most surprising fact about the "pat-down" lawsuit in federal court is that it has to be brought at all. Two female inmates at Danbury's Federal Correctional Institute - "correctional institute" is one of our favorite euphemisms - have petitioned for an exemption for themselves from non-emergency, pat-down searches by prison guards of the opposite sex. Their claim for exemption is based on their personal experiences with abuse as children. It shouldn't take a petition to halt such searches. Nor should anyone need to have been abused as a child to find intimate touching offensive. What in the world does the federal prison system think it's doing by permitting such a practice at all? We certainly recognize that conviction and imprisonment mean the loss of a good many of the conditions that law-abiding citizens take for granted. Personal privacy, liberty, the pursuit of leisure time activities. As a matter of fact, prisoners in some respects, have privileges that many outside might like to try - though we don't believe that any such privilege would make up for the loss of freedom. But there are other things that go on in prisons that are inexcusable. Rape, mayhem and murder, not to mention contraband, all exist in almost every prison setting. It isn't easy to control several hundred adult human beings in a confined setting, at least not with the attributes of modern life which today's prisons allow. Shackling prisoners to the wall of a damp, below-ground cell might solve the problem - but would be considered a human rights violation today. And so is routine "pat-down" searching by guards, whatever their sex, whose technique borrows more from lust, prurience, and intimidation than from security consciousness. Prison isn't expected to be a picnic at taxpayers' expense. But it should be a place where the penalty is being paid to society, in terms of loss of liberty, not to other prisoners for abuse or to guards out for a free fondle. There is no defense to an indefensible practice. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D