Pubdate: Thu, Apr 15 1999 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 1999 The Oregonian Contact: 1320 SW Broadway, Portland, OR 97201 Fax: 503-294-4193 Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/ Author: Ashbel S. Green, the Oregonian APPEALS COURT OKS CITY'S RESTRICTIONS ON SUSPECTS Portland Is Allowed To Ban Suspects From Drug- And Prostitution-free Zones Before Trial Portland police can go back to issuing orders that prohibit people charged with drug or prostitution offenses from going into designated parts of the city, according to an Oregon Court of Appeals ruling issued Wednesday. Without dissent, a three-judge panel reversed a 1997 lower court ruling that said issuing a temporary exclusion order and prosecuting someone for the same drug arrest violated the constitutional ban on double jeopardy, or being punished twice for one crime. "This is a victory for neighborhoods," said Jim Hayden, a deputy Multnomah County district attorney. Portland's drug-free and prostitution-free zones have continued to function at least in part since 1997, but Wednesday's ruling restores a key component that allowed police to exclude defendants from the designated zones for 90 days before they went to trial. Civil libertarians and criminal defense lawyers said they were disappointed in the decision but that the ruling possibly left open the door for another appeal. Portland first adopted its drug-free zone ordinance in 1992. The ordinance identified areas of the city with serious drug problems. The boundaries have changed over time, but the city now has drug-free zones in downtown, on East Burnside near the Willamette River and two in North/Northeast Portland. The ordinance covers anyone arrested on drug charges within one of the zones. In addition to making the drug arrest, police also can issue an exclusion notice that prohibits the person who has been arrested from entering the drug-free zones for 90 days. If they are convicted later of the charges, they face an additional one-year exclusion. Violation of that order carries a possible arrest on trespassing charges. Prostitution-free zones, begun in 1995, work similarly. Hayden said the purpose of the exclusion is to keep offenders out of the neighborhoods where they are causing grief. "The pattern had been that they would come right back to the neighborhood," he said. In 1997 Robert J. James was arrested on charges of drug possession within a drug-free zone and issued a 90-day exclusion notice. After his indictment, James claimed the exclusion notice combined with the criminal sanctions he faced amounted to double jeopardy. Multnomah County Circuit Judge John A. Whittmayer agreed, basing his decision on a 1989 U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Later that year, however, the U.S. Supreme Court disavowed its ruling and set out a seven-part test to examine whether a civil penalty on top of prosecution adds up to double jeopardy. The Oregon Court of Appeals found that -- on balance -- Portland's drug-free zone ordinance passed the test. The 90-day exclusion did not amount to the traditional punishment of banishment. Nor was it designed for retribution. The ordinance demonstrates "a concern for the quality of life in the designated zones in general and not a desire to seek retribution against individuals who commit crimes," wrote Judge Paul J. De Muniz, the author of the opinion. The panel also looked at the ordinance under the Oregon Constitution, specifically whether the exclusion process, which has an avenue for appeal, amounts to a second criminal prosecution, which also would be double jeopardy. De Muniz wrote that lawyers involved in the case analyzed the question incorrectly. He suggested the proper analysis was to consider the historical purpose of the drug-free zone ordinance. David Fidanque, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon, said the decision could be appealed or the analysis suggested by De Muniz could be raised when the case goes back to Whittmayer. A spokesman for the Oregon Department of Justice, which defended the ordinance on appeal, said he did not think De Muniz' suggestion opened much of a door. Despite the 1997 ruling, Portland's drug-free and prostitution-free zones have been partially in effect. Drug possession cases, for example, are typically resolved quickly. And in exchange for a shorter term of probation, most drug possession defendants accept the one-year exclusion, Hayden said. People charged with drug-dealing, however, have been able to avoid the 90-day pretrial exclusion. If convicted, they face the one-year exclusion. One result of Whittmayer's ruling was the dismissal of several hundred drug and prostitution charges against defendants who had been given 90-day exclusion notices. Gary Meabe, an assistant Multnomah County district attorney, said the charges could be brought back, but the decision would be up to District Attorney Michael Schrunk. Hayden already had been planning to go to the City Council in June to seek expansion of the drug-free zones. He said the ruling will give him momentum. "Not only can I tell you that drug-free zones are effective, but I can tell you they are constitutional,"he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake