Pubdate: Thu, 17 Jun 1999 Source: Danbury News-Times Copyright: 1999 The Danbury News-Times (CT) Contact: 333 Main Street Danbury, CT 06810 Fax: (203) 792-8730 Website: http://www.newstimes.com/ Author: Associated Press LOITERING LAW REVERSED Supreme Court strikes down ordinance aimed at gangs WASHINGTON (AP)-- Chicago went too far in its fight against street gangs by ordering police to break up groups of loiterers, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday, striking down the city's law despite pleas from the Clinton administration, 31 states and many mayors. The court deemed as unconstitutionally vague the anti-loitering ordinance that resulted in 45,000 arrests in the three years it was enforced. "If the loitering is in fact harmless and innocent, the dispersal order itself is an unjustified impairment of liberty," even if it did reduce crime, Justice John Paul Stevens said in the court's main opinion. The Illinois Supreme Court previously had invalidated the ordinance and blocked its enforcement. Yesterday's 6-3 ruling spurred six separate opinions and deep disagreement among the justices. Stevens, the highest court's only Chicago native, wrote for the majority that the ordinance gave police officers too much discretion to arrest people who never belonged to any gang. But Clarence Thomas, a dissenter, said he feared the court "has unnecessarily sentenced law-abiding citizens to lives of terror and misery." Another dissenter, Justice Antonin Scalia, chastised the court for "elevating loitering to a constitutionally guaranteed right." But the court long has barred communities from using anti-loitering laws to discriminate against racial minorities by, for example, trying to keep blacks out of some towns or neighborhoods. "We are grateful...that it is not a criminal activity simply to be a young man of color gathered with friends on the streets of Chicago," said Harvey Grossman, the American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who successfully challenged the ordinance. "Such laws are likely to be enforced in a discriminatory manner." But Thomas, the court's only black justice and one of its consistently conservative voices, cited far different concerns for innocent minorities. "The people who suffer from our lofty pronouncements are people...who have seen their neighborhoods literally destroyed by gangs and violence and drugs," he said. "They are good, decent people who must struggle to overcome their desperate situation, against all odds, in order to raise their families, earn a living and remain good citizens. The 1992 ordinance required police to oder any group of people standing around with no apparent purpose to move along if an officer believed at least one of them belonged to a street gang. Those who disregarded the ordinance would be arrested. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck