home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- From: lisa@access.digex.net (Lisa Losito)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: Reason Magazine
- Date: 18 Jan 1994 17:42:17 -0500
- Message-ID: <2hhok9$99o@access.digex.net>
-
- Casualties of War-- Drug prohibition has shot gaping holes in the Bill of
- Rights. Author: Steven B. Duke and Albert C. Gross
-
- "At 2 a.m. on June 29, 1991, Tracy White of Los Angeles was awakened by the
- explosion of a diversionary grenade set off in a trash can outside her front
- door. She stumbled out into the upstairs hallway and was met by a
- shaft of light and a man's voice. "Freeze," he said. "Police."
-
- At that moment, her bedroom windows shattered and two men clad in black hoods
- swung into the room. Her three infants shrieked in fright. Several guns were
- pointed at her. More men dressed in black bounded through the bathroom window.
- One ran into an adjoining bedroom and pinned Tracy's sister Yolanda and her
- 12-year-old daughter behind a door. The youngster tried to squirm free
- and found the barrel of a pistol against her head. She closed her eyes
- and urinated on herself. "I thought," she later said, "he was going to
- kill me."
-
- Such raids and ransackings are standard procedure in most large cities and,
- except in the most outrageous cases, they receive the approval of
- courts. Police can get search warrants on the flimsiest of suspicion
- -- even the word of an anonymous informant. In many cases, though, the
- police don't even bother to get a warrant, since they are virtually
- unfettered by the risk of successful suits or other sanctions,
- especially if they confine their warrantless invasions to poor members
- of minority groups.
-
- The Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees against
- "unreasonable searches and seizures" and prohibits warrants on anything but
- "probable cause," is a casualty of the drug war. Other provisions intended to
- protect Americans from overzealous law enforcement -- the right to
- defense counsel,the right to a fair trial, and the right to property
- -- are also in danger. The debris of the war on drugs may ultimately
- include shreds of the Constitution as well as splintered doors,
- shattered glass, and broken furniture."
-
-
- So begins this issue's featured article from Reason Magazine. Reason
- describes itself as a publication dedicated to "free minds and free
- markets" and to the issues of individual liberty without adopting a
- right, left or middle of the road political stance.
-
- This article and others from Reason Magazine and additional publications
- are available free from The Electronic Newsstand, a service which
- collects articles, editorials, and table of contents from over 50
- magazines and provides them to the Global Internet community.
-
- Access to The Electronic Newsstand is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a
- week via Gopher, an information navigation and retrieval technology from the
- University of Minnesota.
-
- For those without a local Gopher client program, The Electronic Newsstand
- provides a telnet account which will allow you to use a text based Gopher
- client to access our service.
-
- To access The Electronic Newsstand,
-
- via Local Gopher Client:
-
- Hostname: gopher.internet.com
- Port: 2100
-
- via the Gopher Home Menu at U of Minn:
-
- Other Gopher and Information Servers/
- North America/
- USA/
- General/
- The Electronic Newsstand (tm)
-
- via Gopher Link Information:
-
- Name=The Electronic Newsstand
- Type=1
- Port=2100
- Path=1/
- Host=gopher.internet.com
-
- via Telnet:
-
- Hostname: gopher.internet.com
- Loginname: enews
- Password: <not required>
-
- If you have any suggestions on how we might improve this service, or
- need more information, please email staff@enews.com
-
- --The Electronic Newsstand Staff
-
-
-
-
-
-