-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

To Harass and Terrorize
by Jef Allen

In its lead story in the Thursday March 8, 2001,
edition of the Forsyth County News, the Georgia
newspaper (Motto: Your "Hometown Paper" Since 1908),
ran an article under the headline: "Drug dogs are
familiar sight on school campuses." Forsyth County
is a rural bedroom community in the northern
suburbs of Atlanta, Georgia.

To quote the article, "Deputies are increasingly
using drug-sniffing dogs in searches of lockers
and cars at Forsyth County middle and high schools.

The searches are done as a cooperative effort
between the county sheriff's office and school
system as part of the ongoing war on drugs and in
response to heightened fears about school safety.
There is no specific reason deputies are appearing
more this year on campuses with the dogs, said
Capt. Ernie Born, commander of special operations
for the sheriff's office.

"'We have the resources, so we might as well use
them,' Born said Tuesday."

The article continues, "In some cases, deputies
theorized the dogs were sniffing marijuana smoke
in the (automobile) upholstery. Deputies also
have walked canines by lockers at a handful of
middle schools. No arrests have been made as a
result of the searches.

Deputy Jody Chapman said the practice is a
preventative measure, designed to keep campuses
free of drugs, more than to "bust" students while
they are in class.

"'All it takes is one student to look out a window
and it goes around the school we're out there with
the dogs. It scares them,' Chapman said."

No kidding, Deputy Chapman. Dogs on the leashes
of armed agents of the government have a long and
colorful history of scaring the crap out of people,
from runaway slaves to Jews being herded into
boxcars on their way to concentration camps.

This article in "Your 'Hometown Paper' Since 1908"
captures in a microcosm the rot to our institutions
that is being caused by our government's
ill-conceived "war on drugs."

For starters, we have the local authorities, and
the school administrators who accompany them,
wandering about the school campus with German
Shepherds looking for evidence of criminal activity
without probable cause, other than the fact that
the officers "know" that some of these kids are
using drugs.

Second, we have the officers promoting the theory
that "the dogs were sniffing marijuana smoke in
the (automobile) upholstery" of some of the cars
in the parking lot. No physical evidence necessary,
thank you very much.

By the officer's own admission, there is "no
specific reason" for the activity that they are
engaged in, they simply "have the resources, so we
might as well use them." There is something morally
repugnant when the police feel justified in scaring
middle and high school kids with dogs because they
"have the resources."

Of course, the officers in question certainly feel
justified in their activity. They are theoretically
preventing crimes from taking place on our public
school grounds. You can hear the argument now: If
you aren't guilty, you have nothing to be afraid
of. When you extend this argument logically, however,
it falls apart in tatters.

If the officers are justified in their actions with
no evidence of a crime being committed, where does it
stop? Should we start searching every car on the
street or every individual's home simply because we
are certain that somebody, somewhere is breaking
the law, and besides, "we have the resources"?

Why not post checkpoints with a rising gate and a
guard shack at all county borders where we can check
the citizens' papers and let the dogs sniff for
illegal contraband? After all, surely somebody on
these highways is breaking the law. The job of law
enforcement would be a helluva lot easier if we could
just get rid of that pesky Bill of Rights.

According to an article in the July 17, 2000, issue
of U.S. News and World Report, entitled "The Case of
the Missing Cops", Potsdam, Ohio Police Chief Bobby
Cheney proposed just that. In an effort to latch onto
a share of President Clinton's COPS program funding,
Cheney proposed "raising the match (locally provided
matching funds required by the federal program) by
launching Driving Under the Influence checkpoints,
issuing speed citations, and making the village
eligible for asset forfeiture funds through a K-9
unit, which would sniff out drugs on local roads.
"It would have been top notch," says Chaney, insisting
he was just trying to keep a lid on crime. But
residents were not impressed: 80 out of 100 polled
opposed fattening the force, agreeing with a Dayton
Daily News headline that tagged the chief's grand
scheme 'Mad Stop.'"

According to the article, "Potsdam, Ohio, (population
250) consists of 100 houses scattered around two
principal streets: Main and Cross. There are no
stoplights, stores, gas stations, or restaurants. Yet
from October to February, this tiny village northwest
of Dayton employed 11 police officers, three full-time
and eight part-time. At 1 cop for every 35 residents
(the national average: 1 officer per 400 residents),
Potsdam, at least in theory, was America's most tightly
patrolled town."

Fortunately for the residents of Potsdam, they got a
whiff of the kind of tyranny that the empire-building
Chaney was proposing and decided enough was enough.
The outraged citizens demanded a return of the $300,000
in federal money. The question is, how many other
communities didn't, either out of ignorance of what
was happening to their local constabulary, or just
through apathy?

"We have the resources" becomes a vicious cycle. If
the police don't "have the resources," the citizens
are asked to provide them in order to prosecute the
war on drugs. If they do "have the resources," the
police feel compelled to use them in order to justify
the expenditure. All across America we have sprouted
local paramilitary organizations whose sole reason
for existence is to interdict illegal drugs. Assuming
for a moment (and this is a real stretch) that these
interdiction efforts will eventually be successful,
will these units go away, or will these organizations
always be on the lookout for the next boogieman that
will require their continued funding?

The corrosive effect of our "war on drugs" has corrupted
our communities' relationship with our police nearly to
the point of no return. "To Serve and Protect" has
become "To Harass and Terrorize" in less than a
generation. Random roadblocks are becoming a standard
law enforcement practice, even when there is no evidence
of a crime being committed. "Just need to see your
insurance card, sir", or "Just checking for compliance
with the seatbelt law", or whatever, all the while the
German Shepherd circles your car.

Today, many police see themselves at war with the citizens
in their community. Pick up a copy of a periodical like
"Guns and Weapons for Law Enforcement" and you will get
the gist of the situation. Do we really need every Andy
Taylor in every Mayberry in America outfitted in a Kevlar
helmet and BDU, toting an AR-15 and kicking in doors? Is
that the kind of relationship that we want to have with
our local authorities?

Well, if it isn't time is running out. Just ask the kids
looking out the window at the Forsyth County sheriffs
and their drug-sniffing dogs. They are getting the
message loud and clear.

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