Oakland California and Washington D.C.
officials propose a Consent-to-Search law that allows police searches of
homes without a warrant. They have little respect for Americans’
constitutional Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable
searches and seizures.
| Some stranger
rifling through belongings and inspecting the most private
areas of someone’s home is repulsive and humiliating.
|
This proposal is another example how when
given an opening the government always tries to extend its powers
abusively into human rights areas. Ideas of community policing already
allowed government intrusion where constitutionally it did not belong.
Now cities use this precedent to intrude more into the peoples’ rights.
This misuse of policing authority is similar
to misuse of the military. Like military people in the ranks, police
officers on the street endure citizens’ displeasure about unpopular
decisions administrators and elected officials make.
The city of St. Louis installed a
Consent-to-Search for guns program in 1995 based on standards of the
community policing according to information in the Oakland, California
police proposal. Police officers knocked on doors in violent areas and
asked parents or guardians’ permission to search for weapons a juvenile
may have hidden. They confiscated all found weapons with the promise not
to follow with prosecution unless the gun connected to a crime. Later
they ended this program abruptly without explanation.
Now, Oakland California and Washington D.C.
propose similar programs. Oakland promises they will remove the gun and
not level a criminal charge unless the gun was involved in a shooting or
homicide. A Washington spokesperson says they will grant immunity if
they find evidence during the searches about other crimes.
Those conditions set the stage for potential
police mischief. Police may have evidence too weak to get a search
warrant that a juvenile committed a crime. This law will allow them to
ask the parent for consent-to-search for a gun. The parents may grant
permission from respect for the officers believing the claim they are
looking for stashed guns for safety reasons and with no intent to
prosecute anybody. In fact, the result will be an intentional
warrantless search for evidence of a crime.
What is the harm of police asking for this
consent-to-search or conducting the search if the parents have nothing
to hide? Why not cooperate with the police and get those dangerous guns
out of the hands of children and off the street?
Do I care that it gets a kid involved in a
shooting is off the street? No, I would be pleased they removed him or
her from the community. Do I care the police used parents respect for
them as an end run around their child’s constitutional protections? Yes,
I do, because this erosion of trust and compromise of constitutional
protections reduces those protections for all of us.
There are many problems with this tactic.
First, this police officer request will intimidate many people to agree
to a warrantless search that they prefer not to take place. Second, this
tactic violates the privacy, the inviolability of the home and the
dignity for everybody living there. This is especially true when they
find no weapons and nobody living there committed a crime. They are
guilty only of living where criminals have more control in the community
than law enforcement agencies.
Some stranger rifling through belongings and
inspecting the most private areas of someone’s home is repulsive and
humiliating. People have the right and the need for dignity even if they
live in a violent area of a city. Government officials violate this
right just by asking them to surrender constitutional protections
without a reasonable suspicion they committed a crime.
In addition, government treats citizens
unequally when it forces some of them to make this choice, but not
residents in other areas. Some of the most horrific gun violence
happened in suburban schools. Nevertheless, I did not read about
requests to install a consent-to-search law there.
We need new ideas for limiting juvenile crime,
violence and gun possession. Nevertheless, it is irresponsible for
Oakland officials to suggest that residents sacrifice their rights as
part of a violence suppression program that promises little success. It
is unethical for them to do this while California Governor
Schwarzenegger plans to divert money from schools to balance the state
budget.
Schwarzenegger’s plan will make marginally
performing schools worse. It will make a life with academic success and
jobs less likely for struggling students in those schools and a life of
crime and gun violence more likely.
Government officials have an ethical duty to
honor the spirit and letter of constitutional protections when they
approve new laws and policy. They should have quashed this proposal from
the start. I hope, Oakland City Council will reject this proposal. If
not, Oakland residents should exercise their right to search for
officials that are more responsible.
Contact Kenneth Brooks at P.O. B 882,
Vallejo, CA 94590. opinion@ethicalego.com