Pubdate: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2001 St. Petersburg Times Contact: 490 First Ave. S, St. Petersburg, FL 33701 Website: http://www.sptimes.com/ Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Forums/ubb/cgi-bin/Ultimate.cgi Section: Opinion, page 13A Author: Rick Meredith, Chris Howard LAW ENFORCEMENT LIMITS NEEDED Law Enforcement Limits Needed I couldn't agree more with the Dec. 30 editorial, Unwarranted "drug war" tactics. The Delta Task Force anti-drug squad in Manatee County, the Rampart Division in Los Angeles and the on-going Aisenberg trial, are clear evidence that checks and balances for law enforcement need to be in place. The vast majority of police officers are law abiding, honest citizens, but the drug war and the lure of easy money has corrupted a countless number of law abiding, honest citizens -- including police officers. To disallow a suspect's attorney from deposing the investigating and arresting officers before trial would be a travesty of justice that would further erode civil liberties and confidence in law enforcement. Law-abiding police officers who do their job within the legal guidelines of the law should not have a problem answering a few questions from a defense attorney before trial. As someone who is experienced with thermal-imaging cameras, I must agree with the editorial's view of them. These cameras are imprecise tools, and the images they produce are open to a police officer's interpretations. With these cameras, officers could literally peer through concrete walls and watch a husband and wife making love. To use an instrument this powerful without a search warrant would clearly be an invasion of privacy and unconstitutional. To the citizens who are willing to grant the government this kind of unbridled power in the fight against illicit drugs, I have one thing to say: "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Rick L. Meredith, Tampa - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DEALING WITH DRUGS Re: Unwarranted "drug war" tactics. Simple drug use and possession should be tolerated, as in the Dutch or Canadian models. Drug problems (read: addiction) are health problems, not criminal justice issues. Jails are not equipped for treatment of addiction. Fully funding a drug court would just dump more tax dollars into the criminal justice system and continue to entrench the culture of incarceration. Using the Florida National Guard as a police force is rather disturbing and Gestapo-like. How long before we must show our identity papers at the checkpoint? Chris Howard, St. Petersburg - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens