Feel free to copy this article far and wide, but please
          keep my name and this sentence on it.


                     The Bill of Rights, a Status Report
                             by Eric Postpischil

                               4 September 1990

                          6 Hamlett Drive, Apt. 17
                             Nashua, NH  03062

                          [email protected]


          How many rights do you have?  You should check, because it
          might not be as many today as it was a few years ago, or
          even a few months ago.  Some people I talk to are not
          concerned that police will execute a search warrant without
          knocking or that they set up roadblocks and stop and
          interrogate innocent citizens.  They do not regard these as
          great infringements on their rights.  But when you put
          current events together, there is information that may be
          surprising to people who have not yet been concerned:  The
          amount of the Bill of Rights that is under attack is
          alarming.

          Let's take a look at the Bill of Rights and see which
          aspects are being pushed on or threatened.  The point here
          is not the degree of each attack or its rightness or
          wrongness, but the sheer number of rights that are under
          attack.


                                 Amendment I

               Congress shall make no law respecting an
               establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
               free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
               of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
               people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
               Government for a redress of grievances.

          ESTABLISHING RELIGION:  While campaigning for his first
          term, George Bush said "I don't know that atheists should
          be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered
          patriots."  Bush has not retracted, commented on, or
          clarified this statement, in spite of requests to do so.
          According to Bush, this is one nation under God.  And
          apparently if you are not within Bush's religious beliefs,
          you are not a citizen.  Federal, state, and local
          governments also promote a particular religion (or,
          occasionally, religions) by spending public money on
          religious displays.

          FREE EXERCISE OF RELIGION:  Robert Newmeyer and Glenn
          Braunstein were jailed in 1988 for refusing to stand in
          respect for a judge.  Braunstein says the tradition of
          rising in court started decades ago when judges entered
          carrying Bibles.  Since judges no longer carry Bibles,
          Braunstein says there is no reason to stand -- and his
          Bible tells him to honor no other God.  For this religious
          practice, Newmeyer and Braunstein were jailed and are now
          suing.


          FREE SPEECH:  We find that technology has given the
          government an excuse to interfere with free speech.
          Claiming that radio frequencies are a limited resource, the
          government tells broadcasters what to say (such as news and
          public and local service programming) and what not to say
          (obscenity, as defined by the Federal Communications
          Commission [FCC]).  The FCC is investigating Boston PBS
          station WGBH-TV for broadcasting photographs from the
          Mapplethorpe exhibit.

          FREE SPEECH:  There are also laws to limit political
          statements and contributions to political activities.  In
          1985, the Michigan Chamber of Commerce wanted to take out
          an advertisement supporting a candidate in the state house
          of representatives.  But a 1976 Michigan law prohibits a
          corporation from using its general treasury funds to make
          independent expenditures in a political campaign.  In
          March, the Supreme Court upheld that law.  According to
          dissenting Justice Kennedy, it is now a felony in Michigan
          for the Sierra Club, the American Civil Liberties Union, or
          the Chamber of Commerce to advise the public how a
          candidate voted on issues of urgent concern to their
          members.

          FREE PRESS:  As in speech, technology has provided another
          excuse for government intrusion in the press.  If you
          distribute a magazine electronically and do not print
          copies, the government doesn't consider you a press and
          does not give you the same protections courts have extended
          to printed news.  The equipment used to publish Phrack, a
          worldwide electronic magazine about phones and hacking, was
          confiscated after publishing a document copied from a Bell
          South computer entitled "A Bell South Standard Practice
          (BSP) 660-225-104SV Control Office Administration of
          Enhanced 911 Services for Special Services and Major
          Account Centers, March, 1988."  All of the information in
          this document was publicly available from Bell South in
          other documents.  The government has not alleged that the
          publisher of Phrack, Craig Neidorf, was involved with or
          participated in the copying of the document.  Also, the
          person who copied this document from telephone company
          computers placed a copy on a bulletin board run by Rich
          Andrews.  Andrews forwarded a copy to AT&T officials and
          cooperated with authorities fully.  In return, the Secret
          Service (SS) confiscated Andrews' computer along with all
          the mail and data that were on it.  Andrews was not charged
          with any crime.

          FREE PRESS:  In another incident that would be comical if
          it were not true, on March 1 the SS ransacked the offices
          of Steve Jackson Games (SJG); irreparably damaged property;
          and confiscated three computers, two laser printers,
          several hard disks, and many boxes of paper and floppy
          disks.  The target of the SS operation was to seize all
          copies of a game of fiction called GURPS Cyberpunk.  The
          Cyberpunk game contains fictitious break-ins in a
          futuristic world, with no technical information of actual
          use with real computers, nor is it played on computers.
          The SS never filed any charges against SJG but still
          refused to return confiscated property.

          PEACEABLE ASSEMBLY:  The right to assemble peaceably is no
          longer free -- you have to get a permit.  Even that is not
          enough; some officials have to be sued before they realize
          their reasons for denying a permit are not Constitutional.

          PEACEABLE ASSEMBLY:  In Alexandria, Virginia, there is a
          law that prohibits people from loitering for more than
          seven minutes and exchanging small objects.  Punishment is
          two years in jail.  Consider the scene in jail:  "What'd
          you do?"  "I was waiting at a bus stop and gave a guy a
          cigarette."  This is not an impossible occurrence:  In
          Pittsburgh, Eugene Tyler, 15, has been ordered away from
          bus stops by police officers.  Sherman Jones, also 15, was
          accosted with a police officer's hands around his neck
          after putting the last bit of pizza crust into his mouth.
          The police suspected him of hiding drugs.

          PETITION FOR REDRESS OF GRIEVANCES:  Rounding out the
          attacks on the first amendment, there is a sword hanging
          over the right to petition for redress of grievances.
          House Resolution 4079, the National Drug and Crime
          Emergency Act, tries to "modify" the right to habeas
          corpus.  It sets time limits on the right of people in
          custody to petition for redress and also limits the courts
          in which such an appeal may be heard.


                                 Amendment II

               A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the
               security of a free State, the right of the people
               to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

          RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS:  This amendment is so commonly
          challenged that the movement has its own name:  gun
          control.  Legislation banning various types of weapons is
          supported with the claim that the weapons are not for
          "legitimate" sporting purposes.  This is a perversion of
          the right to bear arms for two reasons.  First, the basis
          of freedom is not that permission to do legitimate things
          is granted to the people, but rather that the government is
          empowered to do a limited number of legitimate things --
          everything else people are free to do; they do not need to
          justify their choices.  Second, should the need for defense
          arise, it will not be hordes of deer that the security of a
          free state needs to be defended from.  Defense would be
          needed against humans, whether external invaders or
          internal oppressors.  It is an unfortunate fact of life
          that the guns that would be needed to defend the security
          of a state are guns to attack people, not guns for sporting
          purposes.

          Firearms regulations also empower local officials, such as
          police chiefs, to grant or deny permits.  This results in
          towns where only friends of people in the right places are
          granted permits, or towns where women are generally denied
          the right to carry a weapon for self-defense.


                                Amendment III

               No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered
               in any house, without the consent of the Owner,
               nor in time of war, but in a manner to be
               prescribed by law.

          QUARTERING SOLDIERS:  This amendment is fairly clean so
          far, but it is not entirely safe.  Recently, 200 troops in
          camouflage dress with M-16s and helicopters swept through
          Kings Ridge National Forest in Humboldt County, California.
          In the process of searching for marijuana plants for four
          days, soldiers assaulted people on private land with M-16s
          and barred them from their own property.  This might not be
          a direct hit on the third amendment, but the disregard for
          private property is uncomfortably close.


                                 Amendment IV

               The right of the people to be secure in their
               persons, houses, papers and effects, against
               unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
               violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
               probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
               and particularly describing the place to be
               searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

          RIGHT TO BE SECURE IN PERSONS, HOUSES, PAPERS AND EFFECTS
          AGAINST UNREASONABLE SEARCHES AND SEIZURES:  The RICO law
          is making a mockery of the right to be secure from seizure.
          Entire stores of books or videotapes have been confiscated
          based upon the presence of some sexually explicit items.
          Bars, restaurants, or houses are taken from the owners
          because employees or tenants sold drugs.  In Volusia
          County, Florida, Sheriff Robert Vogel and his officers stop
          automobiles for contrived violations.  If large amounts of
          cash are found, the police confiscate it on the PRESUMPTION
          that it is drug money -- even if there is no other evidence
          and no charges are filed against the car's occupants.  The
          victims can get their money back only if they prove the
          money was obtained legally.  One couple got their money
          back by proving it was an insurance settlement.  Two other
          men who tried to get their two thousand dollars back were
          denied by the Florida courts.

          RIGHT TO BE SECURE IN PERSONS, HOUSES, PAPERS AND EFFECTS
          AGAINST UNREASONABLE SEARCHES AND SEIZURES:  A new law goes
          into effect in Oklahoma on January 1, 1991. All property,
          real and personal, is taxable, and citizens are required to
          list all their personal property for tax assessors,
          including household furniture, gold and silver plate,
          musical instruments, watches, jewelry, and personal,
          private, or professional libraries.  If a citizen refuses
          to list their property or is suspected of not listing
          something, the law directs the assessor to visit and enter
          the premises, getting a search warrant if necessary.  Being
          required to tell the state everything you own is not being
          secure in one's home and effects.

          NO WARRANTS SHALL ISSUE, BUT UPON PROBABLE CAUSE, SUPPORTED
          BY OATH OR AFFIRMATION:  As a supporting oath or
          affirmation, reports of anonymous informants are accepted.
          This practice has been condoned by the Supreme Court.

          PARTICULARLY DESCRIBING THE PLACE TO BE SEARCHED AND
          PERSONS OR THINGS TO BE SEIZED:  Today's warrants do not
          particularly describe the things to be seized -- they list
          things that might be present.  For example, if police are
          making a drug raid, they will list weapons as things to be
          searched for and seized.  This is done not because the
          police know of any weapons and can particularly describe
          them, but because they allege people with drugs often have
          weapons.

          Both of the above apply to the warrant the Hudson, New
          Hampshire, police used when they broke down Bruce Lavoie's
          door at 5 a.m. with guns drawn and shot and killed him.
          The warrant claimed information from an anonymous
          informant, and it said, among other things, that guns were
          to be seized.  The mention of guns in the warrant was used
          as reason to enter with guns drawn.  Bruce Lavoie had no
          guns.  Bruce Lavoie was not secure from unreasonable search
          and seizure -- nor is anybody else.

          Other infringements on the fourth amendment include
          roadblocks and the Boston Police detention of people based
          on colors they are wearing (supposedly indicating gang
          membership).  And in Pittsburgh again, Eugene Tyler was
          once searched because he was wearing sweat pants and a
          plaid shirt -- police told him they heard many drug dealers
          at that time were wearing sweat pants and plaid shirts.


                                 Amendment V

               No person shall be held to answer for a capital,
               or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a
               presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except
               in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or
               in the Militia, when in actual service in time of
               War or public danger; nor shall any person be
               subject to the same offence to be twice put in
               jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled
               in any criminal case to be a witness against
               himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or
               property, without due process of law; nor shall
               private property be taken for public use without
               just compensation.

          INDICTMENT OF A GRAND JURY:  Kevin Bjornson has been
          proprietor of Hydro-Tech for nearly a decade and is a
          leading authority on hydroponic technology and cultivation.
          On October 26, 1989, both locations of Hydro-Tech were
          raided by the Drug Enforcement Administration.  National
          Drug Control Policy Director William Bennett has declared
          that some indoor lighting and hydroponic equipment is
          purchased by marijuana growers, so retailers and
          wholesalers of such equipment are drug profiteers and
          co-conspirators.  Bjornson was not charged with any crime,
          nor subpoenaed, issued a warrant, or arrested.  No illegal
          substances were found on his premises.  Federal officials
          were unable to convince grand juries to indict Bjornson.
          By February, they had called scores of witnesses and
          recalled many two or three times, but none of the grand
          juries they convened decided there was reason to criminally
          prosecute Bjornson.  In spite of that, as of March, his
          bank accounts were still frozen and none of the inventories
          or records had been returned.  Grand juries refused to
          indict Bjornson, but the government is still penalizing
          him.

          TWICE PUT IN JEOPARDY OF LIFE OR LIMB:  Members of the
          McMartin family in California have been tried two or three
          times for child abuse.  Anthony Barnaby was tried for
          murder (without evidence linking him to the crime) three
          times before New Hampshire let him go.

          COMPELLED TO BE A WITNESS AGAINST HIMSELF:  Oliver North
          was forced to testify against himself.  Congress granted
          him immunity from having anything he said to them being
          used as evidence against him, and then they required him to
          talk.  After he did so, what he said was used to find other
          evidence which was used against him.  The courts also play
          games where you can be required to testify against yourself
          if you testify at all.

          COMPELLED TO BE A WITNESS AGAINST HIMSELF:  In the New York
          Central Park assault case, three people were found guilty
          of assault.  But there was no physical evidence linking
          them to the crime; semen did not match any of the
          defendants.  The only evidence the state had was
          confessions.  To obtain these confessions, the police
          questioned a 15-year old without a parent present -- which
          is illegal under New York state law.  Police also refused
          to let the subject's Big Brother, an attorney for the
          Federal government, see him during questioning.  Police
          screamed "You better tell us what we want to hear and
          cooperate or you are going to jail," at 14-year-old Antron
          McCray, according to Bobby McCray, his father.  Antron
          McCray "confessed" after his father told him to, so that
          police would release him.  These people were coerced into
          bearing witness against themselves, and those confessions
          were used to convict them.

          COMPELLED TO BE A WITNESS AGAINST HIMSELF:  Your answers to
          Census questions are required by law, with a $100 penalty
          for each question not answered.  But people have been
          evicted for giving honest Census answers.  According to the
          General Accounting Office, one of the most frequent ways
          city governments use census information is to detect
          illegal two-family dwellings.  This has happened in
          Montgomery County, Maryland; Pullman, Washington; and Long
          Island, New York.  The August 8, 1989, Wall Street Journal
          reports this and other ways Census answers have been used
          against the answerers.

          COMPELLED TO BE A WITNESS AGAINST HIMSELF:  Drug tests are
          being required from more and more people, even when there
          is no probable cause, no accident, and no suspicion of drug
          use.  Requiring people to take drug tests compels them to
          provide evidence against themselves.

          DEPRIVED OF LIFE, LIBERTY, OR PROPERTY WITHOUT DUE PROCESS
          OF LAW:  This clause is violated on each of the items life,
          liberty, and property.  Incidents including such violations
          are described elsewhere in this article.  Here are two
          more:  On March 26, 1987, in Jeffersontown, Kentucky,
          Jeffrey Miles was killed by police officer John Rucker, who
          was looking for a suspected drug dealer.  Rucker had been
          sent to the wrong house; Miles was not wanted by police.
          He received no due process.  In Detroit, $4,834 was seized
          from a grocery store after dogs detected traces of cocaine
          on three one-dollar bills in a cash register.

          PRIVATE PROPERTY TAKEN FOR PUBLIC USE WITHOUT JUST
          COMPENSATION:  RICO is shredding this aspect of the Bill of
          Rights.  The money confiscated by Sheriff Vogel goes
          directly into Vogel's budget; it is not regulated by the
          legislature.  Federal and local governments seize and
          auction boats, buildings, and other property.  Under RICO,
          the government is seizing property without due process.
          The victims are required to prove not only that they are
          not guilty of a crime, but that they are entitled to their
          property.  Otherwise, the government auctions off the
          property and keeps the proceeds.


                                 Amendment VI

               In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
               enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by
               an impartial jury of the State and district
               wherein the crime shall have been committed,
               which district shall have been previously
               ascertained by law, and to be informed of the
               nature and cause of the accusation; to be
               confronted with the witnesses against him; to
               have compulsory process for obtaining Witnesses
               in his favor, and to have the assistance of
               counsel for his defence.

          THE RIGHT TO A SPEEDY AND PUBLIC TRIAL:  Surprisingly, the
          right to a public trial is under attack.  When Marion Barry
          was being tried, the prosecution attempted to bar Louis
          Farrakhan and George Stallings from the gallery.  This
          request was based on an allegation that they would send
          silent and "impermissible messages" to the jurors.  The
          judge initially granted this request.  One might argue that
          the whole point of a public trial is to send a message to
          all the participants:  The message is that the public is
          watching; the trial had better be fair.

          BY AN IMPARTIAL JURY:  The government does not even honor
          the right to trial by an impartial jury.  US District Judge
          Edward Rafeedie is investigating improper influence on
          jurors by US marshals in the Enrique Camarena case.  US
          marshals apparently illegally communicated with jurors
          during deliberations.

          OF THE STATE AND DISTRICT WHEREIN THE CRIME SHALL HAVE BEEN
          COMMITTED:  This is incredible, but Manuel Noriega is being
          tried so far away from the place where he is alleged to
          have committed crimes that the United States had to invade
          another country and overturn a government to get him.  Nor
          is this a unique occurrence; in a matter separate from the
          Camarena case, Judge Rafeedie was asked to dismiss charges
          against Mexican gynecologist Dr. Humberto Alvarez Machain
          on the grounds that the doctor was illegally abducted from
          his Guadalajara office in April and turned over to US
          authorities.

          TO BE INFORMED OF THE NATURE AND CAUSE OF THE ACCUSATION:
          Steve Jackson Games, nearly put out of business by the raid
          described previously, has been stonewalled by the SS.  "For
          the past month or so these guys have been insisting the
          book wasn't the target of the raid, but they don't say what
          the target was, or why they were critical of the book, or
          why they won't give it back," Steve Jackson says.  "They
          have repeatedly denied we're targets but don't explain why
          we've been made victims."  Attorneys for SJG tried to find
          out the basis for the search warrant that led to the raid
          on SJG.  But the application for that warrant was sealed by
          order of the court and remained sealed at last report, in
          July.  Not only has the SS taken property and nearly
          destroyed a publisher, it will not even explain the nature
          and cause of the accusations that led to the raid.

          TO BE CONFRONTED WITH THE WITNESSES AGAINST HIM:  The courts
          are beginning to play fast and loose with the right to
          confront witnesses.  Watch out for anonymous witnesses and
          videotaped testimony.

          TO HAVE COMPULSORY PROCESS FOR OBTAINING WITNESSES:  Ronald
          Reagan resisted submitting to subpoena and answering
          questions about Irangate, claiming matters of national
          security and executive privilege.  A judge had to dismiss
          some charges against Irangate participants because the
          government refused to provide information subpoenaed by the
          defendants.  And one wonders if the government would go
          to the same lengths to obtain witnesses for Manuel Noriega
          as it did to capture him.

          TO HAVE THE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL:  The right to assistance
          of counsel took a hit recently.  Connecticut Judge Joseph
          Sylvester is refusing to assign public defenders to people
          ACCUSED of drug-related crimes, including drunk driving.

          TO HAVE THE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL:  RICO is also affecting
          the right to have the assistance of counsel.  The
          government confiscates the money of an accused person,
          which leaves them unable to hire attorneys.  The IRS has
          served summonses nationwide to defense attorneys, demanding
          the names of clients who paid cash for fees exceeding
          $10,000.


                                Amendment VII

               In Suits at common law, where the value in
               controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the
               right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no
               fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise
               reexamined in any Court of the United States,
               than according to the rules of common law.

          RIGHT OF TRIAL BY JURY IN SUITS AT COMMON LAW:  This is a
          simple right; so far the government has not felt threatened
          by it and has not made attacks on it that I am aware of.
          This is our only remaining safe haven in the Bill of Rights.


                                Amendment VIII

               Excessive bail shall not be required, nor
               excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
               punishments inflicted.

          EXCESSIVE BAIL AND FINES:  Tallahatchie County in
          Mississippi charges ten dollars a day to each person who
          spends time in the jail, regardless of the length of stay
          or the outcome of their trial.  This means innocent people
          are forced to pay.  Marvin Willis was stuck in jail for 90
          days trying to raise $2,500 bail on an assault charge.  But
          after he made that bail, he was kept imprisoned because he
          could not pay the $900 rent Tallahatchie demanded.  Nine
          former inmates are suing the county for this practice.

          CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENTS:  House Resolution 4079
          sticks its nose in here too:  "... a Federal court shall
          not hold prison or jail crowding unconstitutional under the
          eighth amendment except to the extent that an individual
          plaintiff inmate proves that the crowding causes the
          infliction of cruel and unusual punishment of that
          inmate."

          CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENTS:  A life sentence for selling
          a quarter of a gram of cocaine for $20 -- that is what
          Ricky Isom was sentenced to in February in Cobb County,
          Georgia.  It was Isom's second conviction in two years, and
          state law imposes a mandatory sentence.  Even the judge
          pronouncing the sentence thinks it is cruel; Judge Tom
          Cauthorn expressed grave reservations before sentencing
          Isom and Douglas Rucks (convicted of selling 3.5 grams of
          cocaine in a separate but similar case).  Judge Cauthorn
          called the sentences "Draconian."


                                 Amendment IX

               The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain
               rights, shall not be construed to deny or
               disparage others retained by the people.

          OTHER RIGHTS RETAINED BY THE PEOPLE:  This amendment is so
          weak today that I will ask not what infringements there are
          on it but rather what exercise of it exists at all?  What
          law can you appeal to a court to find you not guilty of
          violating because the law denies a right retained by you?


                                 Amendment X

               The powers not delegated to the United States by
               the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the
               States, are reserved to the States respectively,
               or to the people.

          POWERS RESERVED TO THE STATES OR THE PEOPLE:  This
          amendment is also weak, although it is not so nonexistent
          as the ninth amendment.  But few states set their own speed
          limits or drinking age limits.  Today, we mostly think of
          this country as the -- singular -- United States, rather
          than a collection of states.  This concentration of power
          detaches laws from the desires of people -- and even of
          states.  House Resolution 4079 crops up again here -- it
          uses financial incentives to get states to set specific
          penalties for certain crimes.  Making their own laws
          certainly must be considered a right of the states, and
          this right is being infringed upon.


          Out of ten amendments, nine are under attack, most of them
          under multiple attacks of different natures, and some of
          them under a barrage.  If this much of the Bill of Rights
          is threatened, how can you be sure your rights are safe?  A
          right has to be there when you need it.  Like insurance,
          you cannot afford to wait until you need it and then set
          about procuring it or ensuring it is available.  Assurance
          must be made in advance.

          The bottom line here is that your rights are not safe.  You
          do not know when one of your rights will be violated.  A
          number of rights protect accused persons, and you may think
          it is not important to protect the rights of criminals.
          But if a right is not there for people accused of crimes,
          it will not be there when you need it.  With the Bill of
          Rights in the sad condition described above, nobody can be
          confident they will be able to exercise the rights to which
          they are justly entitled.  To preserve our rights for
          ourselves in the future, we must defend them for everybody
          today.