Bill of Rights Status Report






         Eric Postpischil

         6 Hamlett Drive, Apt. 17, Nashua, NH 03062

         [email protected]



         6 October 1990



         Permission is granted to copy this article and to convert it as
         needed for copying and/or transmission in other forms of media,
         including radio, television, computer mail, and print.

         I would like to thank the numerous people who enter reports on
         Usenet and the dozens who provided me with information. Without
         their efforts, I would not have had the volume of information
         that made this article possible.















































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                                   Introduction

         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 are not concerned that police will
         execute a search warrant without knocking or that they set up
         roadblocks to 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.

         15 December 1991 will be the two-hundredth anniversary of the
         ratification of the Bill of Rights. How has it stood up over two
         hundred years? 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 re-
            ligion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridg-
            ing 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 consid-
         ered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots."[1]
         Bush has not retracted, commented on, or clarified this state-
         ment, 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 promote a particular religion (or, occa-
         sionally, religions) by spending public money on religious dis-
         plays. Governments also establish religion via blue laws, which
         ___________________

       [1] "Bush on Atheism," Free Inquiry 8, no.  4 (Fall 1988):  16.

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         set Sunday as a special day on which business is prohibited or
         limited.

         Free exercise of religion: Robert Newmeyer and Glenn Braunstein
         were jailed in 1988 for refusing to stand in respect for a
         judge.[2] 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 exercise of religion: On 17 April 1990, the Supreme Court
         ruled that Native Americans do not have a Constitutional right
         to use peyote during their religious ceremonies. Peyote is a
         mild hallucinogen derived from cactus plants. It is also, to
         members of the Native American Church, an essential sacrament,
         the physical embodiment of the Great Spirit. During the Prohibi-
         tion, the Federal government permitted the Roman Catholic Church
         to use sacramental wine at masses, but Native Americans are not
         receiving equal treatment now. In the majority opinion, Justice
         Antonin Scalia admitted the decision would place minority reli-
         gious practices at a disadvantage. The Supreme Court decision
         is so generally opposed that three weeks after the decision,
         a petition for rehearing was filed jointly by American Jewish
         Congress, Baptist Joint Committee on Public Affairs, National
         Council of Churches, National Association of Evangelicals, Peo-
         ple for the American Way, Presbyterian Church USA, American
         Civil Liberties Union, Christian Legal Society, American Jewish
         Committee, Unitarian-Universalist Association, General Confer-
         ence of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, Worldwide Church of




         ___________________
       [2] Steve Green, "Courtroom Respect Case Goes to Trial," United

           Press International (UPI), circa 9 August 1990.

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         God, Missouri Synod of Lutheran Church, and Americans United for
         Separation of Church and State.[3][,][4]

         Free speech: 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. This includes prohibitions on 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. Also, a broadcaster
         that supported legalization of drugs would be in danger of
         violating FCC rules.

         Free speech: There are also laws to limit political statements
         and contributions to political activities. In 1985, the Michi-
         gan 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 1990, the Supreme Court upheld that
         law. According to dissenting Justice Anthony 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 pub-
         lic how a candidate voted on issues of urgent concern to their
         members.[5]




         ___________________
       [3] Rob Boston, "The Day 'Sherbert' Melted," Church and State 43,

           no.  6 (June 1990):  4-6.
       [4] Steve Moore, "Supreme Court Deals Devastating Blow to Native Amer-

           ican Church," Native American Rights Fund Legal Review (Spring 1990).
       [5] Michael Gartner, "If Corporations Are Silenced in Political
           Debate, Who's Next?", Wall Street Journal, 5 April 1990, sec.

           A, 19.

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         Free press: In an apparently unprecedented order, New York
         Supreme Court Justice Michael J. Dontzin issued an order for
         prior restraint against the publication of a book by a former
         member of Mossad, an Israeli intelligence service. Further,
         Dontzin issued this order with only scant information about the
         alleged menace represented by the book. The justice made the
         ruling based upon lawyers' descriptions of material in a sealed
         affidavit in Ontario, Canada - material the justice had not
         seen.[6]

         Free press: The equipment Craig Neidorf used to publish Phrack,
         a worldwide electronic magazine about phones and hacking, was
         confiscated after Neidorf published a three-page document copied
         from a Bell South computer and 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."[7] All of the information in this doc-
         ument was publicly available in other documents and could be
         ordered by calling a toll-free 800 number.[8] The government has
         not alleged that Neidorf was involved with or participated in
         the copying of the document, only that he published it.[9] The
         person who copied this document from telephone company comput-
         ers also placed a copy on a bulletin board run by Rich Andrews.
         Andrews notified AT&T officials and cooperated with author-
         ities 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.[10]

         ___________________
       [6] Roger Cohen, "Judge Halts Publication of Book by Ex-Israeli
           Intelligence Agent," New York Times, 13 September 1990, sec.

           A, 1, and sec.  C, 24.
       [7] John Perry Barlow, "Crime and Puzzlement," Whole Earth Review

           68 (Fall 1990):  44-57.
       [8] Jef Poskanzer of Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), computer
           mail to author, 17 September 1990.  EFF provided litigation sup-

           port to Neidorf.

       [9] "Legal Case Summary," Electronic Frontier Foundation, 10 July 1990.

      [10] Barlow.

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         Free press: On 1 March 1990 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 com-
         puters. The SS never filed any charges against SJG but still
         refused to return confiscated property.[11]

         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.[12] 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.[13]

         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

         ___________________

      [11] Ibid.
      [12] Dan Donovan and Ellen Perlmutter, "Teens Say Drug Tactics

           Hassle the Innocent," Pittsburgh Press, 10 July 1990.

      [13] Ibid.

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         courts in which such an appeal may be heard.[14] And on 5 March
         1990, the Supreme Court limited the ability of state prison
         inmates to obtain Federal court review of their convictions and
         sentences. By ruling that prisoners cannot make appeals based
         on favorable court rulings issued in other cases since their
         own convictions, the Supreme Court permitted states to execute
         people even though their death sentences would not be permitted
         today in light of subsequent rulings.[15] If a state imposed
         a death sentence in "good faith," but it turns out the state
         was mistaken, the Supreme Court has given the okay to refusing
         to hear the prisoner's petition for redress of grievances. The
         defendant will be killed even though the state made a mistake.

                                   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 le-
         gitimate 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, the purpose of the sec-
         ond amendment is not to provide arms for sporting purposes. The
         right to bear arms is the last line of defense of our rights.
         In case there is an emergency, in case the people running the

         ___________________
      [14] House of Representatives, House Resolution 4079, 101st

           Congress, 2d session, 1990, 37-43
      [15] Linda Greenhouse, "Justices Limit Path to US Courts for State Pris-
           oners on Death Row," New York Times, 6 March 1990, sec.  A, 1 and

           20.

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         government get out of control, guns in the hands of the people -
         all the people - are the last chance to defend our freedom.

         Some people contend the second amendment forbids Congress to
         prohibit the maintenance of a state militia. If so, this amend-
         ment is threatened by an incident described below, at the tenth
         amendment, in which the Federal government took control of the
         state militias.

         Firearms regulations also empower local officials, such as po-
         lice chiefs, to grant or deny permits. This gives local offi-
         cials power to grant permits only to friends of people in the
         right places or to deny permits on sexist or racist bases -
         such as denying women the right to carry a weapon needed 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. In July and August of 1990, 200 troops
         in camouflage dress with M-16s and helicopters swept through
         King Range National Conservation Area in Humboldt County, Cal-
         ifornia, in a militarized attack involving the California Na-
         tional Guard, the Army, and seven other federal agencies.[16]
         In the process of searching for marijuana plants, soldiers as-
         saulted people with M-16s, trespassed on private land, and de-
         stroyed private property, including a fire-protection spring box
         and watering system the day before a major fire (they thought it



         ___________________
      [16] Eric Brazil, "Troops Raid Humboldt Pot Farms," San Francisco

           Examiner, 31 July 1990, sec.  A, 1 and 16.

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         might be used to irrigate marijuana plants).[17][,][18][,][19]
         This is not a direct hit on the third amendment, but the disre-
         gard for private property is threateningly 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 affirma-
            tion, 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 are no drugs
         or other evidence of a crime and no charges are filed against
         the car's occupants.[20][,][21] 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

         ___________________
      [17] Rick DelVecchio, "US Marijuana Busters Find 'Good Quantities',"

           San Francisco Chronicle, 1 August 1990, sec.  A, 1f.
      [18] DelVecchio, "Humboldt Man Talks About Close Encounters," San Fran-

           cisco Chronicle, 2 August 1990, sec.  A, 2.
      [19] Ronald M. Sinoway, "Nationwide Class-Action Lawsuit Filed Against
           Operation Green Sweep," Civil Liberties Monitoring Project, 9 Au-

           gust 1990.
      [20] Jacob Sullum, "Little Big Brothers," Trends, Reason 21, no.

           10 (March 1990):  14.

      [21] 20/20, American Broadcasting Companies, January 1990.

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         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 1 January 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.[22]
         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.

         The two items immediately above both 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 any guns found were to be

         ___________________
      [22] Don Bell, "Supreme Court Dictatorship in America," The CDL Re-
           port 129 (June 1990), quoting the text of the bill as printed

           in The Christian World Report, 16 May 1989.

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         seized.[23] Although Bruce Lavoie had no guns and there was no
         reason to suspect he did, the mention of guns in the warrant was
         used as reason to enter with guns drawn. Bruce Lavoie was not
         secure from unreasonable search and seizure.

         Other infringements on the fourth amendment include roadblocks
         and the Boston Police detention and deliberate harassment of
         known gang members.[24] Gang membership is known by such things
         as skin color and clothing color. And in Pittsburgh again, Eu-
         gene 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.[25]

                                    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 author-
         ity on hydroponic technology and cultivation. On 26 October
         1989, both locations of Hydro-Tech were raided by the Drug
         Enforcement Administration. National Drug Control Policy Di-
         rector William Bennett has declared that some indoor lighting

         ___________________
      [23] Hudson Police Shooting, Investigation report case I-89-220,

           Concord:  New Hampshire State Police, 13 August 1989, 243.
      [24] Jerry Thomas, "Police Sweep of Gangs Deemed a Success," Boston

           Globe, 21 May 1989, 40.

      [25] Donovan and Perlmutter.

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         and hydroponic equipment is purchased by marijuana growers,
         so retailers and wholesalers of such equipment are drug prof-
         iteers 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 1990, his bank accounts were still frozen and
         none of the inventories or records had been returned.[26] Grand
         juries refused to indict Bjornson, but the government is still
         penalizing him.

         Twice put in jeopardy of life or limb: Raymond Buckey was put
         on trial a second time for child molesting in the McMartin
         Preschool case, after a first trial lasting three years ac-
         quitted him of 40 charges but deadlocked on 13 other counts.[27]
         Anthony Barnaby was tried for the same murder three times before
         New Hampshire released him,[28] even though there was virtually
         no physical evidence linking him to the scene of the crime.[29]
         These were mistrials rather than not-guilty verdicts, but they
         were not mistrials caused by accident (such as a juror falling
         ill) or incorrect procedure (such as misconduct by a prosecu-
         tor). The facts here are that the prosecutors did not convince
         the juries that the defendants were guilty, yet the defendants
         were tried over and over again, sapping them in finances and
         in years from their lives. The trying and retrying of a person

         ___________________
      [26] Amy Swanson, "Libertarian Activist in Northwest Victim of
           Bennett's Drug War," Libertarian Party News 5, no.  3 (March

           1990).
      [27] "2d Trial Opens in Preschool Molestation Case," New York

           Times, 8 May 1990, sec.  A, 13.
      [28] Pendleton Beach, "Barnaby 'Ecstatic' at Release," Nashua Telegraph,

           11 July 1990, 1.
      [29] Carolyn Magnuson, "Caplin Shadows Barnaby Trial," Nashua Telegraph,

           8 October 1989, sec.  A, 1 and 4.

                                                                       11




         Bill of Rights Status Report



         becomes an abuse that threatens the right to continue with one's
         life after having withstood the jeopardy to life or limb.

         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 develop other evidence which was
         used against him.[30]

         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; hair, clothing, and semen did not match any of the
         defendants.[31][,][32] The only evidence the state had was
         confessions. To obtain these confessions, the police questioned
         15-year-old Yusef Salaam without a parent present - which is
         illegal under New York state law.[33] Police also refused to let
         the subject's Big Brother, an assistant United States attorney,
         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.[34] Antron McCray "confessed" after his father told
         him to, because the police said they would release him if he
         confessed.[35] These people were coerced into bearing witness

         ___________________
      [30] "Say Goodnight, Mr.  Walsh," Review & Outlook, Wall Street

           Journal, 10 September 1990, sec.  A, 14.
      [31] Ronald Sullivan, "Scientific Link is Still Missing in Jogger

           Trial," New York Times, 20 July 1990, sec.  B, 1 and 5.
      [32] Sullivan, "Defense Asks, Was Jogger Really Raped?", New York Times,

           8 August 1990, sec.  B, 1 and 3.
      [33] Sullivan, "Police Ignored Warnings on Age of Jogger Suspect, Wit-

           nesses Say," New York Times, 31 July 1990, sec.  B, 3.
      [34] Peg Byron, "Father Says He Told Son to Lie After Police Lied to

           Him," UPI, circa 30 July 1990.
      [35] Sullivan, "Youth's Father Says He Urged Park-Rape Lie," New York

           Times, 28 July 1990, 23 and 26.

         12




                                             Bill of Rights Status Report



         against themselves, and those confessions were used to convict
         them.

         Compelled to be a witness against himself: Your answers to Cen-
         sus questions are required by law, with a $100 penalty for each
         question not answered. But people have been evicted for giv-
         ing honest Census answers. According to the General Accounting
         Office, one of the most frequent ways city governments use cen-
         sus information is to detect illegal two-family dwellings. This
         has happened in Montgomery County, Maryland; Pullman, Washing-
         ton; and Long Island, New York. In this and other ways, Census
         answers are used against the answerers.[36]

         Compelled to be a witness against himself: The government is
         requiring drug tests 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 26 March 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.[37] 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.[38]


         ___________________
      [36] James Bovard, "Honesty May Not Be Your Best Census Policy,"

           Wall Street Journal, 8 August 1989, sec.  A, 10.
      [37] John Dentinger, "Narc, Narc," Playboy 37, no.  4 (April 1990):

           49-50.

      [38] Sullum.

                                                                       13




         Bill of Rights Status Report



         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.
         Federal and local governments seize and auction cars and boats.
         Vehicles are seized even if the owners are not present or re-
         sponsible for the presence of drugs (as in the case of chartered
         vehicles). One car was seized because an inspector believed the
         smell of marijuana was in it.[39] 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 com-
            mitted, which district shall have been previously ascertained
            by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the ac-
            cusation; 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.[40] The judge initially granted this


         ___________________
      [39] Jon Nordheimer, "Tighter Federal Drug Dragnet Yields Cars,
           Boats and Protests," New York Times, 22 May 1988, sec.  A, 1

           and 16.
      [40] Sandra Sardella, "ACLU Says Farrakhan, Stallings Can Attend

           Barry Trial," UPI, circa 5 July 1990.

         14




                                             Bill of Rights Status Report



         request.[41] 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.[42]

         Of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been
         committed: 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 jury tampering, Judge Rafeedie had
         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 1990 and turned
         over to US authorities.[43]

         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."[44] Attorneys
         for SJG tried to find out the basis for the search warrant that
         ___________________
      [41] B. Drummond Ayres, Jr., "Witness in Barry Trial Now Denies Exceed-

           ing Agents' Instructions," New York Times, 4 July 1990, 10.
      [42] Carol Baker, "Camarena Judge Vows to Get to 'Bottom' of Mis-

           trial Motion," UPI, circa 9 August 1990.
      [43] "US Appeals Order to Return Suspect to Mexico," New York

           Times, 18 August 1990, 9.
      [44] "CyberPunk Could Prove End of Steve Jackson Games," UPI, 10

           May 1990.

                                                                       15




         Bill of Rights Status Report



         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 1990.[45] 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. Testimony via videotape or one-way television is
         being used for former Presidents and children. Such procedures
         reduce the information a jury receives. First, the lack of the
         physical presence of the witness makes it more difficult for
         the jury to judge the witness' veracity and get an accurate
         impression of what the witness is saying. Second, the cumbersome
         procedures involved reduce the ability for either prosecution or
         defense to cross-examine the witness - a step which is essential
         to bringing out the truth in difficult situations.

         To have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses: When John M.
         Poindexter subpoenaed Ronald Reagan as a witness in Poindexter's
         trial, Reagan fought the subpoena.[46] The White House and the
         Justice Department also opposed providing documents in response
         to subpoenas of Oliver North.[47] Without the disputed papers,
         Federal District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell had to dismiss the
         main criminal charges against North.[48] The government said the
         documents were being withheld for reasons of national security.
         Some of the documents had already been made public by release to



         ___________________

      [45] "Legal Case Summary," Electronic Frontier Foundation, 10 July 1990.
      [46] "Reagan Fighting a Subpoena," New York Times, 3 January 1990,

           sec.  A, 16.
      [47] Philip Shenon, "North Subpoenas Face Fight by White House," New

           York Times, 1 January 1989, 12.
      [48] Michael Wines, "Key North Counts Dismissed by Court," New York Times,

           14 January 1989, 1.

         16




                                             Bill of Rights Status Report



         a private institute in another court case. The prosecution knew
         this but still told the court the documents were secret.[49]

         To have the assistance of counsel: Connecticut Judge Joseph
         Sylvester is refusing to assign public defenders to people
         accused of drug-related crimes, including drunk driving.[50]

         To have the assistance of counsel: RICO is also affecting the
         right to have the assistance of counsel. The government confis-
         cates the money of an accused person, which leaves them unable
         to hire attorneys. The IRS has served summonses nationwide to
         defense attorneys around the country, demanding the names of
         clients who paid cash for fees exceeding $10,000.[51]

                                   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: There are several
         ways this right can be taken from somebody. If a person is
         not careful about knowing when to ask for a jury trial, the
         government might refuse to grant the right. Under the Federal
         Rules of Civil Procedure, failure to demand a trial by jury in




         ___________________
      [49] David Johnston, "Trial of North Stalled Again; Defense Moves for

           Dismissal," New York Times, 1 March 1989, sec.  A, 1 and 20.
      [50] "Drug Suspects Barred From Public Defenders," New York Times,

           12 July 1990, national edition, sec.  B, 3.
      [51] "IRS Issues Summonses to Defense Lawyers," New York Times, 7

           March 1990, sec.  A, 17.

                                                                       17




         Bill of Rights Status Report



         time constitutes a waiver of the right.[52] The rules courts
         are using allow judges to direct a jury to return a particular
         verdict. Or a judge can decide a verdict is wrong according
         to the evidence, set aside the jury's verdict, and order a new
         trial.[53] In Slocum v. New York Life Insurance Company, the
         Supreme Court decided that in a case where the judge allowed the
         jury to deliberate, the matter could not be changed by directing
         the verdict, because of the seventh amendment, but it was okay
         to declare a mistrial and order a new trial in which the judge
         could direct the jury verdict.[54] This sidesteps the seventh
         amendment and removes the power to decide justice and facts from
         the people of a jury.

                                  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.[55]

         ___________________
      [52] Library of Congress Legislative Reference Service, The Con-
           stitution of the United States of America:  Analysis and
           Interpretation, edited by Johnny H. Killian and Leland E.
           Beck, 99th Congress, 1st session, 1987, Senate document 99-16,

           1376.

      [53] Ibid, 1382.

      [54] Ibid.
      [55] "Ex-inmates Take Issue with Jail Cell Fees," Insight (16 April

           1990):  55.

         18




                                             Bill of Rights Status Report



         Cruel and unusual punishments: House Resolution 4079 threatens
         this right 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."[56]

         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 1990 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."[57]

                                   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: Other rights retained by
         the people include the right of a citizen to work in or for a
         political party and the right to marital privacy.[58] Those are
         some of the rights the authors of the Constitution were trying
         to protect by telling us in this amendment that the other parts
         of the Constitution were not to be interpreted as a complete
         list, that people have fundamental rights other than those
         explicitly listed, and those rights should not be infringed.
         But still the government tries. The Hatch Act limits political
         activities of people who are employed by the government. Various

         ___________________

      [56] House Resolution 4079, 8-9.
      [57] Mark Curriden, "Man Gets Life for $20 Sale of Cocaine," At-

           lanta Journal, 22 February 1990.

      [58] Constitution:  Analysis and Interpretation, 1412-1413.

                                                                       19




         Bill of Rights Status Report



         states attempt to regulate marital relations. Another right
         considered fundamental is the right to travel, including travel
         abroad across borders in either direction and travel within
         the country.[59] Yet the Federal government limits travel to
         Cuba and other countries, and states establish roadblocks to
         question and examine citizens. And aspects of our private lives
         are increasingly regulated. At home, recreation, and work, laws
         and regulations dictate what the government thinks is good for
         us.

                                    Amendment X

            The powers not delegated to the United States by the Consti-
            tution, 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: Until 1937, this
         amendment was used to keep Congress within limits in such things
         as regulation of commerce, enforcement of the fourteenth amend-
         ment, and laying and collecting taxes.[60] Today, this protec-
         tion has eroded. The Federal government exercises much power
         through purse strings, by taking money from the people and cor-
         porations within the states and refusing to return it unless
         states conform to Federal rules. By controlling money, the Fed-
         eral government coerces obedience from the states in setting
         speed limits, defining crimes, and setting criminal sentences
         and penalties. In 1984, Reagan signed a law ordering millions
         of dollars withheld from states not raising their drinking age
         to 21.[61] South Dakota objected to this and sued, with sup-
         port from eight other states.[62] On 23 June 1987, the Supreme

         ___________________
      [59] Milton R. Konvitz, Bill of Rights Reader:  Leading Constitutional

           Cases, 5th ed.  (New York:  Cornell University Press, 1973):  518.

      [60] Constitution:  Analysis and Interpretation, 1418.
      [61] Steven R. Weisman, "Reagan Signs Law Linking Federal Aid to Drink-

           ing Age," New York Times, 18 July 1984, sec.  A, 15.
      [62] Dick Pawelek, "Resolve Two Federal-State Conflicts," Scholastic

           Update 119, no.  10 (26 January 1987):  21-22.

         20




                                             Bill of Rights Status Report



         Court ruled against the states.[63] On the same day, the Supreme
         Court overturned an 1861 decision prohibiting Federal courts
         from ordering states to extradite criminal suspects to other
         states.[64] That power of a state to refuse extradition saved
         a free black person from being extradited in 1861 from Ohio
         to Kentucky to face trial for the crime of helping a slave to
         escape, but the power is now gone.

         Powers reserved to the states or the people: Article I, section
         eight of the Constitution reserves to the states the authority
         of training the militia. In 1986, Minnesota and eleven other
         states refused permission for their National Guard units to be
         sent to Honduras for training missions. A Federal judge denied
         the states this authority.[65]

                                      Summary

         Out of ten amendments, all are under attack. All of the indi-
         vidual parts of each amendment are threatened. Many of them are
         under multiple attacks of different natures. 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 insur-
         ance, 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

         ___________________
      [63] Stuart Taylor, Jr., "Justices Back Use of Aid to Get States to Raise

           Drinking Age," New York Times, 24 June 1987, sec.  A, 20.

      [64] Ibid.
      [65] "States Lose Suit on the Guard's Latin Missions," New York

           Times, 5 August 1987, sec.  A, 10.

                                                                       21




         Bill of Rights Status Report



         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.



































         22



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