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DrugReporter

Summer's Here and the Time is Right for ... Getting Busted Going to the Festival (If You're Not Careful)

By Phillip S. Smith, Drug War Chronicle. Posted June 5, 2008.


Music lovers this summer should be prepared to encounter drug checkpoints and undercover cops working inside the festival grounds.
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With Memorial Day now just a memory, the summer music festival season is on -- and with it, special drug law enforcement aimed at festival goers in what could be called a form of cultural profiling. If years past are any indicator, music lovers should be prepared to encounter everything from announced "Drug Checkpoints" that aren't -- they are instead traps to lure the freaked out -- to real, unconstitutional, highway drug checkpoints masquerading as "safety checks" (complete with drug dogs) to undercover cops working inside the festival grounds themselves.

Nationally known festivals like Bonaroo in Tennessee and Wakarusa in Kansas, as well as countless lesser festivals, especially in rural areas, have drawn special law enforcement efforts in the past. With this year unlikely to be any different, festival goers will need to know their rights and how to exercise them when they encounter the cops.

The police enforcement actions are already getting underway. Last weekend, the 2008 Summer Camp Festival in Chillicothe, Illinois, drew some 13,000 fans to hear a diverse line-up of bands including the Flaming Lips, George Clinton & Parliament/Funkadelic, Blind Melon, the Roots, and the New Pornographers. It also drew city and state police, who claimed 20 drug arrests -- for marijuana, ecstasy, and LSD -- between them in and around the festival.

The police were pleased. "I think a lot of it had to do with all of the agencies getting together before the event and really planning out our attack," Chillicothe Police Chief Steven Maurer told local HOI-19 TV News. "Our goal is to prevent it from coming in and that's what we did a lot of."

Meanwhile, down in northeast Georgia, some other law enforcement agencies had also gotten together to plan an attack. This one wasn't aimed directly at concert-goers, but at the highway-traveling public in general. In what the Northeast Georgian described as "one of the county's largest highway interdiction and safety checks in at least five years," personnel from the Habersham County Sheriff's Office, Northeast Georgia Drug Task Force, Georgia National Guard Counter Drug Task Force, Georgia State Patrol, Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Georgia Department of Public Safety Motor Carrier Compliance Unit, Lee Arrendale State Prison, Phillips State Prison and Cornelia Police Department participated in a 24-hour checkpoint on a local highway.

Police bragged about the success of their checkpoint, which netted 74 arrests, 31 of them for drug offenses. "It worked well, I thought," said Habersham County Sheriff De Ray Fincher. "The operation resulted in a seizure of $36,000 in illegal drugs. And a total amount of currency, drugs and vehicles seized is estimated to have a value of $82,000."

Police did write some tickets for traffic offenses, Fincher told WNEG-TV 32 News. "We got a lot of people with no insurance, no driver's license or suspended license," he said. And some pot smokers: "The majority of our cases were marijuana cases; however, we did get several methamphetamine and we got one case of cocaine," Fincher explained.

In a 2000 Supreme Court decision, Indianapolis v. Edmonds, the high court held that indiscriminate highway drug checkpoints were unconstitutional since motorists were being stopped without suspicion for a law enforcement -- not a public safety -- purpose.

But Fincher was open about his constitutionally-suspect highway checkpoint. "We are trying to do everything we can to prevent drug activity in Habersham County, whether it's just passing through or stopping here," he said, noting that drug arrests in the county were on the rise. "That just means we've taken a real aggressive approach to drug enforcement."

"In the wake of the Indianapolis case, law enforcement has tried to figure out ways to still conduct drug checkpoints that comport with that ruling," said Adam Wolf of the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project. "Intent is the name of the game. If the intent is to conduct a checkpoint basically for law enforcement purposes, that's not okay. If it's for public safety purposes, such as sobriety checkpoints, that is okay."

A constitutional challenge to any given checkpoint would turn on intent, said Wolf. "If it turns out the intent was primarily to be a drug checkpoint, that would be an unreasonable search and not comply with the Constitution," he said. "That kind of checkpoint should be shut down, but it would take someone to challenge it."

Noting Sheriff Fincher's report of cash and goods seized, Wolf suggested the purpose of the checkpoints could really be about something other than law enforcement or public safety. "So often these things are being done to fund law enforcement agencies. Asset forfeiture is really a cash cow," he said.


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See more stories tagged with: drug wars, police checkpoints, undercover cops

Phillip S. Smith is a writer and editor for Drug Reform Coordination Network.


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Well, here is some good news from California.
Posted by: Lauren on Jun 5, 2008 3:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
California Assembly Votes to Protect Medical Marijuana Patients' Right to Work

Americans for Safe Access, the medical marijuana advocacy group that argued the case before the Court and is now a sponsor of the bill.

May 28th, 2008 - California Assembly Votes to Protect Medical Marijuana Patients' Right to Work

Anti-discrimination bill AB2279 passes State Assembly Today

Sacramento, CA -- A medical marijuana employment rights bill, which would protect hundreds of thousands of medical marijuana patients in California from employment discrimination, passed the State Assembly today. AB2279, introduced in February by Assemblymember Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) and co-authored by Assemblymembers Patty Berg (D-Eureka), Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley) and Lori SaldaƱa (D-San Diego), would reverse a January California Supreme Court decision in the case Ross v. RagingWire. Support for the bill has been widespread, coming from labor, business, and health groups at the local and national level.

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cash cow indeed
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Jun 5, 2008 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
can you say fascism? It is alive and well all over the country. nothing like having the lowest IQ's be in charge of public well being. everybody is a "perp" and everybody is going to pay. complete waste of manpower, time, and good will. FIND SOME REAL CRIMINALS YOU PUSSIES. THERE ARE PLENTY OF THEM,ONLY YOU'RE AFRAID OF THE REAL DEAL.

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» RE: cash cow indeed Posted by: Dboy
» RE: cash cow indeed Posted by: moose_indian
What happened to....
Posted by: Cowardly_lion on Jun 6, 2008 2:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Innocent until proven guilty. we now have a system that ASSUMES guilty parties roam the streets everywhere. They just have to look for us. If they stop you, I don't think it's just because of a random check....it's PROFILING. If they ask to search you, don't let them! They have no right. On what grounds can they stand there and say that they have the right to search you? Only the grounds that they own you, which is a total totalitarian Ideal. It's an assumption of your guiltiness or an assumption that they own you. They may own the grounds, but the grounds don't own you.

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» RE: What happened to.... Posted by: Dboy
See the Video "Busted: A Citizen's Guide to Police Encounters"
Posted by: kestral on Jun 6, 2008 5:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Know your rights. Before going to the festival, watch (with your buddies, of course) the video "Busted' and the book _Beat the Heat: How to Handle Encounters With Law Enforcement_ by Katya Komisaruk produced by Flex Your Rights (http://www.flexyourrights.org) Better yet, buy the DVD and share them with your friends. After all, friends don't let friends get busted!

Here is a link to Busted on youtube. (The video quality is better on DVDs... Please support Flex Your Rights and buy the video)
Busted: A Citizens Guide to Police Encounters


Note: I am not affiliated with Flex Your Rights, but I support them.

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And this is news to whom?
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jun 6, 2008 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gee,they must be searching Country Music fans now. I'm a lifelong Deadhead and we've been harrassed for better than 30 years. Not just at the venues but along the way there,for hundreds of miles away. If you had Grateful Dead stickers on your car you could count on being stopped, searched and possibly arrested,that is unless you came from a well to do family then you paid a hefty fine and were sent on your way. There were folks dressed in Tye-dye busting folks right and left dragging them off to some kangaroo court set up,usually in the basement,tried sentanced and if you were lucky,let go. They would take needles away from card carring diabetics or tell them they could keep their neccessary items but not come into the show. They always had riot dogs,mussled,at the ready,in short they had a strong police-state presence. You did'nt feel like an Anerican,you were made to feel like a criminal going through another prison checkpoint. The real pisser was we Deadheads knew that all the while we were being harrassed by these assholes with badges there were REAL criminals raping,mugging, breaking and entering and sometimes killing folks, that were'nt being tracked down and caught because it was an easier bust to chase down a stoned Hippie because they put up less resistance and they could recycle the confiscated drugs on their own streets through their own street dealers they used to find out who was buying drugs in their towns. Add to that the fact that a lot of Deadheads were Veterans who had given an arm or leg or was paralized by landmines fighting for Freedom only to come home and find that all the people we killed in the name of the USA did'nt mean shit because we had no Freedom in our own country.
Now that the folks that were passed over by the cops are now getting hassled,it's somehow newsworthy!?? Wake up America!!! We have no Freedom! We have no Liberty. We live in a Police-state run bycorrupt fools that badmouth the very things they are privately into as if they are some how better,smarter and more in line with the country's leadership. They are'nt. They just hide behind a badge and pull some of the most heinous crap and tell us pot smoking Hippies 'We're the cause of the decline of American Society. Sorry shit for brains... we're not the problem, it authority figures acting in a hypocritical way that's killing America. This is Nazi- America. It won't change with a new President because they have no real power because they have to dance to a puppeteer we never see. Cops in music shows are as needed as balls on the chin of the Mona Lisa. But then again most cops are the kids that got bullied in school,beat up after school and have their antagonizers as their chiefs of police. It's time to end the police-state by cutting the funding for police departments from the federal level on down to the beat cops. It's time to resotre our Freedom and Liberty by removing the laws that restrict them. It's time to say,'If you're legal age of your State,then you can do whatever you want as long as you're hurting no one but yourself. That's what real Liberty is. That's real Freedom. We all know we don't have it, We're not bringing it to other lands and there are no plans to let the people have it back. How can we,in all good conscience,send our children off to fight and die for Freedoms we don't have and Liberty's that don't exist for a governance that does exactly what they say they stand against in private. That being a hypocritical,dishonest and down right authoritarian scum. This is what out taxes pay for. So when you get strip-searched to get into an Oakridge Boys show,we should say 'Thank-you sir may I have another!'
Get used to it America, Lady Liberty is getting it in the ass with the Washington Monument while the jackasses we voted in stand back smiling at the carnage, while they get to the show through an entrance that has a doorman and a 'Hello we're glad you came.'
Draft Jeffrey7 for Prez '08

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» RE: And this is news to whom? Posted by: BCcovers
Shelter from the storm
Posted by: lightmind on Jun 6, 2008 9:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"I think a lot of it had to do with all of the agencies getting together before the event and really planning out our attack,"

This quote says it all. We may still believe we have a Republic, but in reality it is only the facade, a glittering store-front that disguises the greed, ignorance, hatred and addiction for power that belies the truth of what we really are. A parallel reality where the insane game of cat-and-mouse, of human dominance and submission is played out endlessly in adrenaline-charged stupor.

We are the enemy, the mice, and we are under attack like never before. America is fractured beyond repair. The totalitarian mindset is fully engaged with no shortage of willing pretorian guards eager to climb the rungs of power and to exercise bootjack authority at the expense of liberty. It is truly come to us-vs-them.

The scales are tipped in favor of the "new world" where barbarism is called law and oppression of freedom is called peace and order.

The facade is fading as it is no longer needed, and as the raw power emerges from behind the mask we shall finally become awakened to the stark reality of the truth.

America was a failed experiment and those who have eyes to see already recognize it. What man touches man eventually corrupts, no matter how noble the effort. Sadly, most americans are fully unprepared for what is coming even though the signs are everywhere. The split american personality manifests outwardly as endless distraction and inwardly as a foreboding that is to be ignored at all expense. We have lost our spirit, our will, and therefore our Freedom.

Even as twilight falls upon our beautiful land the decades of conditioning that filter out the possibility of reason, compassion and truth like a blindfold hide the descending darkness behind the TV's and stores. It is where we spend our last moments of light anesthised and sheltered from the world. The world shall prove to be unforgiving and when we are shocked into reality it will be far too late.

God help us. Peace to you all.

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» RE: Shelter from the storm Posted by: edgeofnowhere
» RE: Shelter from the storm Posted by: HoboHomo
Cops stay away from Wakarusa
Posted by: skylights on Jun 8, 2008 10:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ever since the year with all the drug arrests, the cops have been more hands off at Wakarusa. See http://www.kansascity.com/115/story/651981.html

There are no longer any police checkpoints or surveillance. If you get caught with drugs, you probably won't get arrested. They'll just take the drugs away. But you probably won't get caught.

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uncercover police at music festivals.
Posted by: hannerss on Jun 9, 2008 12:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
while in california at the coachella music festival my friends and i were approached by two older looking girls asking to buy weed. after telling them we didn't have any to sell, and then pointed them in the direction of a "real drug dealer" who offered to sell us "anything we wanted to enhance our concert going experience" they told us it was too hot for them to go chance after him and asked us repeatedly for weed. we told them a million times no, and then eventually we told them we could give them a bowl if they really wanted. after handing them a small amount of weed they gave us 20$. we didn't ask for it or anything. ten second later they came back and arrested us all. they were undercover cops. we had a very minimal amount of weed. they searched our entire campsite, charged us with possesion, possession with intent to sell, and selling. all three of us went to jail and our bail was set at 5000$ each. now we are all out on bail, charged with felonies in california and must appear in june, california also happens to be over 1500 miles awya from where we live.

moral of the story is we didn't know our rights well enough to assert them. when at music festivals people need to be careful about woh they deal with and be cautious about undercover cops because they had an entire sting running at this festival. they were illegally searching people and violating every right i feel like i had. i regret that i was not more informed on what i could do in that situation. just be cautious, that's all.

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Thorough and complete transparency
Posted by: talkville on Jun 10, 2008 3:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Individual, family, group gathering; it makes no difference. The corporate-state now completely surrounds and suffuses the entire population in one form or another. Crowd control is at the top 10 of the agenda and any and all means will be used.

Makes me think of that circumstance way back in WWII in Holland, I believe but am not sure: EVERYONE wore a Star of David. Maybe at a concert.....? It's frickin' MUSIC for goodness sake!!

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