By A. Barton Hinkle
Elizabeth Daly went to jail over a case of bottled water.
According to the Charlottesville Daily Progress, shortly after 10 p.m. April 11,
the University of Virginia student bought ice cream, cookie dough and a
carton of LaCroix sparkling water from the Harris Teeter grocery store
at the popular Barracks Road Shopping Center. In the parking lot, a
half-dozen men and a woman approached her car, flashing some kind of
badges. One jumped on the hood. Another drew a gun. Others started
trying to break the windows.
Daly
understandably panicked. With her roommate in the passenger seat
yelling “Go, go, go!” Daly drove off, hoping to reach the nearest police
station. The women dialed 911. Then a vehicle with lights and sirens
pulled them over, and the situation clarified: The people who had
swarmed Daly’s vehicle were plainclothes agents of the Virginia
Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. The agents had thought the
sparkling water was a 12-pack of beer.
Did
the ABC’s enforcers apologize? Not in the slightest. They charged Daly
with three felonies: two for assaulting an officer (her vehicle had
grazed two agents; neither was hurt) and one for eluding the police.
Last week, the commonwealth’s attorney dropped the charges.
The
agents’ excessive display of force is outrageously disproportionate to
the offense they mistakenly thought they witnessed: an underage purchase
of alcohol. But in a sense, Daly got off easy. A couple of weeks after
her ordeal, a 61-year-old man in Tennessee was killed when the police
executed a drug raid on the wrong house. A few weeks later, in another
wrong-house raid, police officers killed a dog belonging to an Army
veteran. These are not isolated incidents; for more information, visit
the interactive map at www.cato.org/raidmap
.
They
are, however, part and parcel of two broader phenomena. One is the
militarization of domestic law enforcement. In recent years, police
departments have widely adopted military tactics, military equipment
(armored personnel carriers, flash-bang grenades) — and, sometimes, the
mindset of military conquerors rather than domestic peacekeepers.
The
other phenomenon is the increasing degree to which civilians are
subject to criminal prosecution for noncriminal acts, including
exercising the constitutionally protected right to free speech.
Last
week, A.J. Marin was arrested in Harrisburg, Pa., for writing in chalk
on the sidewalk. Marin was participating in a health care demonstration
outside Gov. Tom Corbett’s residence when he wrote, “Governor Corbett
has health insurance, we should too.” Authorities charged Marin with
writing “a derogatory remark about the governor on the sidewalk.” The
horror.
This
follows the case of Jeff Olson, who chalked messages such as “Stop big
banks” outside branches of Bank of America last year. Law professor
Jonathan Turley reports that prosecutors brought 13 vandalism charges
against him. Moreover, the judge in the case recently prohibited Olson’s
attorney from “mentioning the First Amendment, free speech,” or
anything like them during the trial.
In
May, a Texas woman was arrested for asking to see a warrant for the
arrest of her 11-year-old son. “She spent the night in jail while her
son was left at home,” reports Fox34 News. The son never was arrested.
Also in Texas, Justin Carter has spent months in jail — and faces eight
years more — for making an admittedly atrocious joke about shooting up a
school in an online chat. Though he was plainly kidding, authorities
charged him with making a terrorist threat.
Federal
prosecutors also recently used an anti-terrorism measure to seize
almost $70,000 from the owners of a Maryland dairy. Randy and Karen
Sowers had made several bank deposits of just under $10,000 to avoid the
headache of filing federal reports required for sums over that amount.
The feds charged them with unlawful “structuring.” Last week, they
settled the case. Authorities kept half their money to teach them a
lesson.
“I
broke the law yesterday,” writes George Mason economics professor Alex
Tabarrok, “and I probably will break the law tomorrow. Don’t mistake me,
I have done nothing wrong. I don’t even know what laws I have broken. …
It’s hard for anyone to live today without breaking the law. Doubt me?
Have you ever thrown out some junk mail that … was addressed to someone
else? That’s a violation of federal law punishable by up to five years
in prison.” Tabarrok notes that lawyer Harvey Silverglate thinks the
typical American commits “Three Felonies a Day” — the title of
Silverglate’s book on the subject.
As
The Wall Street Journal has reported, lawmakers in Washington have
greatly eroded the notion of mens rea — the principle that you need
criminal intent in order to commit a crime. Thanks to a proliferating
number of obscure offenses, Americans now resemble the condemned souls
in Jonathan Edwards’ “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” — spared
from perdition only by the temporary forbearance of those who sit in
judgment.
“What
once might have been considered simply a mistake,” The Journal
explains, is now “punishable by jail time.” And as 20-year-old Elizabeth
Daly has now learned, you can go to jail even when the person making
the mistake wasn’t you.
A. Barton Hinkle is senior editorial writer and a columnist at the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
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