Pubdate: Sat, 25 Jan 2003
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Section: Page A08
Copyright: 2003 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Charles Lane

HIGH COURT TO REVIEW ANTI-DRUG POLICY

Rules Intended To Strictly Control Visitors To Richmond Public Housing Project

The Supreme Court announced yesterday that it will decide whether a tough 
Richmond anti-drug policy that bans unauthorized visitors from the streets 
and sidewalks in a public housing project violates the Constitution.

The court will hear the case of Kevin L. Hicks, who was convicted of 
trespassing in 1999 after he tried to visit his girlfriend and their child 
at the Whitcomb Court apartment complex despite earlier warnings from 
police to keep out.

Hicks, who said he intended to deliver disposable diapers to his child, 
appealed. He argued that the policy, which barred entrance by non-residents 
who have no "legitimate business or social purpose" for coming to the 
apartments, was so broad that it could be used to bar disfavored political 
leafletters or religious groups.

The Virginia Supreme Court ruled 5 to 2 in his favor, and the state 
appealed to the Supreme Court. In his petition, Attorney General Jerry W. 
Kilgore argues that Hicks has no right to challenge the policy as a threat 
to free expression since he was not engaged in any "expressive activity."

The court has permitted such challenges in free-speech cases as an 
exception to the rule that people can complain only of a law's application 
to their own conduct. But the precise contours of that exception are 
unclear, and Kilgore says this case shows the need to limit it.

In addition, Kilgore argues that government should be permitted to place 
greater restrictions on citizens when it acts as a landlord than in other 
situations.

Hicks's lawyer, Steven D. Benjamin, said there is not enough information in 
the case to say for sure whether Hicks or others have not been denied free 
speech under the Richmond policy.

The case, Virginia v. Hicks, No. 02-371, which will be argued in late April 
and decided by the end of June, presents the court with a new twist on an 
issue it has visited before -- how to balance the rights of individuals to 
be free from police harassment against the rights of communities to be safe 
from drug-related crime, in a context where the victims of police excesses 
and the victims of crime are likely to be black or Hispanic.

Last year, in a case cited frequently in Kilgore's petition, the court 
ruled unanimously that public housing authorities could evict tenants for 
drug use by friends and family even if the tenants were unaware of it.

But in 1999, the court, by a vote of 6 to 3, struck down a Chicago 
ordinance that permitted police to arrest people for loitering if they 
appeared to be involved in gang activities.

The Richmond policy was enacted in July 1997 as part of a crackdown on 
open-air drug markets that had taken hold of Whitcomb and other public 
housing sites in the city. Hicks was convicted of a drug charge in 2001 
after serving 12 months for repeatedly violating the no-trespassing policy. 
but now has a job, according to Benjamin.

The policy created a "gated community" at Whitcomb, minus the gates. The 
city council closed several streets and sidewalks around the apartment 
buildings and deeded them over to the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing 
Authority, which then erected "No Trespassing" signs. The council gave 
police the right to arrest any non-resident who "cannot demonstrate a 
legitimate business or social purpose for being on the premises."

The exception was for those who had a note from Whitcomb Court's manager, 
Gloria Rogers. There are no written rules to guide her decisions.
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