Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jun 2003
Source: Austin Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2003 Austin Chronicle Corp.
Contact:  http://www.auschron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/33
Author: Jordan Smith

WILL RAVE ACT STOMP OUT DRUGS -- OR DISSENT?

Despite assurances by U.S. Sen. Joe Biden, D-Delaware, that his Reducing 
Americans' Vulnerability to Ecstasy Act -- better known as the RAVE Act -- 
would not be applied indiscriminately, it appears the anti-drug measure's 
first practical application since becoming federal law less than two months 
ago has been just that. The RAVE Act amends and expands the existing 
federal "crack house statutes" (also authored by Biden) by enabling the 
government to prosecute any person that makes available any property for 
any use if drugs -- even those being held by a third party -- are found on 
the premises during the event.

The Drug Reform Coordination Network reported June 10 that a fundraising 
concert for the Montana chapters of the National Organization for the 
Reform of Marijuana Laws and Students for Sensible Drug Policy was 
cancelled -- mere hours before it was to begin. A Billings-based Drug 
Enforcement Administration agent had presented the venue's managers with a 
copy of the RAVE Act and threatened them with hefty fines or property 
forfeiture if any drugs were found on the premises during the fundraiser.

According to Allen St. Pierre, NORML's executive director, the intimidation 
created the desired effect: scaring the club owners into canceling the 
fundraiser. The DEA agent "absolutely, positively spelled it out to the 
management of the club that they could be in violation of this 
brand-spanking new law," he said. "This is so unprecedented; that's why 
it's scary." St. Pierre charges that the agents, knowing the fundraiser was 
intended to support drug policy reform groups, stifled the groups' free 
speech rights by pre-emptively shutting down the event. "The First 
Amendment seems clear here; that is a violation," he said. "The government 
can now immediately and proactively stop people [whose views they disagree 
with] from gathering." Both NORML and SSDP, along with the American Civil 
Liberties Union, plan to file suit on First Amendment grounds over the 
Billings case, seeking to have the RAVE Act overturned.

Biden and RAVE Act supporters had long assured opponents that, despite the 
act's breadth, the law wouldn't be applied in this manner. The legislation 
was clearly aimed at quashing the rave scene, but drug reformers and civil 
libertarians quickly cried foul at the scope of the provisions applying to 
any use of property, no matter how "temporary." Potentially, a citizen who 
allows -- even unknowingly -- the use of illegal drugs in his or her home 
can be prosecuted and lose that home under the RAVE Act. Foes of the 
legislation also worried that the law could be used to target any group or 
individual critical of government policy -- a fear that drug reformers say 
has now become a reality in the Montana case.

In 2002, the drug reform lobby was part of a coalition that successfully 
killed the RAVE Act. This year, though, Biden reincarnated the legislation 
(now called the Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act) and inserted it into 
the Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to End the Exploitation of 
Children Today (PROTECT) Act -- the home of feel-good laws like the measure 
creating a national Amber Alert system. President George W. Bush signed the 
PROTECT Act into law on April 30.

The Chronicle was unable to contact the DEA's Rocky Mountain region 
spokesman, but on June 11 Biden spokesman Chip Unruh said that the drug 
reformers have the story all wrong. Instead, Unruh said that a DEA agent 
visited the Eagle Lodge meeting hall, where the fundraiser was being held, 
to express concern that there had been "a lack of proper planning" on the 
part of organizers and that they might not have hired enough "security 
personnel" for the event. When pressed, Unruh said the agent did tell the 
lodge's manager about the newly enacted RAVE legislation because, "knowing 
who they [NORML and SSDP] are," he said, violation of the law was also a 
concern.

Unfortunately, Unruh's explanation gives credence to NORML director St. 
Pierre's allegation that the government's actions were discriminatory and 
violated the organizers' constitutional rights. Unruh's "exactly right: 
they know what NORML is and what it's about," St. Pierre said. "Would they 
have done this to a Jewish community group? Or to a group that plays 
baroque music? What's to stop them from acting out an anti-gay agenda by 
shutting down gay dance clubs?" he asked. "Anybody who claims to be a 
liberal Democrat" -- like Biden himself -- "should ram their heads into a 
hole if they voted for this."
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