Pubdate: 13 March 1999 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 1999 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Emile Schepers Note: responding to Mayor Richard Daley's announcement that he would copy New York City's plan to confiscate the cars of suspected drunk drivers. DEFENDING RIGHTS CHICAGO -- In Gary Washburn's Page 1 March 4 article in the Tribune, "Daley out to seize autos in DUI cases," there is mention of the city's effort to change the 1982 Alliance Consent Decree, which prohibits police spying on the political opposition. The phrasing used--"Daley also has run afoul of civil libertarians as he seeks to ease restrictions on the surveillance of possible criminal activity. . ."--is not accurate. What the city seeks is permission to spy on any and all organizations it chooses to classify as radical. The city already has full authority for any criminal investigation that it might want to carry out, whether this involves private citizens or public figures. Under the old Red Squad, groups like the League of Women Voters and the Methodist Church were considered dangerous radical hotbeds and were subjected to intensive police surveillance and even disruption of their constitutionally protected activities. The danger of a return to such outrageous practices is what "civil libertarians" such as myself consider to be foul. Further referring to the anti-loitering ordinance, which the city is now contesting in the Supreme Court, you should note that the anti-crime group CANS (Chicago Alliance for Neighborhood Safety) re-examined the basis on which the police made claims of the effectiveness of this ordinance, and came to conclusions radically different from those of the police, calling into question the real impact on crime of this ordinance. In all of these things, the mayor uses the citizens' fear of street crime and miscellaneous mayhem to justify a cavalier attitude toward the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution, and to get around the fact that in this country, the accused are supposed to be considered innocent until proven guilty. Emile Schepers, Program director, Chicago Committee to Defend the Bill of Rights - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea