ACLU of Massachusetts Warns Boston Residents About Warrantless Searches of Their Homes (11/20/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
BOSTON – Citing serious concerns
about the threat to civil liberties posed by the Boston Police Department’s
“Safe Homes” program, the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts today
launched a neighborhood outreach campaign to educate people about the
constitutional rights they are being asked to surrender by complying with the
police program. “Safe Homes” calls on parents to allow detectives to search
their private homes without a warrant.
“The ACLU is concerned about our youth and safety in our
neighborhoods, but this program does an end-run around basic constitutional
protections and we question whether it will effectively reduce the number of
guns on the street,” said Carol Rose, Executive Director of the ACLU of
Massachusetts. “This is not a benign gun collection program.”
According to media reports, the consent-to-search scheme,
dubbed the “Safe Homes” program by the Boston Police Department, would call upon
parents in primarily minority neighborhoods to allow detectives into their homes
without a warrant to search for guns in their children’s
bedrooms. Reportedly relying on tips from neighbors, the police will knock
on the doors of homes where teenagers live and try to convince parents or legal
guardians to let them search the home without a warrant.
In response, the ACLU of Massachusetts today launched a
public education program that includes distributing “Know Your Rights” fliers in
affected neighborhoods in an effort to warn people about the dangers of
consenting to a search without a warrant.
“People need to understand that they do not have to consent
to let police officers into their private homes,” said Amy Reichbach, Racial
Justice Advocate for the ACLU of Massachusetts. “If you say no, the police
should leave.”
People are free, of course, to waive their constitutional
rights, but the law requires that any such waiver must be knowing and
intelligent, said the ACLU. People need to understand what they are giving
up. The ACLU is concerned that residents may be misled by the stated
purpose of the search and the suggestion that they will not be prosecuted for
possession of the guns.
“Residents should know that they could face serious legal
consequences if they waive their constitutional right to request a search
warrant before letting police into their homes,” said Reichbach. Although the police have promised not to charge teenagers
with unlawful gun possession unless the firearm is linked to a crime, they may
still charge other members of the household or bring charges based on other
crimes arising from evidence seized during a search.
“You waive important constitutional protections if you let
the police search your home without a warrant,” said Reichbach. “First, if the
police find a gun, they may test it and arrest anyone who lives in your home if
that gun is linked to a certain kind of crime. Second, if the police find
drugs or anything else illegal in your home, they may charge someone who lives
in your home, including your child, with a crime. Finally, anything the
police find in your home may lead to school discipline for your children,
including suspension or expulsion.”
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