Posted on 11/30/2005 11:34:30 AM PST by JTN
The first time she was asked to show identification while riding the bus to work, Deborah Davis was so startled that she complied without thinking. But the more she thought about it, the less sense it made.
That's how Davis, a 50-year-old Colorado woman with four grown children and five grandchildren, ended up getting dragged off the bus by federal security officers, who handcuffed her, took her to their station, and cited her for two misdemeanors. Davis, who is scheduled to be arraigned on December 9, is risking 60 days in jail to show her fellow Americans that they don't need to blindly obey every dictate imposed in the name of security.
The public bus that Davis took to her office job in Lakewood, Colorado, crosses the Denver Federal Center, a 90-building complex occupied by agencies such as the U.S. Geological Survey, the Interior Department, the General Services Administration, and the Bureau of Land Management. "The facility is not high security," says Davis. "It's not Area 51 or NORAD or the Rocky Mountain Arsenal."
Guards nevertheless board buses as they enter the complex and demand IDs from passengers, whether or not they're getting off there. According to Davis, the guards barely glance at the IDs, let alone write down names or check them against a list.
"It's just an obedience test," says Gail Johnson, a lawyer recruited to represent Davis by the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado. "It does nothing for security."
Ahmad Taha, supervisory special agent with the Federal Protective Service, which is in charge of security at the Denver complex, said guards there have been checking the IDs of bus passengers since 9/11. He declined to explain the security rationale for this ritual or to comment on Davis' case.
After complying the first day she rode the bus, Davis began saying she had no ID and was not getting off at the Federal Center anyway. One Friday in late September, a guard told her she would not be permitted to ride the bus anymore without ID.
Before taking the stand that led to her arrest, Davis says, "I spent the weekend making sure that the Constitution hadn't changed since I was in the eighth grade, and it hadn't....We're not required to carry papers....We have a right to be anonymous."
Last year the Supreme Court ruled that a suspect in a criminal investigation can be required to give his name. But it has never upheld a policy of requiring ordinary citizens to carry ID and present it on demand. Davis "wasn't doing anything wrong," notes Johnson. "She wasn't suspected of doing anything wrong. She was a completely innocent person on the way to work."
Johnson plans to argue that the ID requirement violates Davis' First Amendment right to freedom of association, her Fourth Amendment right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures, and her Fifth Amendment right not to be deprived of liberty (in this case, freedom of travel) without due process. A civil case raising similar issues in the context of airport ID checks is scheduled to be heard by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit the day before Davis' arraignment.
"Enough is enough," says Davis. "Our rights are being taken away a little piece at a time, and people are letting it happen."
Pulling out your driver's license may seem like a slight imposition, but the justification is even slighter. Since anyone can flash an ID, the procedure does not distinguish between people who pose a threat and people who don't. It does not even distinguish between people who are visiting the Federal Center and people who are merely riding a bus that happens to pass through it.
In a free country, citizens have no obligation to explain themselves to the government as they go about their daily lives. It's the government that owes us an explanation.
If she leaves the bus she must show ID: If she doesn't show ID she must leave the bus.
OTOH, she could just show the guard her ID and be merrily on her way.
But according to the way security apologists interpret the rules, they still have to present vehicle registration for every vehicle they may happen to own.
I notice that you made two assumptions in this very post.
I am going to go out on a limb here and suppose that by "security apologist", you are referring to me.
To permit entrance to a Federal facility, the FedGuv has the power to ask for whatever they want. They also have the power to bar people who fail to cooperate with their rules. For practical purposes, they ask for Drivers Licenses and Vehicle Registration because the regulation largely applies to drivers. But the bus riders are no less on the facility. I dare say that the folks who work there have a facility-issued ID.
I suppose the web-page could go on for three and a half pages about what exactly constitutes proper ID for a bus rider, but what would be the point? Don't they have the power to ask for what they want in order to grant access to their own facility?
Suppose you walked up to the White House and demanded to be let in without showing ID. How far do you think you would get? Should they let you in anyway?
Now suppose you walked up to the Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, instead... Oh wait a minute, you can't, because it doesn't exist anymore.
So noted. I find these threads to be interesting because they allow for ready identification of those who will willingly support anything they are told to do by "the authorities".
I guess you are referring to the statements that I prefaced with "I guess", "I imagine" and "I suppose". These are not assumptions, obviously, because I am prefacing them with "I guess", "I imagine" and "I suppose".
Such statements are to be evaluated objectively, that is why they are set apart in this way.
.
So why isn't she being charged with simple trespassing?
What was she charged with? All the paper said was "two petty offenses". Perhaps one is trespassing and the other is failure to obey a lawful order of a Police Officer?
The person doing the arresting was a Federal Protective Service Officer, BTW. They are Police Officers with full powers of arrest. But you don't see a FPS officer every day, so it is possible they had the officer on that bus that day to deal with this woman, who had refused to show ID several days in a row.
Well, I gotta boogie. I'll catch up with Y'All later...
When Deb is arraigned in U.S. District Court on the 9th of December, she will most likely be charged with the following federal criminal misdemeanors: 41 CFR § 102-74.375 (Admission to Property) and 41 CFR § 102-74.385 (Conformity to Official Signs and Directions).
That seems reasonable. There are laws for admission to a federal facility, and she broke them.
Now I really gotta go...
A 90 building complex?? In just one city? I wonder if the government could use a few dozen more buildings in Colorado.
A bit of clarification, please. Are you refering to some kind of chip or other subdural implant, or maybe something like a retina scan, or fingerprint?
I ask because I have issues with all of the above, but I can tell you for true and certain right now that I will never, ever, voluntarily have any kind of chip or other device like that implanted in my body, nor will anyone in my immediate family. That, in my opinion, is going too far.
While all assumptions are not suppositions, all suppositions are assumptions. And the meaning of assumption in discussion here is: supposition, guess, imagining.
No implants, no papers, no cards. Technology is increasing very, very fast, and pretty soon, quick, on the spot, highly thorough and accurate DNA tests should be available. Especially if we make it a priority. That way we can know who we're dealing with. If a job applicant shows up for a nursing home job, gives some other person's name and employment history (so reference checks will come back fine), and fake photo IDs to match, you'll be able to quickly determine of the person is who s/he says he is, or if s/he's really the convicted mugger or rapist who's wanted on a parole violation, and is eager to beat or rape some helpless patients (and BTW, our nation's nursing homes are full of low level staffers who fit this exact description).
Sadly, we do not. Already decided.
Now suppose you walked up to the Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, instead...
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