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Busting
Toe-Tappers: An Insane Use of Our
Law-Enforcement Resources
By: Arianna Huffington
In the consensus judgment of America's 16 intelligence
agencies, the terrorist threat to our homeland is
"persistent and evolving," placing our
country in "a heightened threat environment."
Given that chilling assessment, isn't it the height
of madness to use America's finite law enforcement
resources to seek out and arrest people for tapping
the foot of a cute undercover officer in a restroom?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not wild about walking into
a public restroom and seeing a couple using the
a stall for something other than, as Sgt. Dave Karsnia,
the arresting officer in the Craig case put it,
"its intended use."
But that is not what Larry Craig did. If he had,
someone in the restroom could have done what most
people do when they see a law being broken: Go get
a cop.
And as it happens, since Craig was arrested in an
airport, presumably there were plenty of law-enforcement
officers nearby looking for, you know, real threats
- like explosives or folks on a Watch List. Assuming,
that is, they weren't all hunkered down in other
bathrooms across the airport, protecting the public
against people who might be thinking about having
sex.
Let me be clear: I'm no fan of Larry Craig. Indeed,
I disagree with almost everything he stands for.
And I'd much rather he not be in the United States
Senate. But I'd also rather that his exit had been
the result of his constituents' voting on his ideas
and policies, instead of a ridiculous sting operation
in an airport bathroom.
At least it's nice to see that, while the cable
networks have been giving the incident their usual
nuanced treatment, bloggers across the political
spectrum have taken a step back to look at the real
issues here.
Garance Franke-Ruta of The American Prospect asks:
"Was there anything criminal about Sen. Larry
Craig's gestures if they suggested a desire for
consensual lewd behavior of some kind with the man
in the adjacent restroom stall?" Her answer:
no.
Conservative University of Minnesota law professor
Dale Carpenter, blogging at the Volokh Conspiracy,
agrees with her: "Disorderly conduct is a notoriously
nebulous crime, allowing police wide discretion
in making arrests and charges for conduct or speech
that is little more than bothersome to police or
to others."
As Carpenter and Franke-Ruta both point out, soliciting
someone to have sex with you is not a crime in Minnesota.
If Craig had solicited someone, which then led to
a round of bathroom sex, then yes, arrest them.
But that's not what happened.
It's unsettling that more people here in the land
of the free aren't at all discomfited at leaving
it up to the prognostication skills of Sgt. Karsnia
and his crack team of B-men to determine what crimes
people might have committed if not for the mind-reading
and derring-do of Minneapolis' Special Forces Bathroom
Unit.
Conservative pundit Mark Steyn thinks that Craig
was up to no good, but says, "Karsnia sounds
just as weird and creepy: a guy who's paid to sit
in a bathroom stall for hours on end observing adjoining
ankles. I'd rather hand out traffic tickets."
But beyond them being weird and creepy, these kinds
of stings also have a huge opportunity cost to them.
There clearly are very serious potential threats
to our safety to be found in airports - outside
of bathroom stalls. Is sending Sgt. Karsnia into
the men's room to spend all day trying to get other
men to look at him and tap his foot really the best
way to use our limited law enforcement resources?
And just how much money is Minneapolis/St. Paul
spending on sting operations like this one? Just
since May, 40 men have been arrested on allegations
of illegal sexual activity at the same airport.
And how much taxpayer money in total is being allocated
across the country by local police to protect us
from people whom the Sgt. Karsnias of the world
think might, at some point, commit a crime?
Here's another question to ask: Does the Minneapolis
police force look around its members for officers
they think might be attractive to gay men? Or do
they specifically search out recruits who would
make good undercover "twinks," "bears"
and "silver foxes"?
And, yes, I know, Sen. Craig pleaded guilty. But
given the inevitable humiliation that would have
ensued had he challenged this arrest, it's not hard
to imagine that he felt he had no other choice.
The same goes for the thousands of other men who
have been snared in these wasteful sting operations.
But those of us who prefer that our public servants
go after actual lawbreakers rather than use our
resources to humiliate gay people do have a choice.
And we should make it clear that we want our police
going after terrorists - not toe-tappers.
Since the news about Craig broke, the media focus
has been on his sexual perversions - it's time to
turn the spotlight on the perverted priorities of
America's law enforcement community.
Arianna Huffington's e-mail address is arianna@huffingtonpost.com.)
© 2007 Arianna Huffington.
Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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