D.C. Police Say Courts Hamper Alcohol Enforcement
Police officials in the District of Columbia said recent court
rulings have made it nearly impossible to enforce the city's law
banning underage drinking, the Washington Post reported June 17.
According to Lt. Patrick Burke, the police department's traffic-safety
coordinator, a May 25 court injunction only allows police officers
to issue civil citations to minors who possess or drink alcohol.
The minor punishment, he said, essentially gives youth a free pass
to purchase and drink alcohol.
"If I was a young person in Maryland or Virginia, I'd be here
in D.C. trying to get a drink right now, because there's nothing
we can do about it," said Burke before a council hearing on
strengthening the city's law. "We can't enforce the law right
now, so there is a free ride in the city."
The bill under consideration by the D.C. City Council would amend
the underage drinking law by allowing criminal and civil penalties.
"This is a very serious problem," said council member
Sharon Ambrose (D-Ward 6), a co-sponsor of the bill. "We want
to make sure we have strong deterrence."
However, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of the National
Capital Area is against the measure, arguing that there is no justification
for criminalizing the possession of alcoholic beverages by people
younger than 21.
ACLU attorney Arthur Spitzer said fingerprinting, arresting, and
giving a minor an arrest record is too stiff a penalty.
But Burke countered, "I'd rather see a young person crying
in handcuffs rather than a young person crying at the scene of a
crash because their friend is dead. I'm sick of it. We see too many
young people killed."
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