News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Feds Weed Out Drug Paraphernalia Sites |
Title: | US: Web: Feds Weed Out Drug Paraphernalia Sites |
Published On: | 2003-02-25 |
Source: | CNET News (US Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 23:53:43 |
FEDS WEED OUT DRUG PARAPHERNALIA SITES
The U.S. Justice Department on Monday said it indicted 11 Web site
operators for allegedly selling illegal devices including bongs and holders
for marijuana cigarettes.
Attorney General John Ashcroft told reporters that the government would ask
a U.S. district court in Pittsburgh to point the sites to a Web page at the
Drug Enforcement Administration ( http://www.dea.gov/ ) explaining why they
were taken offline, a new twist in crime-fighting.
"With the advent of the Internet, the illegal drug paraphernalia industry
has exploded," Ashcroft said. "The drug paraphernalia business now thrives
not only in small shops but it is now accessible in anyone's home with a
computer and Internet access...Quite simply, the illegal drug paraphernalia
industry has invaded the homes of families across the country without their
knowledge."
The prosecutions, called Operation Pipe Dreams, represent the federal
government's boldest attempt yet to shutter Web sites that sell drug
paraphernalia. Under current federal law (
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/21/863.html ) , that category includes
any product that is "primarily intended" for use with illegal drugs,
including water pipes, roach clips, chillums, bongs, and small spoons used
with cocaine.
Ashcroft said that a total of 27 people in a dozen states had been charged
with selling illegal drug paraphernalia in an investigation led by the Drug
Enforcement Administration and centered in Pittsburgh. The list of Web
sites targeted in coordinated raids that took place on Monday includes
PipesForYou.com, OmniLounge.com, ColorChangingGlass.com, 420now.com and
PuffPipes.com.
As of Monday afternoon, many of the sites were still reachable.
OmniLounge.com describes itself as a "one-stop head shop for a wide
selection of water pipes and smoking accessories at great prices," and
AHeadCase.com, which says it has two stores in southern California, sells
water pipes and drug test kits.
If the court orders the sites to be redirected, Ashcroft said, they will
point to a DEA.gov ( http://www.dea.gov/ )Web page that says: "By
application of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, the Web
site you are attempting to visit has been restrained by the United States
District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania pursuant to Title
21, United States Code, Section 853 (e)(1)(a)."
Keith Stroup, director of the National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws, said it was ridiculous for the Justice Department to be
indicting bong sellers when the United States is on high terror-alert
status. "This latest enforcement initiative is primarily an expression of
extremism of this particular attorney general," Stroup said. Ashcroft "is a
right-wing zealot. Now I'm not a fan of the Bush administration, but I have
to think that President Bush and most of his serious advisers have far more
serious work to focus on right now than whether someone's selling rolling
papers and roach clips."
"You simply cannot outlaw rolling papers," Stroup said. "They're perfectly
legal assuming that they're used with tobacco. Those of us who smoke
marijuana can always find rolling paper to roll our joints with. All this
is going to do is criminalize a class of young entrepreneurs."
In a 1994 case ( http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/92-903.ZO.html
)that arose out of the same law, the Supreme Court ruled that the statute
was not unconstitutionally vague and that prosecutors do not need to "prove
specific knowledge that the items are 'drug paraphernalia' within the
meaning of the statute."
Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (
http://www.epic.org/ ) said redirecting Web visitors to DEA.gov raises
novel legal issues. "It sounds like this is a concluded drug operation
segueing into a new sting operation," he said. "In effect, the defunct Web
sites become electronic flypaper for those looking for illegal drug
paraphernalia, reporters covering the story, and people who have trouble
spelling in Google."
The DEA.gov site's privacy policy ( http://www.usdoj.gov/privacy-file.htm
), which is the same as other Justice Department sites, permits it to give
personal information about visitors to law enforcement. It says "we may
take additional steps to identify you based on this information, and we may
share this information, including your identity, with other government
agencies."
The U.S. Justice Department on Monday said it indicted 11 Web site
operators for allegedly selling illegal devices including bongs and holders
for marijuana cigarettes.
Attorney General John Ashcroft told reporters that the government would ask
a U.S. district court in Pittsburgh to point the sites to a Web page at the
Drug Enforcement Administration ( http://www.dea.gov/ ) explaining why they
were taken offline, a new twist in crime-fighting.
"With the advent of the Internet, the illegal drug paraphernalia industry
has exploded," Ashcroft said. "The drug paraphernalia business now thrives
not only in small shops but it is now accessible in anyone's home with a
computer and Internet access...Quite simply, the illegal drug paraphernalia
industry has invaded the homes of families across the country without their
knowledge."
The prosecutions, called Operation Pipe Dreams, represent the federal
government's boldest attempt yet to shutter Web sites that sell drug
paraphernalia. Under current federal law (
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/21/863.html ) , that category includes
any product that is "primarily intended" for use with illegal drugs,
including water pipes, roach clips, chillums, bongs, and small spoons used
with cocaine.
Ashcroft said that a total of 27 people in a dozen states had been charged
with selling illegal drug paraphernalia in an investigation led by the Drug
Enforcement Administration and centered in Pittsburgh. The list of Web
sites targeted in coordinated raids that took place on Monday includes
PipesForYou.com, OmniLounge.com, ColorChangingGlass.com, 420now.com and
PuffPipes.com.
As of Monday afternoon, many of the sites were still reachable.
OmniLounge.com describes itself as a "one-stop head shop for a wide
selection of water pipes and smoking accessories at great prices," and
AHeadCase.com, which says it has two stores in southern California, sells
water pipes and drug test kits.
If the court orders the sites to be redirected, Ashcroft said, they will
point to a DEA.gov ( http://www.dea.gov/ )Web page that says: "By
application of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, the Web
site you are attempting to visit has been restrained by the United States
District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania pursuant to Title
21, United States Code, Section 853 (e)(1)(a)."
Keith Stroup, director of the National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws, said it was ridiculous for the Justice Department to be
indicting bong sellers when the United States is on high terror-alert
status. "This latest enforcement initiative is primarily an expression of
extremism of this particular attorney general," Stroup said. Ashcroft "is a
right-wing zealot. Now I'm not a fan of the Bush administration, but I have
to think that President Bush and most of his serious advisers have far more
serious work to focus on right now than whether someone's selling rolling
papers and roach clips."
"You simply cannot outlaw rolling papers," Stroup said. "They're perfectly
legal assuming that they're used with tobacco. Those of us who smoke
marijuana can always find rolling paper to roll our joints with. All this
is going to do is criminalize a class of young entrepreneurs."
In a 1994 case ( http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/92-903.ZO.html
)that arose out of the same law, the Supreme Court ruled that the statute
was not unconstitutionally vague and that prosecutors do not need to "prove
specific knowledge that the items are 'drug paraphernalia' within the
meaning of the statute."
Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (
http://www.epic.org/ ) said redirecting Web visitors to DEA.gov raises
novel legal issues. "It sounds like this is a concluded drug operation
segueing into a new sting operation," he said. "In effect, the defunct Web
sites become electronic flypaper for those looking for illegal drug
paraphernalia, reporters covering the story, and people who have trouble
spelling in Google."
The DEA.gov site's privacy policy ( http://www.usdoj.gov/privacy-file.htm
), which is the same as other Justice Department sites, permits it to give
personal information about visitors to law enforcement. It says "we may
take additional steps to identify you based on this information, and we may
share this information, including your identity, with other government
agencies."
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