Tattered Cover v. Thornton Reversed 343
TheMatt writes "In a victory for all those who like the First Amendment, the Colorado Supreme Court today reversed
and remanded 'Tattered Cover v. Thornton'.
The case concerned the Thornton police attempting to use a search warrant to gain access to the book-buying records of a suspected criminal. The Tattered Cover asserted First Amendment rights and refused to comply with the warrant.
It is believed this will be heard by the US Supreme Court eventually." I can only imagine what the Tattered cover's legal bill must be like.
That sound you hear..... (Score:5, Funny)
is the death shriek of an innocent server running Apache on a PII 450 somewhere in central Colorado... ;)
May God have mercy on Tattered Cover's admin.
Re:That sound you hear..... (Score:3, Funny)
New .gov negotiating position: "Well, their legal bills didn't bankrupt 'em, but their bandwidth bills sure will!" ;-)
Re:That sound you hear..... (Score:5, Informative)
The main branch in downtown Denver has four stories of books (plus a basement). The fifth floor is a well-reviewd restaurant that serves fantastic garlic potatoes (among other things). Oh, and they have a coffee bar which serves the best cappucino in Denver.
The decor is tasteful and friendly; a big selling point in the Tattered Cover is that they provide lots of big, over-stuffed chairs and let you sit down and read before you buy. In some ways, it feels more like a library than a book store. Their selection of books is phenomenal; There's only one book I've been unable to obtain from them, and that was "On the Erythraean Sea" by Agatharchides of Cnidus. (Contains the only contemporary account of gold-mining techniques in Ptolemaic Egypt; hardly New York Times Best Seller List material.)
From what I've heard, they have a yearly revenue of a couple million. So, chances are that their web server is more likely to be a dual-cpu RAM-out-the-wazoo behemoth than a PII 450.
Re:That sound you hear..... (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry to be a pain but they're actually running [netcraft.com] Netscape-Enterprise/3.6 SP3 on Solaris. Uptime looks good.
Re:This is a WORD file!!! (Score:2)
Seems every week there's a story on Slashdot about how we can all ditch MS Office.
Judgeorama? (Score:5, Funny)
"The prosecution can bite my shiny, metal ass. Case dismissed."
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:2)
"Move for a change of venue, since we cannot possibly trust anyone known as Justice Bender to uphold the law faithfully. I'm sure that this case would be better handled by Justice Forsale."
-Puk
p.s. That said, I think Justice Breaker would be a great name for a pro wrestler.
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:2)
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:2)
"Ok, he's guilty."
"What! Wait, don't I get to defend myself?"
"Don't be an asshole."
Re:Judgeorama? (Score:2, Funny)
It's a shame that this sham has gone this far. (Score:4, Insightful)
Reading, music and movies are all unsafe at any speed. Let me know if you find a hobby I can enjoy without feeling someone's eyes on my back.
Re:It's a shame that this sham has gone this far. (Score:3, Interesting)
Who do you think will win this fight?
Tattered cover... (Score:3, Funny)
makes me want to start a computer company called Dented Boxen
Re:Tattered cover... (Score:4, Informative)
Ambiance, baby, ambiance. (Score:2, Interesting)
Man, I can lose hours in there.
Re:Ambiance, baby, ambiance. (Score:2)
It is most likely pro bono work (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It is most likely pro bono work (Score:2)
"ACLU Foundation of Colorado"
My guess is that the Tattered Cover didn't pay a dime.
Re:It is most likely pro bono work (Score:2)
Here's the
Re: (Score:2)
Whoohoo! (Score:2)
I mean, used bookstores are just *rolling* in dough.
Where to send them money (Score:2, Informative)
Their legal fund (according to one of their clerks, anyway) is with:
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression
139 Fulton St #302
NY, NY 10038
Or you can call them at 303-322-7727 or 303-436-1070. I'm not listing their toll-free number here cause it costs them money for people to call them on it
You CAN order books directly from them online at www.tatteredcover.com. They have been very helpful in finding books for me that B&N, Boreders, and Amazon have said were out of print.
Re:Whoohoo! (Score:2, Insightful)
In this case (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:In this case (Score:2)
It protects the right of association, and by implication the right not to be found guilty by association.
What is more, the constitution as a whole protects the right to privacy, as violating our privacy is a power not expressly granted the government except in very narrow cases (and therefor, according to the 10th amendment, explicitly denied the government).
It is a refreshing surprise that at least one court is attempting to hold the government to the constitution, something the government really hasn't done since prohibition and the creation of the FBI. How long this will last is anyone's guess, but I for one am glad Tattered Cover has the courage to at least fight the good fight, for all our sakes.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
And implicitly recognized (not granted) as a right of the people by the Ninth Amendment.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Just because something is not explicitly denied does not make it implicitly granted.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
It does, or can, at least theoretically, when it comes to construing the Constitution, because of the wording of the 10th amendment. The federal government has no business making laws about shoplifting cheeses; that is taken care of just fine on the local level anyway.
An argument can certainly be made that the federal government is overstepping its bounds here in one way or another without resorting to utter anarchy and cheese thievery.
Meghan
Re:In this case (Score:5, Interesting)
Read the actual decision in the word document. It's pretty plain there that the expression of speech includes consuming speech without harassment, which implies a right to privacy. While it would be better explicit, this is what a woman's right to choose is (mistakenly, IMO) based on. (I'd prefer it be based on property rights, but that's a whole 'nuther argument).
There's a lot of constitutional scholarship that has found a right to privacy implicit in the other rights, including those expressed in the First Amendment. This decision attempts to set up a test, essentially that the hated "compelling state interest," must be determined in an adversarial proceeding before seizure occurs--that means not just the DA and a judge in a darkened room, but a hearing giving the affected party a chance to object. And on the basis of the facts of the case, the Court did not find compelling state interest sufficient to outweigh the constitutional harm.
The Supreme Court may yet overturn it, but it would be an interesting precedent if upheld. That would significantly curtail the ability of police to do various seizures without a suspect's knowledge. Since several of those things (e.g. wiretaps) have passed constitutional muster before, that's where I see this to be in danger of being overturned, rather than a lack of a right to privacy.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Not that I don't believe in a right to privacy -- explicitly (at least partially) defined in the 3rh and 4th amendments.
Re:In this case (Score:2, Informative)
Judge Bender held that the Colorado Constitution granted wider free speach protections than the First Amendment.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Jackbooted thugs (Score:2)
That's Civil Liberties 101, and should be familiar to anyone arguing this case.
That's why the American Library Association (ALA) has long held that patron's reading selections should be considered Constitutionally protected. Just as it is unconstitutional for the government to prevent the publication or distribution of a book, it should be considered unconstitutional for the government to post a cop in the stacks whose icy stare and hand on the butt of his gun must be endured to pick up a book, and even the threat of the cops reviewing a list of who has read a book should be done with great caution.
The Tattered Cover sells books, instead of just lending them out, but the same arguments apply. IMHO, the ONLY reason this case has gotten as far as it has is that the Thornton police are asking for records about a specific purchase with evidence left at a crime scene, not just asking for a list of all purchasers of a specific book.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Re:In this case (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Re:In this case (Score:2)
There's nothing about the usage of a warrant that implicitly provides a high standard of protection -- it simply means that a judge signed off that the existing standard has been met. What happened in this case is that the court decided that the standard used in awarding the warrant was unacceptably low, and created a new, higher one. That standard (the fulfilment of which the warrant represents) is the important thing, not the piece of paper that means it's been met.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Say I stole your credit card and went on a killing spree across the country. They think I'm headed for Mexico, so they get a warrant to see your credit card purchases to see if I'm buying gas and big gulps in a trail headed south, or north.
Of course, this should be banned because of two reasons. 1) They could discriminate against me for drinking big gulps (a member of the jury is an evian drinker) and 2) You don't want them to know you subscribed to internet porn.
Now, if the government abuses these privileges, then its time for a revolution (or election, heh). You can't have a government that's not allowed to govern.
Re:In this case (Score:2)
Unless the purchase of a specific book leads to clear, logical (and not just "well, that's the sort of nasty book you'd EXPECT a drug maker to buy" circumstantial arguments) evidence-based arguments... it really shouldn't be relevant.
Now, if the book were FOUND, and it had meth all over it, and the prosecution wanted to show that THAT specific book was purchased by a defendant, then that might be material. But unless they can show that it's not just circumstantial, then it's fishing...
An uninformed opinion (Score:2)
Anyhow, the upshot is, I'd appreciate someone pointing me to the background for this story so I can remove the "un"...
Re:An uninformed opinion (Score:2)
http://w3.trib.com/FACT/1st.lev.tatteredcoverrec.
Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org) [sethf.com]
Re:An uninformed opinion (Score:5, Informative)
OK, here's the story. The local police busted a meth lab and found how-to drug manuals in a trailer, along with receipts from the bookstore. But the receipts didn't name the purchaser of the books, so the local DA subpoenaed the bookstore's customer records. The bookstore fought the subpoena and won.
free speech and anonymity (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:An uninformed opinion (Score:2)
Speakers require listeners (Score:2)
That's why the right to listen (or read) in peace is considered an integral part of the freedoms of speech and press. The government can't send the cops to harass listeners, or the FD to hit them with a fire hose, or even the FBI with sound gear they used in Waco.
For a counterpoint, you should still be able to find people with living memory of fascist and communist regimes which had "freedom of speech"... but anyone foolish enough to be caught listening would be sent to the Gulag. Or the death camps.
Re:An uninformed opinion (Score:2)
The upside of doing your homework is that you don't make embarassing statements like but saying that anonymity is required for true freedom of speech seems a tenuous link at best. As long as you're protected from being censored or censured for your opinions, I fail to see how anonymity is a legitimate requirement for free speech.
Re:This begs an interesting question: (Score:2)
This means that the police can't hassle the audience - they can't question you, or demand you identify yourself, or even (arguably) photograph the crowd in an aggressive manner. This is especially noteworthy in light of the recent disclosure that the Denver Police (and remember that it was a Denver DA that signed off on this after the cop's own DA refused to) have been maintaining overly-broad files on "gang" members.
The police can still act in the name of compelling public interest, e.g., keeping people from spilling onto the street, from blocking passage by others, etc.
Go Tattered Cover! (Score:2)
Re:Congratulations. (Score:2)
My god...someone give this man a medal! (Score:4, Interesting)
Mr. Bender, would you please run for Congress?
Re:My god...someone give this man a medal! (Score:2)
Civil Liberties (Score:2)
Tattered Cover (Score:5, Informative)
From a computer books perspective they are neither the best nor the worst but certainly they do carry them.
Re:Tattered Cover (Score:2)
But for overall selection, no bookstore beats TC, in my experience. (I'm still boycotting Amazon.com.) Plus I get the warm fuzzies of supporting an independent bookseller, and one which isn't afraid to stand up for its rights or the rights of its customers.
Eric
Re:Tattered Cover (Score:2)
I've lived in a lot of cities and never come across another general interest bookstore as complete as the Tattered Cover. Cheers and congratulations are due all around.
Screw the Tattered Cover (Score:3, Funny)
Do it for the children.
Every time I excercise my second amendment rights by purchasing a firearm, I am required to fill out a government form with all sorts of personal information. The seller is then required to get permission from the FBI and Colorado Bureau of Investigation to complete the transaction.
The government has illegally been keeping these records. After being conditioned that this is "reasonable," -- often by first amendment extremists -- why should I give a flying rat's ass if it happens to other people?
Satire people, Satire (Score:2)
The fact that the writer does not even coherently stick to the same point from beginning of post to end should clue people in that it was meant as humor.
Yeah! (Score:2)
Whoops! I call Goodwin's Law! [tripod.com]
En Banc (Score:2, Informative)
Plaintiff-Appellant:
TATTERED COVER, INC., d/b/a THE TATTERED COVER BOOKSTORE,
v.
Defendants-Appellees:
THE CITY OF THORNTON; and THORNTON POLICE OFFICER RANDY GOIN, in his official capacity.
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED
EN BANC
JUSTICE BENDER delivered the Opinion of the Court.
JUSTICE COATS does not participate
Tattered Cover (Score:2)
All this from what was a tiny corner bookstore maybe 15 years ago.
Between their just utter badassness, and this - I don't see myself buying books anywhere else for a long long time. oh, and note: they have an affiliate program - so if you value companie slike this, dump amazon, and add them.
Supreme Court (Score:5, Insightful)
The Colorado Supreme Court restricted the ability of Colorado police to execute a search warrant.
First, there is a doctrine that says if there is an independent state ground for the ruling, then there is not a basis for Supreme Court review. This doctrine has less applicability when a Constitutional right is being allegedly violated. However, nobody says that the Colorado police have a Constitutional right to the search -- if anything the ruling tends to support Constitutional rights.
Second, Federalism doctrine, which the current U.S. Supreme Court favors, would tend to lead to the conclusion that the U.S. Supreme Court should let the Colorado Supreme Court rein in the Colorado police if it wants to.
There will be other cases in the future, and the Supreme Court may well hear one. Just not this one.
Re:Supreme Court (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Supreme Court (Score:2)
From an article at the denver post (Score:2)
So it isn't just a first amendment issue.
HTML version of court opinion (above is MSWord) (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.cobar.org/CFwebFiles/Content/dspOpinion . fm?OpinionID=560
[cobar.org]
Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org) [sethf.com]
A great decision (Score:2, Insightful)
. . . the law enforcement need for the book purchase record in this case was not sufficiently compelling to outweigh the harm that would likely follow from execution of the search warrant, in part because law enforcement officials sought the purchase record for reasons related to the contents of the books that the suspect may have purchased. (emphasis added)
In other words, the police weren't interested in any criminal acts related to the purchase of these books, but rather if there was any content in the books which the prosecution could use to strengthen their case against the defendant.
To draw an Internet analogy, this would be akin to the cops forcing an ISP to turn over their Web proxy logs, in order to determine if a suspected terrorist visited a site on bomb-making, instead of finding hard-copy instructions in the terrorist's apartment (which certainly could be used as circumstantial evidence).
This decision makes a lot of sense. It would be one thing if the suspect had bought a dictionary, then used it to brain a little old lady during a mugging--then the police would have the right to obtain purchase records in order to prove the perp bought the murder weapon. But simply to say that "he bought The Anarchist's Cookbook, therefore he must be guilty"--that is a dangerous assumption, and clearly represents an attack on our rights to free expression.
Re:A great decision (Score:2)
Re:A great decision (Score:2)
>and highlighted, on the table of said drug lab,
>surrounded with the equipment and chemicals
>required to make drugs.
Even then, it's hardly relevant!
Why bother to support your local bookstore? (Score:5, Insightful)
Can you imagine Barnes & Noble, Borders, or Amazon.com doing what the Tattered Cover has done?
Re:Why bother to support your local bookstore? (Score:2)
Subpoena, not search warrant! (Score:5, Informative)
Pages 9 and 10 of the ruling make it clear:
---
[Officer Goin] and DI McFarland then served the Tattered Cover with a DEA administrative subpoena. [...] Using such a subpoena was ordinarily a successful technique for DEA officers, though such a subpoena lacks any legal force or effect.
[...]
INSTEAD OF ATTEMPTING TO OBTAIN AN ENFORCEABLE SUBPOENA, Officer Goin approached prosecutors from the Adams County District Attorney's office to get a search warrant for the Tattered Cover. Several prosecutors at the Adams County DA's office refused to sign off on the warrant, voicing concerns about its scope and subject matter. [...]
Without informing the Adams County DA's office, Officer Goin sought approval for his search warrant from the Denver DA's office. As approved by a Denver DA, the warrant authorized a search of the Tattered Cover for information related to the transaction in question, and for records of any other transaction involving Suspect A during the thirty-day period before the police searched the trailer. A Denver county court judge then approved the warrant.
---
So, basically the Officer was a dope who tried to do an end-run around the law. Oops!
This is what bugs me the most... (Score:2)
Officer Goin searched the Tattered Cover's webpage and discovered that it offered both books for sale. He and DI McFarland then served the Tattered Cover with a DEA administrative subpoena. This subpoena demanded the title of the books corresponding to the order and invoice numbers of the mailer, as well as information about all other book orders ever placed by Suspect A. Using such a subpoena was ordinarily a successful technique for DEA officers, though such a subpoena lacks any legal force or effect.
So, the DEA can make up any 'subponea' that they want to, and as long as no one questions it, they can do what they damn well please? This just doesn't seem right. Lawywers? Anyone?
Best part of ruling (Score:2, Interesting)
I wish they had come up with this back in the Crypto-as-Munition export control days.
NB. This is from pp. 17-18 of ruling [state.co.us].
Freedom to think (Score:3, Informative)
For example: "Without the right to receive information and ideas, the protection of speech under the United States and Colorado Constitutions would be meaningless."
Or: "Everyone must be permitted to discover and consider the full range of expression and ideas available in our 'marketplace of ideas.'"
Footnote 14 in the text of the decision is an absolutely brilliant quotation of Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis regarding the "freedom to think as you will and speak as you think".
The decision is well worth reading. It's not in some sort of complex legalese. Far from it, it is very clearly stated.
-h-
Re:Freedom to think (Score:2)
Or: "Everyone must be permitted to discover and consider the full range of expression and ideas available in our 'marketplace of ideas.'"
Does the above apply only if the expressions and ideas are written in ink on paper?
What if it were to apply to expressions and ideas written in ones and zeros?
Thanks, TC (Score:4, Insightful)
Think about that the next time you buy books. The big chains, amazon, et. al do not have this tradition of protecting your information - in fact they are looking at ways to make use of it for marketing purposes. Its the independent bookstores around the country who really care about defending the First Amendment, because that reflects in the quality of literature we will see, and ultimately reflects on our individual freedom to write and speak as we choose. When was the last time you saw "Banned Books week" at amazon.com or Barnes & Noble?
Now we have a good legal precedent to back us up. Thanks, Tattered Cover!
Before you break out the champagne, ... (Score:5, Informative)
[editorandpublisher.com]
Details here.
The FBI was never here, go about your business.
Re:Before you break out the champagne, ... (Score:3, Insightful)
A modest proposal (Score:5, Insightful)
The Termcap Manual [tatteredcover.com], by Richard Stallman.
Support the folks that regard as important the same ideals you regard as important. Amazon is not your friend. The Tattered Cover is. They are fighting the good fight, and at no small cost to themselves. You should thank them by sending them your business and your friends' business.
Re:A modest proposal (Score:2, Insightful)
Someone please mod this up, I'm out of mod points atm.
How many of those people slamming microsoft for a monopoly will turn around and buy from Amazon, hmm?
Re:A modest proposal (Score:3, Interesting)
Thinking in Java [tatteredcover.com], Bruce Eckel
This begs an interesting question (Score:2, Interesting)
Does the chilling effect of someone cataloguing that speech which you are privy to, and using it against you, abridge that right?
What's the big deal? (Score:2)
Believe it or not sometimes it is necessary for law enforcement officials to invade our privacy and that's why a warrent is required. A warrent must be issued by a Judge and if the warrent isn't given out capriciously then it should be honored.
Even that doesn't work... (Score:5, Interesting)
Radio Shack was the original offender in this 'collecting your address to serve you better' BS, but it seems to be picking up steam as 'the thing to do'.
So, pay cash, and remember "3600 N. Clark Street, Chicago Illinois, 60657".
-----
Re:Even that doesn't work... (Score:2)
Re:Even that doesn't work... (Score:2)
In London, that would be the address of a branch of Abbey National Bank (though there is a brass plaque on the outside wall with an engraving depicting a fictional detective).
Re:Even that doesn't work... (Score:2)
This is a modest hassle, but far less than you would think.
Re:Tattered cover is a GREAT bookstore! (Score:2)
Parenthetically - the Tattered Cover used to use a QNX-based system to do all their inventory and point-of-sale stuff. I was in the Tattered Cover last week but I can't recall what they used.
Re:1st Amendment? Not 4th? (Score:3, Interesting)
(IANAL but...) freedom of speech has traditionally been interpreted as protecting a dialog of ideas (as opposed to a monologue). In other words, not only are your rights to express an idea protected, but also your right to receive ideas lawfully expressed by others. (Otherwise, the government could simply say: "Freedom of speech? Sure, talk all you want. Just step into this soundproofed room first.") Freedom of expression without reasonable freedom of channels of expression is more or less useless.
In this case, it seems the court found that, among other things, the warrant placed an undue burden on the bookstore in its role as a channel of constitutionally protected speech.Re:1st Amendment? Not 4th? (Score:2)
Yes, this question has been addressed elsewhere. I'm sure other answers
have been more eloquent and informed. But the question, here, even when
answered elsewhere, begs to be answered here.
This actually falls, in a roundabout way, under both abridgements of the
right to speech without punishment (And how that has been weakened), and
the right of the press to print without the editorial oversight of those
who would be our moral parents.
It ought, however, to also fall under the 4th amendment right you placed
in bold. This has to do with the blurring of "papers" and "effects", as
the constitution was written before so many agencies that would not have
been considered protected regions for personal privacy started keeping a
huge amount of private information.
Honestly, there is a justification for, and a general acceptance of, the
right of parties charged with maintaining peace, order, law, and justice
to obtain certain information, in restricted circumstances, regarding an
otherwise private detail of an individual being investigated in criminal
matters. With public oversight of the process, and without a willful or
careless dissemination of that private information, this becomes a valid
and sensible tool.
The problem here, in this case, is that the agency in question failed to
reasonably limit the scope of their search. The key is "and no warrants
shall issue
is some degree of lattitude, and in many cases, they may have been right
in their blanket request for "purchase records of X from store Y", where
store Y was of a particular class of store and one of those records was,
with a reasonable degree of probability, known to contain information on
a specific purchase. It's a double bind, you see. They know the record
in question exists, but not the date, and if the case is still uncertain
and the suspect still just that (in theory, until conviction), a privacy
argument (protecting against careless dissemination) could justify their
blanket request. Local police might even be thought of as unable to, in
most cases at least, abuse this particular data, though there are cases,
especially where "Christian Values" is a buzzword for "We're going to be
a little facist state here, and if you don't like it, you can go move to
some big city, you hear?", where that is decidedly not true.
So... had they asked only for documentation of that specific purchase, a
reasonable request if not made spuriously as part of a trolling attempt,
they would have been right. But they asked for all records, which is an
obvious troll.
Now the first ammendment comes into the issue, and compounds the search,
which was already iffy, with what could easilly fall under harassment of
the free press. Amending the rights of the press doesn't just mean that
the publication of a paper which says, "Bush is utterly incompetant, and
that was painfully obvious from his original strategy in Afghanistan, as
all of you should have seen, and would have, if you weren't so blind and
stupid with rage. And I'm sure, if he were carefully investigated, that
it would turn out he was still snorting coke," which exercises the free
criticism of a public personage, even to the point of near slander (that
would be the coke line, the first part was a fact, not an accusation) is
protected. It also means that the publisher of said paper has the right
not to have goons hired by a corrupt and facist president harassing him,
or police spending more time investigating him (as opposed to more time,
in the case of someone who has publicly voiced an intention to kill that
devolved primate in question, and done so in a credible manner, checking
very carefully to make sure the second individual is not actually trying
to do so... but not, for example, checking to see if he smokes pot), and
in that respect, monitoring the consumption of published goods is indeed
a 1st amendment issue. It is an issue of principal. I read. I read in
great volume, and from a great many fields. A watchdog agency might get
some funny ideas from what I read, though not internally consistant ones
if they tried to make a criminal pattern of it. But more important than
whether they might get suspicious (and the degrees in physics and a wide
range of hobbies and my current work in artificial nerves explain all of
the nonfiction, aside from the anthropological elements, which are taken
from my dad, an anthropologist... so they can just back off, thank you,)
is whether they might try to profile. I have a friend who the DEA tried
to harrass because he'd been purchasing botanical books and supplies, of
a potentially drug related (and RPGs lead to satanic cults) nature. The
SOBs just ignored the fact that he was a botanist (PhD) and worked for a
legal agricultural hemp research program on the big island of Hawai'i, a
tendancy that's common with those criminal thugs.
He ceased to do business with Barnes N Noble after that visit.
Now, would you trust an agency like the DEA to be honest, or even legal,
in its use of personal information about your reading habits? Would you
purchase books that might be "considered suspicious"? Even if they were
not for criminal purposes? What about books that might be embarassments
if publicly displayed? I buy certain books relating to recovering from,
and dealing with, certain severe forms of child abuse. I don't but them
for myself. I'm recovered just fine, thank you, thanks to some luck and
a few remarkable people... but some of the people I buy them for are not
yet able to admit that it happened to them, at least in the face of this
judgemental and often revolted public, and don't believe that there will
never be some suspicious and unscupled person snooping through the books
they have purchased, and outing them.
Hell, the same probably applies to gay rights books...
And you want an agency with that track record pushing the limit of this?
The people who publish such books might as well hang their hats, if that
happens. No one will risk buying the books if big brother is watching.
Tattered Cover commited no crime (Score:2)
The guy with the meth lab could claim 4th Amendment rights since he was being investigated for a criminal act.
But the Tattered Cover, technically, was a witness whether he legally purchased a legally published book on criminal acts. They were not, and could never be, charged with any crime. Since they weren't in jeopardy, the 4th Amendment doesn't apply.
In contrast, had the "anti-pornography" amendment passed a few years ago then they could be charged with a criminal act for selling certain books, and the 4th Amendment would apply. Fortunately that Amendment was shot down, in part due to the efforts of the owner of the Tattered Cover.
Re:Why would they withhold the purchase info? (Score:2)
Re:Why would they withhold the purchase info? (Score:2)
Re:I just don't get it (Score:2)
Re:Link Describing the situation (Score:2)
Re: Kneejerk slashdot response (Score:3, Insightful)
Now the cops want the bookstore to give them a list of all people who bought the book. Where's probable cause? Why should the cops know anything about my reading habits?
If we live in a climate where unpleasant books we buy bring us to the attention of the State, do we still have freedom of expression?
The State no longer will need to ban books. Ashcroft merely says "We will be subpoena'ing all bookstore records for purchasers of Book X."
As the article says, books are different from fertilizer.