Page 4.--Friday, November 9, 1979-The Michigan Daily Criminal code revisions impede constitutional rights By Marc Manason The federal criminal code defines the activities for which people are liable to prosecution by the U.S. government.1 Since states often pattern their criminal laws on the federal example, criminal code revision will affect the legal rights of all Americans more than any other forseeable event. Congress has for years tried to agree upon a plan for comprehensive revision of the federal criminal code. The present code has developed piecemeal over the course of decades, and therefore lacks fundamental coheren- ce. PIRGIM does not dispute the need to replace it. The substance of revision proposals, however, alarms civil libertarians. Working from a formula provided to Congress in the early seventies by At- torney General John Mitchell (S. 1), the evolution of criminal code debate has been marked by attempts to remove it from the stigma surrounding Nixon's assault of our Constitution. SENATOR EDWARD KENNEDY has facilitated this process by per- sonally introducing the latest version of the bill (S. 1722). Kennedy's co- sponsors, Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) and Orin Hatch (R-Utah), are notoriou reactionaries. Thurmond led the walkout of Southern delegates from the 1948 Democratic National Convention to protest discussion of civil rights. He later switched parties. Hatch has vehemently opposed labor law reform, ERA, and virtually all other egalitarian measures. To place Kennedy's action in the most favorable light, his apparent motive is to liberate us quickly from the archaic code now in effect. His design for ac- complishing that noble task, though, leaves much to be desired. Fortunately, there remains some basis for optimism. A House sub- committee chaired by Robert Drinan has worked independently to fashion an alternative proposal. Although it does not offer a panacea, Drinan's sub- committee has deviated from the Nixon-Mitchell line on some crucial points. The Drinan bill has not yet received a number. BEFORE CRIMINAL code revision becomes law, Congress must resolve several civil liberties issues. FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION S. 1722 would recodify existing laws regarding dissemination of classified information. These laws, enacted during the hysteria of the McCarthy era, fail to provide adequately for plication of the law to a small number of essential government services. S. 1722 would severely limit citizens' right openly to discuss military affairs. The bill would include in its description of "inciting or aiding mutiny" any for- ceful criticism of military operations which might be read by servicemen. Peace advocates would be forbidden to demonstrate in front of military recruitment centers or to counsel resistance. The bill would require journalists to reveal their sources of information to police on demand. Any reporter found to ber "concealing the identity" of a suspect would be guilty of obstructing "Richard Nixon resigned as President of the United States more than five years ago. If we therefore choose no longer to kick Nixon around, though, we do so at our own peril. Nixon's vision of an America ruled by "law and or- der"-already partially realized through the ap- pointment of four Supreme Court justices-did not die with hispresidency." These three politicians have each had an influential role in putting the pieces together for a revision of the nation's criminal code. Nixon first proposed Si, while Kennedy and Thurmond have allied together on the bill's latest form. public debate of government activities. The House bill, in contrast, would call for judicial determination of whether released documents were properly classified. The latter version also would allow the defendant to claim at trial that "significance of the information- for public debate outweighed any harm to the national security." The bill would create a new crime of impairing by physical obstruction the performance of a. "government fun- ction." ACLU spokespeople have war- ned that this provision "could cover vir- tually any mass demonstration," so that street-sweeping might displace a constitutionally protected assembly. The House draft would restrict ap- justice. Present law forbears this bur- den on news coverage until much later in the judicial process. S. 1722 would establish a national prohibition of obscene material. Since it identifies obscenity in ternms of "com- munity standards," writers and direc- tors could not risk offending the residents of any town or village in the U.S. As Justice Harlan has noted, ob- scenity is not "a particular genus of speech and press which we can destroy without doing harm to that which is protected." DUE PROCESS OF LAVW It would introduce a crime of obstruc- ting a government function by fraud. Although legal tradition and common sense suggest that each provision of criminal law should encompass only a narrow class of specific activity, the "obstruction by fraud" section does the opposite. According to Yale Law Professor Thomas Emerson, it would allow prosecution for mischief ranging from "giving a postman the wrong directions" to "avoiding surveillance by an FBI agent." S. 1722 threatent prosecution of in- dividuals for false unsworn oral statements made during a police inter- view. Famous U.S. Supreme Court decisions document the coercion inherent in police questioning. To grant police an additional psychological weapon would further disparage the rights of interviewees. S. 1722 would maintain the crime of 'conspiracy to defraud the United States." This dragnet provision breeds selective prosecution of administration- opponents, as evidenced by its use against -Dr. Daniel Ellsberg. Rep. Drinan's bill would delete this section, as well as the Pinkerton rule of co- conspirator liability. S. 1722 would prohibit "solicitation" of crime, thereby punishing ideas never followed by action. Government need not involve itself at that early stage, for the public interest demands attention elsewhere. The bill would remove certain factual issues from consideration by juries. Judges would make a post-verdict determination of which "grade" of a given crime matched circumstances of the offense. SENTENCING S. 1722's sentencing guidelines would result in longer prison terms for many crimes. One study estimates a 60-90 per cent increase in the prison population within three years." The bill largely ignores alternatives to a prison senten- ce, such as community service and restitution to victims. The high costs of prison-wasted human resources, depletion of the public treasury, malad- justment of prisoners-must be eschewed whenever possible. 5. 1722 would allow the government to appeal sentences which the prosecution thinks are too lenient. Appelate judges should not have power to increase the severity of sentences determined by the trial judge, for (s)he has more knowledge of relevant considerations. Richard Nixon resigned as President of the United States more than five years ago. If we therefore choose no longer to kick Nixon around, though, we' do so at our own peril. Nixon's' vision of an America ruled by "law and or- der"'-already partially realized through the appointment of four Supreme, Court justices - did not' die with his presidency. Public protest has thus far blocked enactment of S. 1 and its descendants, but we dare not relent. Clearly, most members of Congress can identify, more readily with police and prosecutors than with oppressed people. Only continued public response can force Congress to value individual freedom. PIRGIM urges you to contact these legislators and make clear your op- position to S. 1722. They are Sen. Donald W. Riegle, Sen. Carl Levin, Sen. Ed-4 ward M. Kennedy, Rep. Carl Pursell, Rep. John Conyers, and Rep. Harold S. Sawyer. Marc Manason is a member of PIRGIM (the Public Interest Group in Michigan). I . .. 01e tMcgan 4ai'4g Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Letters to Vol LXXXX, No.56 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan A one-siesearch ITY COUNCIL'S search for a new city administrator 'has been moving swiftly, and, by all appearan- ces, haphazardly, mired in confusion and marked by a general lack of sub- stantive citizen input. The selection of Sylvester Murray's replacement has so far over-emphasized the role of an outside consulting firm, and the role of the mayor and his business backers. The result has been a selection process of which, sadly, very few Ann Arbor residents can really say they took part. The list of five or six final candidates will be unveiled-tonight as a fait ac- compli, and from the beginning the process has been mishandled and unreflective of citizen concerns. The so-called citizen's committee-sup- posedly to represent community in- terests-was comprised of the same old faces from council, departments, and commissions. And not even that unrepresentative citizens commission had much of an impact on the process. Instead of actively soliciting names of nominees from community groups, students, tenants' groups, University personnel, and business leaders, the commission was presented with a list of 20 nominees, already narrowed down by the Los-Angeles-based con- sulting firm contracted to aid in the search. After the closed process in arriving' at the original list of 20 nominees, from that point on the mayor decided to open up the selection procedure-but just a little.' Mayor Belcher admitted to showing the nominees' resumes to "a few" business leaders in the city, bringing the view of his business bed- . . . - - --- - -LI.1 _ _ . . . of an interest in the next city ad- ministrator as his business friends? Or does he choose instead to ignore the in- terests of Ann Arborites other than those who put him in office? Aside from the secrecy and lack of input in the process, the general ap- pearance of disinterest on the part of some councilmembers must have con- tributed to Belcher's carte blanche to manipulate the selection. Coun- cilmembers who missed deadlines for final recommendations should not ac- cuse the mayor for the lack of com- munication, since it is incumbent upon the members to make sure they know the rules, solicit the necessary infor- mation, and meet their deadlines. If the council members expect the mayor to hold their hands through the process, small wonder the mayor will take advantage of the chance to ramrod the entire procedure. The job of city administrator is too important to be left to such amateurism, disinterest, and manipulation. Citizens and coun- cilmembers should have actively solicited nominees from all quarters. The citizens panel should have been truly representative of the citizenry. The panel also should not have been expected to make their recommen- datons based on compiled resumes, without the benefit of personal inter- views and the chance to question and probe each of the potential candidates. The administrator is the most powerful person in city government, more so than even the mayor. What's more, the next administrator will be in the delicate position of having to be responsive to a Republican-heavy To the Daily: I never would have thought it possible that I would stand to defend the Daily and its writers, but Friday's letter to the editor concerning Peoplemania has in- spired me to write and defend a certain idea of humor and an ap- proach to different kinds of news that does, in fact "aid hum to the Daily." The author of the let- ter correctly says that Peoplemania is a copy of the popular People pages in other newspapers. He/she then goes on to say thatEric Zorn has no right to place his opinions in this sort of "news." Ah, but it is apparent to all the Peoplemania is primarily a humor column (otherwise, we hope, such news would not be in the paper at all), and it has been obvious since it began that Zorn chooses his stories and makes his remarks in much the same way that a comedian or syndicated columnist does. The very name of the column is a~warning that it is not straight news. Zorn is accused of using only cute sarcasm to amuse his readers. "Sarcasm," writes the correspondent, "is the humor of idiots; most ten year olds can use if effectively." NOT SO. Only a pasty, humorless person would fail to realize that sarcasm and satire have been the makers of some of our greatest humorists-Twain, Wilde, and Dorothy Parker among them-and cetainly the readers of these men and women were not insulted. In the second place, r Peoplemania is not distinguished by mindless sarcasm: The jokes are wry, scathing, and ironic (though, of course, sometimes they miss altogether), and often marked by clever turns of the phrase and interesting jux- tapositions. It is further an insult to anyone with any taste at all to compare the humor of Bob Talbert (of the Free Press) to that shown in Peoplemnania. Talbert is hackneyed, never sardonic or sarcastic in any clever way, and his cliche column is in absolutely no way reminiscent of Peoplemania. Only malevolence would evoke this sort of com- Peoplemania is funny: To some it is. It is a parody and it is cleverly written, and, as a humor column, it disgraces Erma Bombeck, Bob Takbert, and others you could care to mention. -David Ayres To the Daily: The recent decision by the Israeli Supreme Court to have the settlement of Eilon Moreh dismantled is to be commended. But the ruling made one thing very clear, an echo far beyond the legality or illegality of the set- tlement; and that is, Israel's judiciary is an independent one. This is important to note. In no other middle eastern nation would a high court dare to over- turn a government policy. In no other middle eastern country would the government obey; not Jordan, not Syria, not Egypt, not Saudi Arabia. Only in Israel does -democracy flouish. I was at Elion Moreh during the summer. To spend even an hour there, talking with the settlers, gives one a greater insight into the situation than any article in Time or continuous coverage on the network news. Make no mistake, by no means does Eilon Moreh stand upon fertile agriiltural land. The mountain that the settlement is built upon in uninhabitable in its natural state. The ground is covered totally by rocks. Walking is nearly impossible. Any level ground that exists today is the result of dynamiting. So why did they want to settle Eilon Moreh? To look down from the mountains into the valley is to look back in time nearly 4000 years. Much of the Bible happend in that valley. It was the great pathway from the north to the south. Also in that valley is the city of Nablus, whose Hebrew name is Shechem. Shechem was one of the principal cities in an- cient Isreal. The city today, however, con- tains one of the largest concen- trations of Arab population in Judea and Samaria. To stand atop a mountain and gloat at the people below as the Gush Emunim settlers of Eilon Moreh did, only served to raise tensions and hinder the cause of peace. The Israrel Supreme Court, by its The.I troversy." Its author suggests that political protesters (and this is a political issue) ought not to be allowed to call others to join their cause. Because boycotting por- nography, which the author ad- mits to be dehumanizing, would reduce economic demand and, consequently, supply advocating a boycott becomes "censorship." In the name of the First Amen- dment the author would deny the First Amendment right to free association-people may protest, but they may not ask others to join them. People may comment on the status quo, but not attempt to change it through widespread support. Carried to its fullest extent, this argument means farmworkers cannot advocate the boycott of lettuce, grapes, or any other product. No one can urge others to stop buying Nestle products (although they can say what a shame it is that Third World babies are dying). No one could have demanded the end of the Vietnam War (they could, however, have intellectual discussions of the political and economic ramifications). Abolitionists could not have called for the end of slavery; nor, a century later, could blacks have demanded equality. Indeed, the colonists could have ad- vocated economic freedom and revolution in the Declaration of Independence.. The fact is that racism, sexism and oppression is expressed in "art" does not place it above protest or economic pressure. To say in any context that people may express their views as lone as they don't ask anyone to act is to rob Americans of an important traditional means of social change. Free speech is a hollow right if it cannot be used to affect social change. To allow political speech, but not the solicitation of political association is a major step on the road to repression. -Kathi J. Machie Law School Student To the Daily: The following telegram was sent yesterday to UAW Local 600 executive board from University of Michigan student groups and individuals : "We hail the Rouge workers victory in driving the two KKK- )aily p.m. This is ann outrage and deserves to be met by mass ac- tion. "We the undersigned organizations and individuals' urge the UAW Local 600 to take" the lead to call for mass' labor/black mobilizations to smash the Klan and Nazis. We commit ourselves and' organizations to build support for' the anti-Klan rally on Sat., Nov.' 10 and bring contingents of' students to demonstrate against Klan terror in Detroit." - "Endorsed by: "Larry B. Thompson, Minorityo Hall/Pilot Program, U. of M.;' Richard D. Garland, The Black Representative of Minority Student Services; Margarits' Torres, Hispanic Rep., Minority Student Services; Dorothy Goeman, Native Americat Student Association; Black' Student Union; Black Dental' Students; Spartacus Youth: League; James W. Toy, Human° Sexuality Advocate, U. of M., Jack Hall, MSA representative; Carol Brown, Vice-President of the Tenants Union*; Anthony T." Chambers, President, Alice Lloyd Minority Council; Sheila Ritter, Francie Ferguson, North' American Students of Cooperation*; Asian American" Association; PatriciaK Yeghissian, Teaching Assistant; Carol A. Cassidy, librarian, U of' M; Joseph L. Graves, Dept. of Ecology and Evolution, U of M; Robert Currie; Luther H: Buchele." Come to the demonstration' against Klan terror on Saturday' Nov. 10, at 1 p.m. at Kennedy Square, downtown Detroit! Spartacus Youth Leauge "organizations listed for identification purl poses only. To the Daily : I am appalled at the audacity with which the Daily has used my name. On the evening of October 20, I was struck in the head, knocked unconscious and taken to the hospital with no' further comment. After two full days of tests in the hospital, where I was accessible to any reporters, I was released. To further the pain of a concussion, I found that my name had been smeared through a Daily article. The thoughts of two students were used to portray a