BRIDGEPORT, Connecticut - June 1 - The American Civil Liberties Union today
welcomed a ruling by a federal court expanding protections to needle exchange
program participants. The court expanded the scope of a previous order, which
prohibited the Bridgeport Police Department from harassing or arresting
individuals who possess needles, ruling that other forms of injection equipment
are protected as well.
“The message of this much-needed ruling should be heard
nationwide,” said Adam Wolf, an attorney with the ACLU Drug Law Reform
Project. “Public health should be
placed above punitive posturing.
Law enforcement should be chiefly concerned with the public welfare,
which is markedly increased by respecting the rights of needle exchange
participants and acknowledging the vital importance of these exchanges to public
safety.”
Today’s ruling expands the scope of a previous court order
issued in 2001 in the case Doe v. Bridgeport Police Department. Based on the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth
Amendment protection from unreasonable search and seizure, the 2001 order
blocked the Bridgeport Police Department (BPD) “from searching, stopping,
arresting, punishing or penalizing…any person based solely upon that person’s
possession of up to thirty sets of injection equipment.”
But as U.S. District Judge Janet C. Hall, who presided over
both the initial case and the recent hearing, said during a recent courtroom
session, “My order may well have been written in invisible ink.”
While Judge Hall expanded protection to include general
injection equipment, such as cotton balls and items used to heat drugs, and
chastised the BPD for failure to diligently adhere to the initial order, the
court denied the ACLU’s motion to hold the BPD in contempt of court.
Testimony introduced in the case documented repeated
instances of police threatening, arresting and assaulting individuals based
solely on possession of injection equipment or participation in a local needle
exchange program. Furthermore,
police routinely confiscated syringes and needle exchange participants’
identification cards – thereby disallowing effective participation in the
exchange program and directly endangering the public’s safety.
The Bridgeport Syringe Exchange has been in operation for
over a dozen years. The program,
whose members are issued identification cards, dispenses clean needles in return
for used ones and also makes available materials, such as citric acid, that
decrease the dangers of infection associated with intravenous drug use. Just as importantly, the exchange serves
as a bridge to treatment for its many participants by connecting them to other
public health services and encouraging them to enter drug treatment
programs.
“The police can contribute to public health and safety by
supporting efforts that engage injection drug users in disease prevention
programs that simultaneously serve as conduits to treatment for addiction,” said
Robert Heimer, Ph.D., a professor at Yale School of Public Health and a
nationally renowned expert on the emergence and prevention of infectious
diseases. “In the long run, this is
the only reliable means to decrease addiction at the community level.”
Every scientific study of needle exchange programs has
concluded that access to sterile injection equipment is a proven way to reduce the spread of
deadly, infectious blood-borne diseases.
Organizations supporting increased sterile syringe access include the
National Academy of Sciences, the American Medical Association, the National
Institute of Health (NIH), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
Needle exchange programs have been found to reduce HIV
transmission by more than 30 percent, according to the NIH, and to increase the
likelihood of injection drug users to enter treatment programs by five times,
according to a study published in the Journal of Substance Abuse
Treatment.
Additionally, the CDC reported that through 2003, 26 percent
of AIDS cases in the United States among people age 13 or older arose from
exposure to injection drug use.
Among women, a staggering 61 percent of AIDS cases stemmed from injection
drug use.
The ruling was issued by the U.S. District Court for the
District of Connecticut. The BPD
and its Acting Chief, Anthony Armeno, were defendants in the case.
The court’s ruling expanding
protection to include general injection equipment can be viewed online at:
www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/harm/25717lgl20060531.html
Additional background on
needle exchanges and their contribution to public health is available at:
www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/harm/10850res20060531.html
The ACLU’s motion
documenting BPD abuses and seeking to expand the scope of needle exchange
protection may be viewed online at: www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/harm/25610lgl20050928.html
A post-trial brief
reviewing the evidence introduced at the trial may be viewed at: www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/harm/25613lgl20060203.html
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