College girls, bottled water and the emerging American police state – Rutherford Institute
What do college girls and bottled water have to do with the emerging American police state? Quite a bit, it seems.
Public outcry has gone viral over an incident in which a college
student was targeted and terrorized by Alcohol Beverage Control agents
(ABC) after she purchased sparkling water at a grocery store. The girl
and her friends were eventually jailed for daring to evade their
accosters, who failed to identify themselves or approach the young women
in a non-threatening manner.
What makes this particular incident significant (other than the fact
that it took place in my hometown of Charlottesville, Va.) is the degree
to which it embodies all that is wrong with law enforcement today, both
as it relates to the citizenry and the ongoing undermining of our rule
of law. To put it bluntly, due in large part to the militarization of
the police and the equipping of a wide range of government agencies with
weaponry, we are moving into a culture in which law enforcement
officials have developed a sense of entitlement that is at odds with the
spirit of our Constitution—in particular, the Fourth Amendment.
The incident took place late in the evening of April 11, 2013. Several
University of Virginia college students, including 20-year-old Elizabeth
Daly, were leaving the Harris Teeter grocery store parking lot after
having purchased a variety of foodstuffs for an Alzheimer’s Association
sorority charity benefit that evening, including sparkling water, ice
cream and cookie dough, when they noticed a man staring at them as they
walked to their car in the back of the parking lot.
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