Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

November 27, 2007

Supreme Court Allows Warrantless Searches of Welfare Applicants' Homes

AlterNet
If you apply for public assistance in San Diego County, Ca., you are granting agents of the government the right to come into your house, unannounced and without a warrant, and examine every nook and cranny to make sure that you're not committing welfare fraud. The usual "proof of need" is no longer applicable. If you are poor in San Diego County, you are presumed guilty until proven innocent.


[..]Around the time of the American revolution in the late 1700's, English jurist William Blackstone opined that "It is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer."


With their refusal to hear the San Diego County case yesterday, the Supreme Court once again turned Blackstone on his head - in the view of the Roberts court, it is better that ten innocents suffer than one guilty person escape.

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