There’s enough grist in this story about an overzealous police raid on a parentally-unsupervised high school party to power about a half-dozen mills. What really dropped my jaw is this:
Static blares and bounces around the room of Gary Franks’s first-floor law office. Franks, who represents several of the teens busted at last month’s house party, stares at a black-screened monitor and listens intently.
Through a public information request, Franks obtained copies of the video and audio tapes from the night of the police raid. They are mostly useless. But he suffers through them, picking up snippets of conversation amid vast expanses of white noise.
He forwards ahead to a scene in which an officer can be heard ordering the teenagers to go home.
“I don’t want anybody driving if they’ve been drinking,” the cop says.
Franks slaps the palm of his hand on his desk. “If!” he exclaims. “If they’ve been drinking!”
Franks wants to know why the teens were ticketed when the officers didn’t even know if they were drinking alcohol. And why, Franks asks, were teens such as Tarantino busted for possessing alcohol and then handed back their car keys and told to drive home?
Sugar Land Police Chief Lisa Womack has publicly defended her officers several times. She says that the large quantities of alcohol found in the house, and the minors’ proximity to it, is sufficient evidence to issue the MIP citations.
“It’s not okay for a minor to be at a party when alcohol is present, even if they’re not drinking,” Womack says. “Essentially, if there’s enough to go around, it doesn’t matter whether or not they had alcohol on their breath.”
The defense attorneys dispute this reading of the law, contending that a mere presence of alcohol is not enough. They will build their cases around the meaning of “possession,” which is defined in the Texas penal code as having “actual care, custody, control, or management.”
“If the police chief doesn’t know the law any better than that, then the officers under her must be poorly trained,” says Nina Schaefer, an attorney representing one of the students.
If it’s really “not okay for a minor to be at a party when alcohol is present, even if they’re not drinking”, then it seems to me that the police forces in Sugar Land and elsewhere need to step up their enforcement efforts. I’m willing to bet that the vast majority of backyard barbecues that took place across Texas this past Memorial Day weekend featured both beer and minor children. Should they all have been busted? Okay, maybe there’s an exception for when the minor’s parents are also in attendance, but surely there were plenty of cases where a kid was present without a parent in tow. Where does Chief Womack care to draw the line?
I mean, if you really want to get technical, then the Womackian interpretation of minor-in-possession laws would put every professional sporting event in Texas in jeopardy. I attended Yankee games with just my friends before I turned 18. I’m sure teenagers today go to Astro and Ranger and other games by themselves. If it’s really “not okay for a minor to be at a party when alcohol is present, even if they’re not drinking”, then should Minute Maid Park ban anyone under the age of 21 who doesn’t bring a parent or guardian along, or should they just stop selling beer?
I feel pretty confident that the defense will prevail in these cases. Until that happens, though, I think I’d want to check with the local police before cracking open a brewski in Sugar Land. I wouldn’t want to put any passing teenagers in danger of getting an MIP citation while I’m taking the pause that refreshes.
“I’m willing to bet that the vast majority of backyard barbecues that took place across Texas this past Memorial Day weekend featured both beer and minor children. Should they all have been busted?”
Sometimes, my mind plays tricks on me. I thought this read that beer and minor children were barbecued this past Memorial Day weekend. 🙂
We’ve left my son with the 15-year-old babysitter, and we had alcohol in the fridge — I guess the police could’ve arrested her (and us) for an MIP.
Actually, according to the TABC you only have to be 18 to be a bartender/waiter in Texas and handle alcohol. (you have to earn your certification though, a “duh-that-was-easy” 4-hr test) I worked *IN A BAR AS A BARTENDER* last summer and I was 18. I’m doing it again this summer and i’m only 19. Not only should I be arrested for working the 6pm-2am shift during which parties, dancing, drinking, and brawls generally occur, the whole wait staff (of most restaurants in the state, mind you)needs to be hauled off to the county slammer under Chief Womack’s rules. “Fuck the drunk-driving customers Deputy Dan, get them waiters, they’re handling them beverages under age 21! Oh and uhhh…snatch me a cold one before you arrest the bartender.”