San Francisco Police Department officers have added a
controversial tactic to their aggressive raids on
house parties (see "Fun under siege," 4/22/09):
they're seizing laptop computers from DJs at the
events.
While SFPD officials deny the laptop seizures is a
new policy, they admit it has been condoned by Police
Chief George Gascón, who took over in August and last
month told the Guardian's editorial board he
wants to make the SFPD more transparent and
accountable to the public (see "New coach, new
approach," 10/14/09).
"The police chief is aware that officers are being
proactive in gathering evidence," Sgt. Lyn Tomioka
told the Guardian when asked about a string of
laptop seizures by undercover cops over the last 10
months, most of them in cases in which the DJs weren't
even charged with a crime.
Many of the raids have occurred in SoMa, and were
spearheaded by undercover officers who penetrated the
parties and were followed by uniformed officers. San
Francisco Entertainment Commission member Terrance
Alan called the crackdown a "disappointing and
dangerous trend."
Tomioka said it's a judgment call for officers to
seize laptops as evidence of an illegal party, but
Alan said the tactic is a punitive measure that proves
nothing: "Taking laptops [is] not necessary to prove
the underlying crime, and in many cases damages
people's ability to earn a living."
One of the most recent raids happened on Halloween.
It was about 2:30 a.m. and music was pumping out of a
warehouse party on Sixth Street. The people throwing
the party had hired a doorman, and attendee Eric Dunn
was standing in line waiting to get in.
"We were right at the front of the line," Dunn told
the Guardian, when, he said, two
plainclothes officers drove up on the sidewalk, jumped
out of an unmarked car, and rushed up to the doorman.
"[The officers] pretty much started demanding entry
right away. The doorman was really polite. He
basically told them that you have to know somebody to
get into the party."
Dunn said the officers waited until an exiting
guest opened the door from the inside and then made
their move. "One guy barged in, and the other guy
followed. They never asked permission or received
permission to enter the building," Dunn said.
Inside, the two undercover officers immediately
shut down the event. Justin Miller, a DJ at the event,
said she remembers it very clearly. "The cops at that
point were telling everybody to leave the party,
telling me to turn the music off. I turned the music
off. Everyone was quietly leaving."
But Miller said it didn't stop there. One of the
undercover officers approached her and asked if she
had a laptop. She said she did. "I was a little
confused at this point because I didn't know what my
laptop had to do with anything. I was playing CDs."
She said she pulled her computer out from underneath a
table and unzipped it from a case. The officer then
"grabbed it from me."
The undercover police officer — later identified by
witnesses and the evidence receipt as Larry Bertrand —
instructed Miller to follow him down to the street to
get a property receipt for her laptop.
At this point there were uniformed officers on the
scene as well. Miller started to cry. "I begged him. I
said, 'This is my livelihood. You're talking my
laptop. This is my livelihood. I hope you realize
that.' He said, 'This is how you're going to learn
then, I guess.'"
Miller said Bertrand (who did not return
Guardian calls for comment) then told her he was
"going to take it upon himself to shut down every
illegal party in San Francisco."
She said he then opened the trunk of his car,
revealing several other laptops. A person at the party
pointed out that one of the laptops belonged to a
friend of his, and asked if he could get the property
receipt for the laptop. Miller said Bertrand turned to
the inquiring person and said, "You will never see
this laptop again."
She continued: "He then looked at me and said, 'I'm
going to make sure your paperwork gets so tied up that
maybe you won't see this laptop until December,
January, February, who knows when.' I felt so
violated."
Miller has been working as a DJ in the Bay Area,
under the name DJ Justincredible, for more than 10
years. She says she's never had any of her equipment
confiscated by the police before. But at that party,
three DJs had their laptops confiscated, even though
none were charged with a crime.
Shortly after the Halloween incident, Miller and
the two other DJs who were at the party contacted the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit advocacy
group specializing in technology and privacy issues.
Jennifer Granick, a civil liberties lawyer with EFF,
said most people haven't heard about this because few
of these DJs, if any, ever get convicted of a crime.
"DJs and the police department know that sound
equipment and laptops are being unlawfully seized. But
the public and the courts haven't heard much about it
because every time a DJ asks for a hearing, the cops
just give them their property back rather than show up
and defend the practice in open court before a judge,"
she said.
Sean Evans has been working as a DJ in San
Francisco, under the name DJ 7, for more than 10
years. He said that over the summer he had his laptop
seized by police during an after-hours party in SoMa.
He was given no property receipt, and his case was
dismissed. But it took him three months to get his
computer back.
"To lose our sole means of income, it's a huge
setback. It puts us out of work. In this recession,
we're struggling, and we need our laptops to get by,"
he said. Evans grew up in the Bay Area and he said has
never had anything like this happen to him before.
Granick argued it is illegal for police to seize
property without issuing citations or arrests. She
also said there are serious privacy issues at stake.
"If we were to find out that the police were doing
something else with the laptops, like searching
through them or copying the data, we would definitely
go to court," she said.
SFPD Sgt. Wilfred Williams said he could not say
what was currently being done with the laptops. In
general, he said, private events that emit
"extraordinary amounts of sound" need permits. And if
they don't have the proper permits, he said, property
can be seized as evidence, "be it the speakers, be it
the laptops, be it a mixer."
Both Tomioka and Williams say the seizures aren't a
new policy. "If you look back in time, laptops haven't
been used for music," Williams said. "There used to be
old types of equipment that was taken in the past. But
now laptops are being used. So yes, today, laptops
[are] being seized."
Entertainment advocates have called on Mayor Gavin
Newsom and Gascón to come forward with an explicit
policy concerning these raids and seizures. The
Mayor's Office did not respond to Guardian
inquiries. Critics of the policy say it's having a
chilling effect on nightlife in San Francisco.
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