National News
10:39 AM CDT on Friday, July 8, 2005
BOSTON -- A man arrested when police showed up to break up a New Year's
Eve party at a friend's house has filed a lawsuit, arguing he had a
constitutional right to get drunk on private property as long as he
didn't cause a public disturbance.
Eric Laverriere, 25, of Portland, Maine, was taken into protective
custody by Waltham police and locked in a cell for nine hours until the
effects of the alcohol wore off.
Legal experts said his lawsuit, filed this week in U.S. District Court
in Boston, is the first to challenge a state law allowing police to lock
up drunk people against their will for their own protection.
Laverriere argues that the Massachusetts Protective Custody Law was
written to combat public drunkenness and that the police had no right to
use it to take him from a private residence. He also says he had planned
to spend the night at his friend's and wasn't going to be driving
anywhere.
"One thing people should be able to do is drink in their own
house," Laverriere told The Boston Globe. "That's the beauty of
the land of the free."
Waltham Deputy Police Chief Paul Juliano declined to comment on the suit
on the advice of the city's legal department.
Several lawyers said they believe police have the authority to take
inebriated people into custody, but they said it was the first time the
law has been challenged on the grounds that one has a constitutional
right to get drunk on private property.
The Protective Custody Law, enacted in 1971, replaced a Colonial-era law
that made public drunkenness a crime. It authorizes police to hold
people against their will for up to 12 hours if they are drunk and a
danger to themselves or others.
Attorney Leonard Kesten, who has defended police departments in
civil-rights cases, said if officers are investigating a crime or
responding to an incident and discover that someone is drunk and posing
a danger, they are obligated to take that person into protective custody.
Police have been sued for failing to take people into protective custody
who later died from alcohol poisoning or killed others in
drunken-driving accidents.
Laverriere said that he drank several beers, but wasn't drunk, when
officers arrived at his friend's duplex saying someone had thrown
bottles at a passing police cruiser.
When the partygoers denied throwing bottles, Laverriere said, the
officers became angry, prompting him to pick up a friend's camera and
start videotaping. Laverriere told the Globe that Officer Jorge Orta
ripped the camera from his hands and threw him to the floor, injuring
his shoulder.
Laverriere said he told police he had been invited to spend the night at
the house, but the officers insisted on taking him into protective
custody.
One police report says that Laverriere appeared intoxicated and
expressed "displeasure" at being told he had to leave the party.
He was then taken into custody. The report says he fell to the floor while
resisting Orta's efforts to handcuff him.
(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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