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09.19.07
Identification Requirements Discriminate, Invade Privacy
Regional Transit Authority Threatens to Arrest Those Who Do Not Provide Photo Identification
CLEVELAND- The American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio criticized a
new initiative by the Regional Transit Authority (RTA) that would
require those who are cited for jaywalking on Euclid Avenue to provide a
government-issued photo identification or risk arrest. The new
identification requirements were announced in an e-mail to students at
Cleveland State University as a warning of RTA’s new policy once
construction on Euclid Avenue is completed.
“RTA cannot arrest someone simply for not carrying photo
identification,” said ACLU of Ohio Legal Director Jeffrey Gamso.
“Pedestrians are not required to carry photo identification, and there
is no mandatory government-issued identification in this country.”
“As a free society, we should be able to move about the streets of
our city without being forced to ‘stop and show our papers.’ Requiring
that all pedestrians carry photo identification or risk arrest
undermines the very core of liberty,” added Gamso.
While police officers may ask jaywalkers to identify themselves so
that they may be issued a ticket, they cannot be required to produce
what they are not required to have. Requiring pedestrians to carry photo
identification presents a particular hardship for poor and working class
residents because many cannot afford identification.
In its e-mail to students, Cleveland State University said that RTA
officials were concerned about the safety of pedestrians because new
buses would not be able to stop quickly.
“It is commendable that RTA is concerned with the safety of
pedestrians, but there are better ways to ensure safety than to threaten
arrest for those who do not produce picture identification,” concluded
Gamso. “The ability to move about our communities without having to show
papers to government officials is a hallmark of a free society and
Clevelanders cannot lawfully be forced to sacrifice this important
liberty.”
The nonprofit, nonpartisan ACLU of Ohio’s office is located in
Cleveland with community and campus chapters located throughout the
state. There are almost 30,000 ACLU members and supporters in Ohio and
more than 500,000 nationwide.
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