HASSO HERING

A perspective from Oregon’s mid-Willamette Valley

Alcohol stings: Stop state-assisted crime

Written February 12th, 2014 by Hasso Hering
SB 1546 will go to the Senate floor, but it doesn't go far enough to protect store clerks from state-sponsored stings.

SB 1546 will go to the Senate floor, but it doesn’t go far enough to protect store clerks from state-sponsored stings.

It is the custom of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to test checkout clerks at supermarkets and convenience stores by sending minors to buy beer, and then to nail the hapless employees if they fail to prevent the sale. This underhanded practice is wrong, and it should be stopped.
The state Senate Judiciary Committee heard from two former retail clerks on Wednesday. Both had been longtime employees and were fired after accidentally failing to prevent sales and being charged with a Class A misdemeanor, a crime.

One said it had been a busy night at the store. “As I rang up a customer at approximately 8:20 p.m., I glanced up, recognized a neighbor from up the street and checked out his package of diapers and a six-pack of beer. … The next person in line showed me her badge and identified herself as an OLCC agent. She said I had just failed an alcohol sting by selling alcohol to a minor.”

The clerk had thought the customer “looked old enough to purchase alcohol based on my thought that he was a familiar neighbor that I had carded and sold alcohol to in the past.” But she had been mistaken.

She was interviewed and cited at her check stand while customers were waiting in line. “An hour and twenty minutes after my arrest I was asked to shut down my check stand and leave the store. My career at Safeway was over.”

The statement by another witness said: “They sent a minor through my line, with alcohol. I asked her for her ID, and then typed in what I thought it said the birthdate was. I thought it said she was old enough, so sold her the alcohol. A police officer and OLCC representative came into my line and asked me to close it down. He told me I sold alcohol to a minor. I told him he must have been wrong, because I always ID everyone who looks under 30 years old. He showed me her ID, and I told him the birth date still looked the same to me. What happened is that I misread it, because I needed glasses and didn’t know it. I transposed two numbers.”

The clerk went to have her vision checked and got a prescription for glasses, but it was too late. She had been charged with a crime, and “I was let go from Safeway on August 9, 2011, after 5 days. I lost my health insurance, and my dental coverage. I had worked for Safeway for almost 15 years, and had a perfect record of proper ID’ing for alcohol/tobacco sales all of that time.”

The senate committee advanced SB 1546, which would among other things reduce the offense of mistakenly selling alcohol to a minor from a misdemeanor to a violation. That presumably won’t keep employees from being fired, but it might make it easier for fired employees to find another job.

The legislature should do more. It should put a stop to these repeated OLCC stings. In all of these operations, there would be no violation at all unless the state had induced a minor to create the possibility of one. It is unfortunate and wrong for the courts to have allowed this kind of trickery. It amounts to creating the conditions for a crime and to see if anyone falls into the trap.

There are other ways of enforcing the law against minors buying liquor. Kids found with beer could be asked there they got it. Frequent sellers of beer to minors could be watched. Young people emerging from stores with six-packs could be stopped and challenged. It would be more difficult, sure. But it would not put the state in the position of contributing to crimes, and it would not cause grocery clerks to lose their jobs for inadvertent lapses and innocent mistakes. (hh)





7 responses to “Alcohol stings: Stop state-assisted crime”

  1. Jill Morgan says:

    That would entail common sense….something sorely lacking in Salem and Washington DC.

  2. Ray Kopczynski says:

    “Kids found with beer could be asked there they got it. Frequent sellers of beer to minors could be watched. Young people emerging from stores with six-packs could be stopped and challenged. It would be more difficult, sure.”

    Yes – Same conundrum: how do you tell if a “kid” is of legal age? How do you tell if a clerk is a “frequent seller of beer to minors”? “Young people” – that almost invites a lawsuit of illegal arrest? The devil is in the details… I like the system as it is so far.

    • Hasso Hering says:

      How do you tell if someone is of legal age? You ask them when they’re busted for minor in possession. How do the cops make those charges if they can’t tell or ask? The present system is great — simple and efficient — as long as you don’t mind the state creating crimes so it can then punish them and hold them up as a deterrent. It’s kind of like when the police pose as hookers and invite people to break the law, then bust them when they do. Catching people in a crime is always easier when the police know in advance when one is committed because they set it up.

  3. Jim Clausen says:

    Using Hassos logic, we should remove speed signs because they “entrap” people. If the signs weren’t there in the first place no one would be speeding – it’s a trap set up by the police!

    If the people selling booze check the ID of the purchaser there’s no problem and, by the way, no infraction. The next thing we’ll see is Hasso calling illegal aliens “undocumented aliens”…

  4. Ray Kopczynski says:

    “It amounts to creating the conditions for a crime and to see if anyone falls into the trap.”

    Yes — That is exactly what a “sting” is supposed to do. I don’t believe that is “creating a crime.” I would prefer to catch someone at the pre-point of purchase vs. waiting until they are somehow found out by the local police to be asked how old they were…

    • Hasso Hering says:

      We’re obviously not going to agree on this. Let’s just say I would prefer it if the police or the state did not contribute to the crime rate with stings at all. The ATF in Portland encouraged people, even mentally challenged people, to bring them guns and then prosecuted them. I don’t believe it’s the government’s job to make criminals of people who would not be criminals except for temptation or encouragement by the government. If you can’t trust public officials to be honest, where do we end up? And why should grocery clerks lose the ability to make a living because an overzealous official set them a trap? It’s hard enough to get through life without highly paid public employees making it harder. (hh)

  5. Bill Kapaun says:

    Isn’t the STATE committing child abuse by involving them in the commission of a crime?

 

 
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