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police officers are strapping people to beds and having catheters forcibly inserted into their urethras in order to extract urine from them, attorneys say.

South Dakota police officers are strapping people to beds and having catheters forcibly inserted into their urethras in order to extract urine from them, attorneysĀ say.

According to attorneys for aĀ Pierre man charged with felony drug ingestion whoĀ is asking a judge to throw out evidence in his case from an involuntary urine sample, the policy is not new. State prosecutors say the practice isĀ legal butĀ many civil liberties advocates disagree.

Dirk Landon Sparks said hisĀ constitutional rights were violated on March 14 following a report of a domestic disturbance. After being taken into custody,Ā a judge signed off on a search warrant for Pierre police to obtain blood or urine after officers claimed Sparks had become fidgety.

When Sparks refused to comply voluntarily, attorneys say the cops transported him to Avera St. Maryā€™s Hospital where he was strapped to a bed while a catheter was forced into his penis so that a urine sample could be extracted and analyzed for the presence of ā€œillicitā€ substances.

Sparks was charged with obstruction, two counts of felony drug ingestion, and possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia after his urine tested positive for THC and methamphetamine.

In a motion filed May 16 in Hughes County,Ā attorneys for SparksĀ argued that forced catheterization was not explicitly authorized by the judge in the warrant for blood or urine, meaning thatĀ Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures were violated.

A Lake Andes attorney who has representedĀ several clients that have had urine samples forcibly taken, Tim Whalen, said healthcare workers at the Wagner and Platte hospitals routinely preform the extractions without anesthetic.

Another Lake Andes defense attorney, Pam Hein,Ā saidĀ forced catheterization ā€œhas been going on for years,ā€ and that she has viewed the issue from both perspectives having worked as Charles Mix County Stateā€™s Attorney and Bennett County Stateā€™s Attorney.


HeinĀ said when anĀ officer has suspicion of drug use, he can request a warrant for testing but the threat alone is usually enough to obtain a sample. She said only when voluntary testing is refusedĀ does force become necessary, but added that she thought the process was being abused.

The Pierre police department and the Hughes County Stateā€™s Attorney office have not offered any comment onĀ the Sparks case or the practice for forced catheterization as a whole.

Itā€™s not clear now often forced catheterization is beingĀ utilized inĀ South Dakota butĀ Attorney General Marty Jackley said the practice is permitted with a signed court order under state law. He referenced several cases that he said supported the legality of the practice.

ACLU South Dakota legal director Courtney Bowie disagreed however, and saidĀ there are definitely someĀ serious legal concerns to consider, especially when taking into account the sex of suspects, officers, and health workers involved in an extraction.

ā€œIt would be completely improper for people to place a catheter on an individual of the opposite gender,ā€Bowie said. ā€œThat would border on an unlawful assault, battery or rape.ā€ Ā HaTTiP

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