填空题
Even if we could make it impossible for people to commit crimes,
should we? Or would doing so improperly deprive people of their
freedom? This may sound like a fanciful concern, but it is an
increasingly real one. The new federal transportation bill, for example,
authorized funding for a program that seeks to prevent the crime of drunken
driving not by raising public consciousness or issuing stiffer punishments — but
by making the crime practically impossible to commit. {{U}} 1
{{/U}}______ The Dadss program is part of a trend toward what I
call the "perfect prevention" of crime: depriving people of the choice to commit
an offense in the first place. The federal government's Intelligent
Transportation Systems program, which is creating technology to share data among
vehicles and road infrastructure like traffic lights, could make it impossible
for a driver to speed or run a red light. {{U}} 2 {{/U}}______
Such technologies force us to reconcile two important interests. On one
hand is society's desire for safety and security. On the other hand is the
individual's right to act freely. Conventional crime prevention balances these
interests by allowing individuals the freedom to commit crime, but punishing
them if they do. The perfect prevention of crime asks us to
consider exactly how far individual freedom extends. Does freedom include a
"right" to drive drunk, for instance? It is hard to imagine that it does.
{{U}} 3 {{/U}}______ For most familiar crimes (murder,
robbery, rape, arson), the law requires that the actor have some guilty state of
mind, whether it is intent, recklessness or negligence.
{{U}} 4 {{/U}}______ In such cases, using technology to
prevent the crime entirely would not unduly burden individual freedom ; it would
simply be effective enforcement of the statute. Because there is no mental state
required to be guilty of the offense, the government could require, for
instance, that drug manufacturers apply a special tamper-proof coating to all
pills, thus making the sale of tainted drugs practically impossible, without
intruding on the thoughts of any future seller. But because the
government must not intrude on people's thoughts, perfect prevention is a bad
fit for most offenses. {{U}} 5 {{/U}}______ Even if this could be known,
perhaps with the help of some sort of neurological scan, collecting such
knowledge would violate an individual's freedom of thought.
Perfect prevention is a politically attractive approach to crime prevention, and
for strict liability crimes it is permissible and may be good policy if
implemented properly. But for most offenses, the threat to individual freedom is
too great to justify this approach. This is not because people have a right to
commit crimes; they do not. Rather, perfect prevention threatens our right to be
free in our thoughts, even when those thoughts turn to crime.
[A] But there is a category of crimes that are forbidden regardless of the
actor's state of mind: so-called strict-liability offenses. One example is the
sale of tainted drugs. Another is drunken driving. [B] The
Dadss program, despite its effectiveness in preventing drunk driving, is
criticized as a violation of human rights because it monitors drivers' behavior
and controls individual's free will. [C] And the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 has already criminalized the development of
technologies that can be used to avoid copyright restrictions, making it
effectively impossible for most people to illegally share certain copyrighted
materials, including video games. [D] If the actor doesn't have
the guilty state of mind, and he commits crime involuntarily, in this case, the
actor will be convicted as innocent. [E] Perfect prevention of
a crime like murder would require the ability to know what a person was thinking
in order to determine whether he possessed the relevant culpable mental
state. [F] The program, the Driver Alcohol Detection System for
Safety (Dadss), is developing in vehicle technology that automatically checks a
driver's blood-alcohol level and, if that level is above the legal limit,
prevents the car from starting. [G] But what if the government
were to add a drug to the water supply that suppressed antisocial urges and
thereby reduced the murder rate? This would seem like an obvious violation of
our freedom. We need a clear method of distinguishing such cases.