Anyone who participates in Geocaching
thinking that their activities will not arouse suspicion is deluding
themself. For many years, the only people who put little tins under a park
bench with a magnet were spies. They used them to pass messages.
This is know as a "dead drop." I'm sure they are still using
them.
In addition, hidden "caches" are used
by drug dealers and their customers to exchange drugs and money, and these
people often use a GPS to further their criminal activity. If you are a
buyer, you get money to a drug dealer and then someone else calls you to
give you the GPS location where you can go and retrieve your goods. This
makes it harder for law enforcement to get the chain of evidence they need to
make the charges stick. In court, it is easy for the dealer to say you
were just paying back money you had borrowed and he has no idea who called you
about the drugs. The person who took the money, the person who placed the
drugs, and the person who called with the location are all different people, and
it is not easy to prove the connection. It isn't even easy to catch the
person who places the drugs since locations are not usually used more than
once.
Because of these activities, a police
officer who observes you retrieving something under a park bench or looking
for a hidden box in the woods may well suspect that you are a spy or a
druggie. The fact is, you are acting like one. His suspicion is
justified.
I agree that the officer should be
polite and not make threats like those reported in the recent incident, and if a
cop gets out of line, report them. They take these reports
seriously. However, to say that law enforcement should just ignore you
when you act like a druggie or spy is certainly not the answer, either.
Right now, many don't know about geocaching, but even when they do, it won't
make a difference. If I was a druggie out looking for my goods and I was
approached by a cop, I would tell him I was geocaching. It is unfortunate,
but our sport provides an excellent cover for those engaged in these illegal
activities, and it is naive to expect cops to ignore us.
Bill in
Willcox