28/10/02
Drug war has proven more corrosive for America than the
drugs themselves
John Kane
John Kane is a United States senior district judge in Denver, Colorado.
Our present War on Drugs began in 1972 when pot-smoking demonstrators against
the Vietnam War mocked all authority, ridiculed President Nixon and challenged
the very assumption of his authority. His response has resulted in a society
subjected to draconian remedies. The War on Drugs — through stringent,
puritanical measures — attempts to set the public right. Not only is justice not
done, it is threatened and derided.
Our national drug policy hasn't changed significantly with changes in
administration. It emphasizes interdiction, police action and imprisonment with
a pious and pseudo-reverential nod to treatment and education. The policy
persists in spite of all evidence, even the government's own, demonstrating that
it is foolish and unworkable.
And despite the billions of dollars spent each year in drug enforcement
programs, less that $1 out of every $100 is spent on research and evaluation to
find out why it isn't working. As recently as March 29 of last year the National
Research Council of the National Academy of Science and the National Academy of
Engineering advised that the nation's ability to evaluate whether the drug
policies even work is no better now than it was twenty 20 years ago when the War
on Drugs was escalated from bravado to guns and blood.
Without hard, well-researched information, it is not even possible to
articulate a new or improved policy. All that is left is the frequently
expressed inanity that changing our drug policy would "send the wrong message to
our children.''
In this darkest of comedies, the government hasn't the slightest notion what
message our children are presently receiving. Perhaps we should send a message
to our children about the causes of death in the United States. We would have to
tell them that tobacco is legal and, at 430,700 deaths per year, is the leading
cause of substance-abuse deaths; that alcohol is legal and 110,600 die from it
each year; that adverse reactions to legal prescription drugs cause 32,000
fatalities a year; that 30,500 commit suicide; 18,000 are homicide victims; and
that 7,600 people die each year from taking anti-inflammatory drugs such as
aspirin. Of course, we don't want to send them the wrong message that the total
number of deaths caused by marijuana is zero.
local, state and federal governments now spend
more than $9 billion per year to imprison 458,000 drug offenders.
Perhaps the message we should be sending our children is that local, state
and federal governments now spend more than $9 billion per year to imprison
458,000 drug offenders. What would be the cost of our current drug policy if it
were succeeding rather than failing? Incarcerating all cocaine users in the U.S.
would cost $74 billion, but only after constructing 3.5 million more prison beds
at an initial cost of $175 billion. It would cost $365 billion to jail everyone
who smoked marijuana last year — five times the total national, state and local
spending for all police, courts and prisons combined. To contain this crowd
behind walls, we would need a cadre of guards and other prison employees larger
than all of our military forces combined. These projections are not entirely
academic: The nation is completing the construction, on average, of a new prison
every week.
More costly than money, however, is the price we now pay for this failed
policy in terms of the decline in public safety, the breakdown of our criminal
justice system, the erosion of our civil liberties and the pervasive public
disrespect of the law. Good citizens, who are otherwise law-abiding, ignore or
evade drug laws. With literally tens of millions of people using illegal drugs
or related to those who do, an ever-increasing part of the population has become
cynical about our laws, legal system and political process.
Each year since 1989, more people have been sent to
prison for drug offenses than for violent crimes
Each year since 1989, more people have been sent to prison for drug offenses
than for violent crimes. At the same time, only one in five burglaries is
reported and only one in 20 reported burglaries ends in arrest. Yet detectives
continue to be reassigned from burglary details to investigation of street sales
of drugs. The cost for this particular aspect of our national folly is absorbed
in significantly increased insurance premiums.
Furthermore, interdiction efforts are utterly futile.
Using data supplied by the federal Office of National Drug Control Policy, we
learn that the price of heroin has dropped, not increased, while its production
has risen greatly. The illegal market price of cocaine in 1981 was $275.12 per
gram and by 1996 it had dropped to $94.52. Because a kilogram of raw opium sells
for $90 in Pakistan, but is worth $290,000 in the United States, law enforcement
seizures have little, if any, impact on operations or profitability.
And, as New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis observed on April 28, 2001,
"The effort to stop cocaine exports from Peru has cut the flow from there
substantially. But that reduction has been more than made up by a huge increase
in coca cultivation and production in Colombia. As Plan Columbia, the military
anti-drug program, gets under way there, production is reportedly beginning to
shift to Ecuador.''
Lewis listed the costs to other nations of our current
drug policies:
Lewis listed the costs to other nations of our current drug
policies: the rise of drug gangs, the poisoning of peasants from the spraying of
undesirable crops, the corruption of governments and increased deaths by
violence. "Yet,'' he notes, "the amount of cocaine and heroin entering the
United States is as great as ever.'' Police agencies still need to protect the
public by holding those who cause accidents or commit crimes while under the
influence of drugs and alcohol fully accountable for their acts, but we must get
them out of the business of financing their operations through the seizure and
forfeiture of private property. The costs of law enforcement should be funded
from the public treasury so that we can determine how much the implementation of
government policies is costing. In other and harsher words, we need to terminate
the symbiotic business relationship that law enforcement has with the illegal
drug industry. Each scratches the other's back.
Indeed, the two groups who would suffer most from an elimination of the black
market in drugs would be, in nearly equal measure, organized crime and law
enforcement. Those who would benefit the most would be the people, especially
children, who have never before tried drugs because there would be no economic
incentive to turn them into customers. Those who are already addicted or abusing
drugs or who will no matter what law obtains can be treated rather than
imprisoned at a cost of one-seventh the amount needed to imprison them.
And let's not forget the "other victims'' of the
so-called War on Drugs — those people and businesses who can't get into
court to have their cases heard
And let's not forget the "other victims'' of the so-called War on Drugs —
those people and businesses who can't get into court to have their cases heard;
the victims of traditional crimes such as burglary, rape and robbery who can't
get justice because the police are tied up with drug cases; merchants going
bankrupt because the police no longer have time to investigate or prosecute
bad-check cases; battered spouses whose mates are not sent to jail because
there's only room there for pot smokers; physicians and other medical care
providers who cannot treat their patients according to conscience and the
discipline of their profession; the sick and dying who endure unnecessary pain;
children whose parents are taken from them; the police who have given up
honorable and challenging work investigating and detecting crime because they
have become addicted to and dependent upon an informant-based system reminiscent
of Lenin's dreaded Cheka; families forced to select one member to plead guilty
lest the entire family be charged; prosecutors and defense attorneys who have
turned the temples of justice into plea-bargaining bazaars; and, most painful to
me, judges who let this happen and don't say a word.
In order to deal successfully with drug abuse, this
nation must abandon its failed policies and rhetoric of misinformation.
In order to deal successfully with drug abuse, this nation must abandon its
failed policies and rhetoric of misinformation. I suggest that federal drug law
should be severely cut back. The importing of unauthorized drugs should continue
to be a federal crime and the regulation of manufacturing drugs for distribution
in interstate commerce should likewise be a federal concern, but the several
states should regulate sales and decide which activities are criminal — such as
selling or inducing minors to take drugs — and which drugs, if any, should be
prohibited. In sum, the policy should be to end the black market, end the
freebooting financing of law enforcement by forfeiture and treat those drug and
alcohol abusers who want to be treated.
At the present time, our national drug policy is inconsistent with the nature
of justice, abusive of the nature of authority and ignorant of the compelling
force of forgiveness. Our drug laws, indeed, are more mocked than feared. These
are the messages we are sending our children.
(Article pinched from Dr Corry's fabulous website at
DVMen.org based in Colorado.)
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