Pubdate: Sun, 02 Apr 2000 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 2000 Daily News, L.P. Contact: 450 W. 33rd St., New York, N.Y. 10001 Website: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Forum: http://townhall.mostnewyork.com/mb/index.html Authors: Michael Allen and David Noonan, Sunday News Staff Writers POT PUSH REEFER MADNESS? Critics: War's More Smoke Than Fire Last week's wild police chase through a crowded Brooklyn schoolyard was just one more incident in the Giuliani administration's longstanding - and, some say, misguided - war on marijuana, which has netted more than 100,000 public pot smokers since 1994. The undercover cops who shot and killed two robbers brandishing toy guns in Bushwick, Brooklyn, Friday night were participating in Operation Condor, the mayor's latest anti-drug initiative. They were backing up officers who had just arrested three men on marijuana charges. Most of the marijuana busts have come in the past two years as the cops have dramatically escalated their enforcement against puffing in public. In 1992, only 720 people were busted for toking weed in the open. Last year, 33,471 offenders were arrested for smoking marijuana in city parks and streets - a 4,549% increase. The busts represented 9% of all arrests made in New York City in 1999. Those arrested for smoking pot in public - like those arrested for violent crimes - are handcuffed, booked and fingerprinted, and spend hours in jail. Sometimes, it is days before they see a judge. Most are sentenced to time served, receive a small fine and are released. Mayor Giuliani has said that the key to fighting drugs in New York is to go after marijuana use as a crime that leads to bigger crimes. "The link between drugs and crime is well-documented," Giuliani spokesman Matthew Higgins said. "The heightened enforcement of all drug laws in the last few years has dramatically improved the quality of life in New York City and is one of the prime reasons why overall crime is down over 55% since 1994." The war against pot smokers brings together two of the mayor's favorite crimefighting strategies: eliminating public "nuisances," such as squeegee people and panhandlers, and increasing misdemeanor drug arrests. But Giuliani's aggressive pursuit of dopers is viewed by some as reefer madness, a return of the demonization of marijuana that swept the nation in the 1920s and 1930s. "I don't think arresting people for possession of marijuana is going to make the city safe," said City Councilwoman Ronnie Eldridge (D-Manhattan). "It's just the wrong emphasis. All these operations - Condor and whatever - these undercover or street operations the police are undertaking are harassing people. "And the best charge that they can get most often is for marijuana. That is not what threatens this city, or people's lives." Condor - not to be confused with the mayor's earlier and continuing anti-marijuana drive - is the $20 million push against low-level drug activity, including marijuana use, that began in January. Unarmed security guard Patrick Dorismond was killed March 16 during a confrontation with a team of undercover cops assigned to the initiative. Although the mayor's campaign against pot seems to have had no formal beginning, the effort really took off around 1996. That year, marijuana collars increased to 9,144 from 5,541 the year before. The number of arrests almost doubled in 1997, to 17,609 and nearly doubled again in 1998, to 32,569. While Condor has attracted the most attention, Giuliani's undeclared pot offensive seems to be the front line in the city's war against drugs. "The kind of money that we're spending on marijuana is outrageous," said Angel Rodriguez, executive director of the Andrew Glover Youth Program, which serves troubled youths on the lower East Side. "The cops could be doing lots of other work that's really necessary in this neighborhood," Rodriguez said. "They could be working on the hard drugs, No. 1. There's plenty of heroin and cocaine around that is damaging our children and creating problems for all the citizens." Although arrests for smoking pot have soared in the last few years, arrests for misdemeanor possession of controlled substances, such as heroin and cocaine, actually have declined to 34,951 last year from 40,691 in 1995. "The mayor's war on drugs is actually a phony war on drugs," said Tom Leighton, chairman of the Marijuana Reform Party of New York. "In reality, it's a war on marijuana smokers and low-level, nonviolent marijuana offenders." While total misdemeanor drug arrests climbed to 78,354 in 1999 from 27,447 in 1993, Leighton points out that pot-smoking arrests account for 61% of the increase. Leighton, who ran for Manhattan borough president in 1997 to publicize the pot-arrest issue and garnered more than 24,000 votes, says there is no evidence to support the mayor's contention that marijuana use is linked with crime. "Marijuana is not connected to violence and not connected to crime," Leighton said. "Except for the crime of having marijuana." Police spokeswoman Marilyn Mode pointed out that in 1992, when there were 720 arrests for public pot smoking, there also were 1,995 murders and 626,182 major felony complaints in the city. In 1999, when pot-smoking arrests topped 33,000, there were just 667 murders and 299,523 felony complaints. "Clearly there's a nexus with drug activity and crime," Mode said. City Councilman Sheldon Leffler (D-Queens), chairman of the Council's Public Safety Committee, has scheduled a public hearing for April 25 to review police anti-drug strategies, including Operation Condor. "One of the things that has to be gone into is whether there are alternative strategies that make sense in this day and age, when crime has been driven down a lot," Leffler said. "And I think there are other things that New Yorkers would like to see besides these anti-narcotics efforts." As serious crime has dropped in the city, minor offenders have been targeted by cops, critics say. Legal Aid Society lawyer David Kapner says pot smokers are easy pickings for the police and a convenient way for them to keep their arrest numbers up. "These aren't people who are going to run," Kapner said. "They are not going to pull out weapons. They are not going to give you a hard time," Kapner said. "If you are a police officer looking to fill a quota, marijuana is a really easy way to do it, because it's also a group activity, people tend to smoke marijuana with other people. Sometimes you get three arrests out of one stop, so it's very efficient. It's not like people smoking crack, where they go off on their own." Almost one-third of those arrested for smoking pot are under 20, Leighton said. And because the federal Higher Education Act, which will go into effect this summer, prohibits federal college loans or financial aid to anyone with a prior drug conviction, "a misdemeanor pot-smoking arrest can spell disaster for college-bound youngsters from poor families," he said. "We don't feel, as a city, as besieged by the drug problem as we did 10, 15 years ago," Leffler said. "And yet we are using more aggressive tactics than ever. Does that really make sense?" - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D