Pubdate: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 Source: Northwest Florida Daily News (FL) Copyright: 2000 Northwest Florida Daily News Contact: http://www.nwfdailynews.com/ WHY IS DRUG WAR TARGETING BLACKS? A report released this month by Human Rights Watch, an international watchdog organization, demonstrates in such detail that it can no longer be ignored that the war on drugs is waged disproportionately and cruelly against African Americans (find the report at www.hrw.org/reports/2000/usa/ ). Voters need to hear from both major-party candidates how they would address this situation, which contributes significantly to a growing distrust of the judicial system among minority Americans. As Jamie Fellner, associate counsel of Human Rights Watch, notes: "Most drug offenders are white. Five times as many whites use drugs as blacks. But blacks comprise the great majority of drug offenders sent to prison." These figures could be tweaked slightly. Black people make up about 13 percent of the population, white people about 73 percent, so there are slightly more than five times as many white people as black people, which might mean a slightly higher percentage of black people than white people use illicit drugs. Still, if the laws were applied equally, one would expect to see about five times as many white people as African Americans in prison for drug offenses. But that's not how it is. Nationwide, black people comprise 62 percent of drug offenders sent to state prisons. Nationwide, black men are sent to prison on drug charges at 13 times the rate of white men. Can anyone fail to be shocked at such disparities? There may be reasons besides blatant racial prejudice why this might be the case, as Human Rights Watch Executive Director Kenneth Roth acknowledged. Drug use and drug transactions in black neighborhoods are more likely to occur on the streets, which police can patrol, than inside suburban homes. Some police departments use "profiles" to identify suspects in ways that bring more black people to police attention. And enhanced sentences for "crack" cocaine compared with powder cocaine tend to put more black people than white in prison for longer periods. Whatever the reasons, however, this is an unjust, divisive and potentially explosive phenomenon. Human Rights Watch recommends the elimination of mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses, more use of alternatives to incarceration, more use of "drug courts," more treatment programs and the end of racial profiling. Those modest steps should be just the beginning of a wholesale reconsideration of a disastrous approach to drug policy. The current policy hasn't worked and has imposed the costs disproportionately on racial minorities. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson