Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jun 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://www.nydailynews.com/manual/news/e_the_people/e_the_people.htm Author: Stanley Crouch A JUDGE BRINGS SOME SENSE TO THE DRUG ISSUE New York, so often the leader of the nation, is putting together solutions to drug problems that exhibit a combination of intelligence, common sense and close observation. Those qualities are almost never brought to the table when drug abuse is the issue because we are a nation that has had to learn, drug by drug, what we are talking about. We accept the idea that the drug called alcohol cannot be made illegal because people are going to drink whether or not it is a crime. It took almost 15 years of lawlessness during the Prohibition era to learn that fact, which meant the Mafia was bankrolled by the sale of all the illegal booze. So we paid a high price for that prudishness. Now we are going through much the same kind of Prohibition-style thinking about tobacco. At the same time, it has been learned that those in the trade have put addictive elements into their product with the intention of getting their customers hooked. This has led to enormous lawsuits and a lot of governmental sanctimoniousness — although not out of proportion to what those tobacco bigwigs were doing. I find it disingenuous for smokers to sue because they have inhaled two or three packs of cigarettes a day for years and are now very ill or about to die. At the same time, Big Tobacco deserves the foot that has been pushed into its backside for the last few years. Sometimes, unfair things are actually fair. As for other drugs, we are moving away from the policies that have turned our penal institutions into overcrowded chattel compounds. As for me, I would prefer that drugs be legalized and taxed and the tax money used to make sure that we have the very finest rehabilitation programs in the world. That would destroy the trade as a multibillion-dollar shadow business. Legalization also would put a good many of those kids who get hooked on the drug trade's fast and big money right back where they should be — in school. No one is interested in that solution. Still, we are starting to get much closer to the realities of our moment. Too many of those behind bars are there because their addictions brought them into conflict with the law, not because they hit somebody on the head or committed any other act of violence. They like to get high, or they get high to avoid the pain of drug withdrawal. They land behind bars for their addiction or for such bloodless crimes as burglary. Keeping them locked up means a $650 million annual tab for New York. To change this, Chief Judge Judith Kaye has ordered the courts of this state to offer those guilty of nonviolent drug-related crimes the choice of going into a rehabilitation program for two years or heading for the slammer. The success rate for those who go into drug programs rather than prison is 70%. Since drug-related crimes have increased the prison population by 400% over the last 20 years, this approach makes more than a little sense. This is another impressive example of how well things can go if business principles are applied to politics and law. Kaye understands the same thing any first-class CEO does: Successful facts should determine policy, not good-sounding ideology. Let us hope more and more follow her example. For nonviolent addicts, treatment, not jail. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck