Pubdate: Thu, 18 Jan 2001 Source: News Journal (DE) Copyright: 2001 The News Journal Contact: Letters to Editor, Box 15505, Wilmington, DE 19850 Fax: (302) 324-2595 Website: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/index.html Author: Ralph Moyed PRISONS AND ADDICTION ARE EQUALLY BAD Ned Carpenter's proposal that the United States decriminalize illegal drugs is nothing if not provocative. Coming from almost anyone else in Delaware, the idea would be dismissed out of hand. But Carpenter is a respected Wilmington lawyer, a key member of the Delaware establishment and a man of somewhat old-fashioned conservative views. My immediate (paranoid) reaction to his letter to the editor was that Carpenter had fallen into the clutches of the Libertarian movement, which claims such mavericks as writer H.L. Mencken and Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence, as intellectual forefathers. It is unfortunate that both Mencken and Jefferson are no longer around to defend this stain upon their honor. I do not believe Carpenter would be taken in by the extremist, twisted logic -- they call it philosophy -- of Libertarians. The trouble with Carpenter's proposal is a simple one: It will not work. I have known enough junkies to realize that any amount of heroin received from state clinics would not be enough for many of them and would be supplemented by the old illegal means. Research that this newspaper conducted in the early 1970s showed that many addicts were criminals before they were junkies. Many were second-generation criminals. I believe that young people starting out without addictions would find ways to receive daily fixes at clinics. The bad old days I know little about cocaine and laudanum (a precursor of heroin) except what my father told me was happening when he was a boy. In those early days of the 20th century, when the drugs could be purchased across the counter in drugstores, zonked-out users would be seen sprawling on sidewalks near the stores. My father was too young to know where they got the money to satisfy their habits. One thing is clear: When purchase and use of cocaine was legal, federal authorities estimated that as much as 11 percent of the adult population used the drug. Estimates tend to be high when law enforcement people are trying to get legislation through Congress. But it still was higher than it is today. I have read many arguments about the damage done by marijuana, cocaine and heroin and still don't know what they do to the brain and body. There is no question that other drugs such as angel dust destroy brain cells, often permanently. That does not mean I reject Carpenter's ideas about using treatment instead of harsh punishment to deal with addicts. It makes sense. I believe the state has wasted hundreds of millions of dollars building prisons to house men and women who, if treated for their addictions, might be productive citizens. The concept of protecting ourselves with harsh punishment is a way to legitimize the cruel side of the character of too many Americans. We talk of retribution when we mean plain old, counterproductive and mean-spirited vengeance. Worst of all, most intelligent Americans know it doesn't work. We are no safer on the streets because of long prison terms without chance of parole given to otherwise worthy young people. I've been singing this tune for about 35 years, since the first Delaware politician hit upon the idea of passing minimum mandatory sentences to win votes from poorly informed, frightened citizens. I welcome Ned Carpenter to the fray. I hope he provokes some serious thinking about the state's expensive excesses. This suggests to me that even solid citizens are beginning to see through Delaware's costly, fraudulent punishment scheme. The United States may not be winning its war on drugs, but I am sure that unilateral surrender now would only encourage more addiction, more heartbreak and more cheap politics. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D