Pubdate: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 Source: Amarillo Globe-News (TX) Copyright: 2001 Amarillo Globe-News Contact: http://amarillonet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/13 Author: Greg Cunningham Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) NAACP RALLY TARGETS DRUG WAR The nation's drug war was in the spotlight Saturday night at a rally sponsored by the Amarillo chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The rally, which was held at the Amarillo United Citizens Forum Black Cultural Center, attracted about 75 participants and featured Harvard graduate and noted drug policy expert Deborah Peterson Small. Small, who is the director of public policy and community outreach for the Lindesmith Center in New York, involved the spectators in a discussion about the problems she sees in the nation's current drug policy, using the controversial 1999 undercover drug investigation in Tulia as an illustration. The major problem with the drug war in America stems from the focus on law enforcement and incarceration rather than intervention and treatment of drug addicts, Small said. That enforcement focus leads to discrimination in drug arrests, ever-increasing costs for incarceration, and the general failure of the effort to stop drugs, she said. "We need to move away from a criminal justice model and toward a health model," Small said. "I think if we were able to get people to look at this as a health issue, we could begin to make progress on getting a handle on the drug problem." Small said she does not favor legalization of drugs, but rather decriminalization, which would focus on treating drug addicts rather than locking them up. Small said treatment is much more economical than incarceration and shows a higher success rate at stopping drug abuse than prison. A shift in drug policy is not an easy step to take, but Small said she sees increasing support for new ideas as the problems become more familiar to the populace. "I do believe that, in general, the public is starting to question the underlying structure and thought of our drug policy," Small said. "With more and more people getting caught up in drugs, not too many people haven't seen the effects of drug policy in their own families." Small said another major motivating factor for change will be money, pointing to the uproar over recent calls to institute an income tax in Texas, which would be used in part to support an increasing prison population. "Right now, that money (for incarceration) is hidden away," Small said. "But as the penal system keeps growing, people will start to see how much of their money is going to keep this non-producing enterprise going." The drug arrests in Tulia serve as a good illustration of what's wrong with the drug war, Small said. An inordinately high number of minorities were arrested, long sentences were handed out, and convictions were secured with little evidence, all commons occurrences in the drug war, she said. Small's comments were followed up by Amarillo attorney Jeff Blackburn, who filled the crowd in on the progress of the fight against the arrests. The attorneys involved in the fight, which includes a multi-million dollar civil lawsuit and efforts to get the cases overturned on appeal, continue to work, with discovery in the civil suit scheduled to be wrapped up in the next few months. Blackburn said the attorneys will soon begin filing writs of habeas corpus in attempt to overturn several of the cases that were settled with plea bargains, then proceed with their plan to get all the cases tossed out. "We've got a very deliberate, very careful time frame laid out for all of this," Blackburn said. "We're committed to seeing this through." Blackburn also said a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into possible civil rights violations in the arrests continues. Small will continue her conversation about drug policy in Tulia today. She plans to hold an open conversation about the drug war at noon in the basement of the Swisher County Memorial Building at 127 S.W. Second St. The meeting is open to the public. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk