Pubdate: Wed, 23 May 2001 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Judy Mann MISGUIDED LAWS MAKE MARIJUANA DEADLY Three people were killed and two were wounded in a $4,000-a-month apartment five stories above New York's Runyonesque Carnegie Deli two weeks ago. Among the dead was Jennifer Stahl, who had a bit part in the film "Dirty Dancing." Her acting career never came to much, and she turned to singing. And selling marijuana. That's what got her killed. According to news accounts, Stahl was entertaining four guests who had nothing to do with drug trading. Her apartment buzzer sounded, she opened the door, and one of her guests heard her say: "Sean, what are you doing here today?" There were two men. Both carried handguns. One of the men took Stahl into a recording studio she had in the apartment; the other started binding two of her guests' hands and feet with duct tape. Stahl was heard pleading with her assailant: "Take the drugs. Take the money. Don't hurt anybody." Then there was a single shot. Two more of Stahl's guests emerged from another room, and they were ordered to get down on the floor. They were bound. Like Stahl, the four guests were shot in the head. Two survived. When police arrived, they found six pounds of marijuana, with a street value of $60,000, along with what authorities identified as psychedelic mushrooms, and $1,800 in cash. Behind the apartment's front door was a sign listing a half-dozen varieties of marijuana with prices ranging from $300 to $600 an ounce. Police believe that the motive behind the crime was robbery and that the men left with a backpack containing marijuana. This incident should lay to rest the myth that the marijuana trade is nonviolent. It is corrupting police departments. Eventually, it could corrupt our political system, as it has political systems in Latin America. Drug dealers have an enormous stake in keeping their products illegal and, therefore, desirable in this country. Bridget Brennan, New York City's special narcotics prosecutor, describes marijuana as a "highly profitable drug." She notes that money is the source of most drug disputes and that the parties involved can't turn to the courts to settle their arguments. And she warns that the cartels moving marijuana are made up of some of the same people who are moving heroin and cocaine. Marijuana itself does not induce violence. People don't smoke a joint and decide to shoot somebody. What produces the violence associated with marijuana is that it is illegal. The same dynamic caused the murderous Capone-style violence during Prohibition. And once Prohibition was repealed, the violence associated with the bootleg trade vanished, although the gangsters that it spawned did not. Before any sensible discussion can take place about how to deal with illegal drugs in the United States, we must make the distinction between violence associated with a drug and violence associated with the drug trade. Further, for any sensible discussion about what to do about illegal drugs, you have to discuss different drugs separately. They are not all of a piece. Heroin and cocaine are far more addictive than marijuana, for example. You can overdose and die on heroin. You can overdose and die from alcohol poisoning. You smoke too much marijuana, and the worst thing that can happen to you is you'll fall asleep and maybe set the couch afire. So let's take marijuana separately. Its illegality and its soaring cost are causing an astonishing level of violence in our society. The day after the triple slaying, New York's first deputy police commissioner, Joseph Dunne, told reporters: "We've been saying this for eight years: There are guns and violence in the marijuana trade." One argument for prohibiting marijuana is that you don't want young people to get it. We don't want them to get alcohol, either. One is legal; the other is not. Alcohol, the legal drug, is much more heavily associated with violent behavior than is marijuana. "Nobody pretends we're going to get rid of these drugs," says Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation. "So one of the stated policies is we can make them more expensive and fewer people will use them. There's no evidence that's the way it works in drug markets. Sometimes a high price enhances the attraction. Prohibition efforts in the last 20 years have entirely failed to affect the price of heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine. They are cheaper and purer than at any time in the last 30 years." He notes studies that have found that 80 percent of high school seniors said they could easily obtain marijuana. High school kids tell you it is easier to get pot than alcohol. Nadelmann believes marijuana should be "taken out of the drug prohibition system." He says polls show that about 35 percent of people say yes to decriminalizing it and 25 to 30 percent say yes to legalizing it. But when you ask people whether they want to tax and regulate marijuana -- and educate people about it -- as part of legalization, support can rise to 40 percent. He's found support for legalizing marijuana among police, prosecutors and conservative drug treatment programs. About 700,000 people were arrested in the United States on marijuana charges last year, 85 percent for possession, he says. Those arrests account for half of the arrests in the drug war. If marijuana were legalized, we would save billions we spend now on the criminal justice system. If it were taxed, regulated and sold like alcohol, that would generate legal income for governments. If it were controlled and sold legally, the price would be reasonable. High profits associated with marijuana's illegality would vanish, and so would the violence, just as it did when Prohibition ended. How many more killings will it take before we understand that? - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens