Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jul 2002 Source: Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Palm Beach Post Contact: http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333 Author: Stebbins Jefferson, Palm Beach Post Columnist TWO CRIMINALS, BUT SAME CRIME Walking in the mall one afternoon this week, I came face-to-face with a young man loaded down with bags, all bearing labels of expensive shops. He was wearing the uniform of the street drug trade: body- hugging sleeveless undershirt, prominently logoed mid-calf-length pants and designer sneakers. As the youth strutted toward me in a kind of hip-hop prance, I mentally reminded myself that I should draw no hasty conclusions about him or the chains around his neck or the gaudy jewelry on his wrists and fingers. They could bespeak nothing more than adolescent addiction to the styles shown in music videos. Trying to turn off my thoughts about the devastating blows that crack cocaine and other drugs have dealt our neighborhoods, I said, "Hello," and he turned and smiled. That was when I saw that every tooth in the front of his mouth was capped with gold. It also was when -- justified or not -- I yielded to the temptation to profile him as a drug dealer. For years, I preferred to believe that low-level street dealers are unwittingly so alienated from mainstream society that they have no qualms about conducting a trade that ruins people's lives, destroys families and decimates communities. Despite evidence to the contrary when it comes to those at the upper levels of drug trafficking, I believed that only desperate straits -- lack of education, poverty and other dehumanizing experiences -- could drive one to peddle narcotic poison where one lives. I embraced that theory because it was the only logic I could summon to explain a magnitude of greed capable of canceling all human integrity and compassion. Later that day, watching the congressional hearings on corruption in corporate America, I further concluded that whether a conscienceless businessman is at the bottom or at the top of America's social pecking order, unbridled lust for material wealth and status is the factor that overwhelms all consideration of how one's actions may cause others to suffer. The CEO who cooked the company books to generate paper profits and reap for himself lucrative bonuses is the soul mate of the street dealer. Though the two wear different uniforms, both predators' motive is the same. Greed, not need, has been driving our economy. Two decades ago, when the drug trade began to thrive in Miami, banks allowed customers to deposit large sums of money without checking to confirm that the money was legitimate. Banks now are supposed to report cash transactions of $10,000 or more. That self-serving focus, which accommodated top-level drug traffickers, also permitted three of the Sept. 11 hijackers to open American bank accounts to carry out their missions of terrorism. Street thugs hook their customers with bargain prices that escalate over time. Corporate thugs seduce their employees and other customers to invest in depreciating stock to shore up a sinking market, thus allowing the top dogs to skim off the profits. Both dealers are willing to sacrifice the general welfare to gratify their greed. The difference? The most hopeless victims of the low-level drug dealers are highly visible in the inner cities. The less-visible prey of the corporate leaders more likely will be found in middle-class communities and the suburbs. There, retirement plans are dropping, every drop precipitated by the unethical practices of businessmen who rigged the rules to create formulas and business strategies that hide more information than they disclose. The conductors on the journey to this dangerous pass are arrogant corporate executives who often had in their pockets politicians -- Democrat and Republican -- whose priority is getting more money for their campaigns. Once upon a time, public censure helped to keep greed in check. Rather than censure, today we tend to show respectful deference, even adulation, for those who have material wealth, no matter how they got it. Facing an economic crisis with worldwide implications, President Bush has promised that convicted corporate criminals will serve jail time. If so, the bottom-feeders and the top-feeders finally will meet each other on common ground. On the other hand, cancel that thought. Any executives who do time probably will be housed in a country-club prison. Unlike drug-related crime, corporate crime is considered nonviolent. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth