Pubdate: Sun, 15 Dec 2002 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2002 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Rachel Graves WAR ON DRUGS NETS SMALL-TIME OFFENDERS Texas' war on drugs punishes few major importers and dealers but imprisons thousands caught with less than a sugar packet full of cocaine or other illegal drugs. The battle rages most fiercely in Harris County. Of the 58,000 drug convictions won by local prosecutors over the past five years, 77 percent involved less than a gram of a drug, according to district court data analyzed by the Houston Chronicle. Harris County sent 35,000 of these small-time offenders to jail or prison. The numbers suggest that these men and women are collateral damage in the war on drugs, arrested because they were easy targets rather than objects of a grand strategy. The impact is felt most harshly in black neighborhoods. "My people are suffering," said the Rev. F.N. Williams of Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, voicing a growing frustration with the high proportion of blacks in prison. "If the ground can be level, let's make it level." A recent national report on incarceration patterns concluded there is "a two-tiered 'war,' in which middle-income communities with resources can address their drug problems privately as a health issue, while low-income neighborhoods are essentially consigned to criminal justice mechanisms." In Texas, drug abusers sentenced to prison often find waiting lists for counseling programs so long that they are released before they can get in. That means these addicts are thrown back into the same situations they left, this time with a felony record and further diminished prospects. Recognizing the effect on their community, a coalition of black religious leaders, Houston Ministers Against Crime, has started sitting in on court hearings and lobbying state and local officials to make changes. Easy Targets "Drugs cross racial barriers, from Acres Homes to Kingwood," said the Rev. Carl Davis of New Life Tabernacle Church in Acres Homes, a poor, largely black neighborhood about 20 miles from Kingwood, a mostly white suburb. "Why is it that only your ethnic minorities are the ones that end up incarcerated?" State District Judge Michael T. McSpadden, who has encouraged the ministers to focus their efforts on reducing minor drug crimes from felonies to misdemeanors, acknowledged that the disparity may look like a conspiracy against the underclass. But in reality, he said, it reflects arrests of opportunity. Police and prosecutors are not conducting sting operations and investigations to catch people with less than a gram. Instead, they arrest people leaving crack motels and other known drug hangouts or respond to resident complaints. People from tony neighborhoods use drugs privately, McSpadden said, whereas in poor communities, drug users and dealers often loiter in the streets. Because neighbors call the police to complain, more people are arrested in the Fifth Ward than in River Oaks. The result: 62 percent of those convicted for less than 1 gram of drugs in Harris County were black and 37 percent white, according to the Chronicle analysis. It was not possible to tell how many were Hispanic. Harris County's population is 42 percent Anglo, 33 percent Hispanic and 18 percent black. Experts say that, regardless of race, the people ensnared by these drug policies overwhelmingly are poor and uneducated. 'This Is A Waste Of Time' One of them, Tonya Ford, questions why she is being punished instead of being treated for her addiction. "It's like us being animals," she said. "It's like locking a dog up because it has rabies." Ford, 27, was pulled over in November leaving a known drug hangout with a nearly empty crack pipe in her car. She is now serving six months in the Plane State Jail near Dayton. Most of the less-than-a-gram drug cases, including Ford's, never went to trial. The defendants pleaded guilty and took their several-month prison sentences or, in the minority of cases, several years probation. When the cases do go before a jury, though, jurors often complain. "Every single time they'll say, 'Judge, what were we doing here? This is a waste of time,' " said McSpadden, a Republican. "I couldn't agree with them more." A national expert on prison sentences for drug offenders called Harris County's statistics astonishing, even in the face of a national trend toward locking up low-level drug offenders. Most other communities, he said, reserve their jail space for those caught peddling drugs on street corners rather than carrying around cocaine residue. "It sounds remarkable to me," said Marc Mauer, assistant director of The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit group that researches criminal justice issues. Nearly half of Texas' 15,000 state jail prisoners are serving time for drug convictions involving less than 1 gram, and half of those are from Harris County, according to Texas Criminal Justice Policy Council statistics. Harris County is driving the population of nonviolent offenders in the state jails, a system of 25 lower-security facilities started in 1993 to alleviate prison crowding. Today, 37 percent of the state jail inmates come from Harris County, more than double the county's share of the total Texas population. The next three most populous counties combined -- Dallas, Bexar and Tarrant - -- send considerably fewer prisoners to the state jails, a 2000 report from the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows. Harris County District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal said the incarceration rates are high simply because his office is doing its job. "If you give me a law, I'll enforce it," Rosenthal said. "If you take it off the books, that's fine. I'm not in the legislative business, I'm in the enforcement business." While Rosenthal would prefer that his attorneys have more time to devote to violent crime, he said, "sweeping (crack and cocaine cases) under the rug" will not help addicts recover from their law-breaking addictions. But as police, prosecutors and judges all follow the letter of the law, critics say the system has run amok. In an unlikely coalition of sorts, McSpadden, the ministers group and Rosenthal said the drug court, now in the planning stages, should be open by next fall. The Republican district attorney is skeptical that it will be effective. Rosenthal said he has looked at drug courts around the country and thought their standards for success were too low, patting themselves on the back if graduates do not get felony convictions within six months of release. But he is working toward implementation of the court. "The law says it's a good idea," he said, "and I follow the law." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth