Pubdate: Wed, 10 Apr 2002 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2002 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Pam Easton WAR ON DRUGS NEEDS NEW DIRECTION, SOME AT DRUG CONFERENCE SAY HOUSTON - America's war on drugs should focus more on an individual's actions and less on what substances a person might possess or ingest, officials attending a drug policy conference at Rice University said Wednesday. The two-day drug policy conference taking place at the Baker Institute for Public Policy in Houston concludes Thursday. Besides focusing on the United States' drug policy, attendees will discuss policies in other countries with hopes of eventually making recommendations for policy changes in the United States to "reduce negative consequences of drug use and abuse, including attention to more effective drug education and treatment." "It seems to me that the current (U.S.) drug policy has created strains on both the law and democracy," Ronald Earle, Travis County District Attorney in Austin, told those who gathered at the institute, some of whom traveled from as far away as Switzerland, Australia and Colombia. Earle said the nation must develop a policy which results in no more harm than the use of drugs already causes, addresses the underlying reasons for drug abuse, preserves the public safety without violating people's civil liberties and doesn't stress public resources such as jails and law enforcement agencies. "There are so many harms that we are unnecessarily inflicting on ourselves because of drug prohibition," said James Gray, a superior court judge from Anaheim, Calif. and a former prosecutor who once held a record for the largest number of drug convictions. "There's got to be something wrong here," he said. "It's easier for our children to get illegal drugs than it is a six-pack of beer." Gray suggested that laws need to be restructured and more programs developed, such as drug courts, to help people overcome dependency. He said the possession or ingestion of drugs should not be a crime in and of itself. "Where government goes astray is where government tries to protect us from ourselves," he said. "That is where the drug war is going wrong." Gray said state and federal agencies have become too "addicted" to federal funds handed out to fight the war on drugs and that government is sending the wrong message through current drug legislation. The judge said marijuana stays in a person's system for 30 days while cocaine is only present for about 72 hours. The difference results in a message to convicted drug users undergoing drug tests that curbing their habit can be less detectable through harsher drugs. "The message is: 'If you're worried about being caught, take cocaine not marijuana,'" he said. "That is not the message we want to send, but that is the message that is being received." Asa Hutchinson, administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, said the nation's drug war has stalled in recent years, but has achieved amazing successes in the past few decades. "One of the greatest myths of this decade is that there is no success in our anti-drug efforts in this country," Hutchinson said. "The facts are that cocaine drug use is down by 75 percent during the last 15 years. "We have reached the optimum level of reducing drug use in our country and we can't do any better than we have done at the present time." Hutchinson said the DEA must now work toward reducing dependency. He said the only way to keep drug usage down is to keep such substances illegal. "I believe it is a wrong conclusion to say that we have not made enough progress and that therefore, we should move in an entirely different policy direction by legalizing harmful drugs," he said. "The fact is you cannot legalize enough, you cannot decriminalize enough to put the cartels and the criminal organizations out of business. "After prohibition ended, did the organized crime element of our country go away? Of course it did not." Hutchinson's declaration that the nation has been victorious in its war on drugs is a sad commentary for a country in the middle of a drug epidemic enhanced by its own policies, said Kevin Zeese, executive director of Common Sense for Drug Policy, a non-profit group focused on expanding discussion about the nation's drug policy. "The price of heroin, cocaine is cheaper today than it was in 1980s," he said. "The purity of heroin, cocaine is greater than it was in 1980. Drugs like crack cocaine, which didn't exist in those days now exist. We are not winning the war on drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh