Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jan 2004 Source: Herald-Dispatch, The (WV) Copyright: 2004 The Herald-Dispatch Contact: http://www.herald-dispatch.com/hdinfo/letters.html Website: http://www.hdonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1454 Author: Kasey Warner STATE RESIDENTS PAY HIGH PRICE FOR ILLEGAL DRUG ACTIVITY Most of the law-abiding population remains unaware of the large sums of money involved in illegal drug transactions. Of course, supply and demand drives the market. Users in West Virginia, despite the state being economically depressed, pay a comparatively high price for illegal drugs. While prices can vary with purity, potency, amounts purchased, buyer-seller relationships, transportation costs and proximity to sources, the following average figures from the Narcotics Digest special issue on illicit drug prices in the second half of 2003 may be instructive. West Virginia dealers pay $24,000 for a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of powdered cocaine and sell it for $250 to $300 for an eighth of an ounce or $100 for a gram. With these above-national average prices, a kilogram could well generate $75,000 in profit. We rarely see crack cocaine sold wholesale in West Virginia, but dealers usually pay from $800 to $1,600 an ounce and sell an eighth of an ounce for $300 to $400 or $20 to $50 for a fourth of a gram. That's significantly higher than the national average, and generates approximately $1,500 profit per ounce. West Virginians are paying a fairly high $300 a gram for heroin, $6 to $10 for a gram of marijuana or $2 a joint and an above-average $150 per gram of meth. The argument is often heard that drug use should be a matter of personal freedom, and limited law enforcement dollars are better spent elsewhere. I disagree. Many drug abusers resort to stealing property from others to pay for their drugs; property crimes increase dramatically when drug crimes are ignored. Further, health problems, lost work, unemployment and vehicle accidents among drug abusers are much higher than in the law-abiding population. We also note a very high correlation between drug use and domestic abuse, and domestic abuse is reduced as drug abuse is reduced. Further, a huge amount of untaxed money is leaving the state's economy with drug dealers, a situation lessened by a continuing fight against illegal drugs. We are aware of extensive drugs-for-guns trading networks to bring drugs to the state and supply firearms to large city criminals; the fight against drugs is also a fight against illegal firearms. Virtually every drug bust has a greatly multiplying, beneficial effect on future drug abuse, theft crimes, public health, family health, the local economy and public safety. I commend our multi-jurisdictional drug task force officers for the dangerous work they do in fighting drug abuse, and, therefore wide-ranging crime; they are our unsung heroes. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin