Pubdate: Fri, 9 Apr 2004 Source: DrugSense Weekly Section: Feature Article Website: http://www.drugsense.org/current.htm Author: James E. Gierach Note: James E. Gierach is a former drug prosecutor in Cook County, a practicing attorney, a former primary candidate for Cook County State's Attorney who sought to end prohibition to prevent crime and reduce other drug prohibition harm. He is a speaker for L.E.A.P., Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. http://www.leap.cc/ UNLUCKY ERIC The headline - "Teens arrested on felony drug charges," (The Free Press Advocate, 3/31/04) - caught my eye as I curbed my motorcycle for a lunch break in Wilmington on Wednesday. The news story was about another drug-war failure. According to the story and charges, 19-year-old Eric M. Friddle, a former local high school football player was caught selling 1 gram or more and less than 15 grams of cocaine to another. Too bad for Eric, he happened to be standing within 1,000 feet of a school making his commonplace infraction of Illinois drug laws a Class-X felony, the equivalent in seriousness of armed robbery, calling for mandatory penitentiary time. Unbelievably, bail was set at $500,000, requiring the deposit of $50,000 in order for Eric to be released on bond. And assuming Eric the-19-year-old or his friends and relatives can post $50,000, ten percent of the bond, $5,000, will automatically be forfeited to the government for acting as "bail bondsman" under Illinois law. Drug dealing in a prohibition world is the most profitable business on Earth but $500,000? The day after my motorcycle ride, I picked up the Chicago Tribune and read the storyline ("$750,000 bail set for man in slaying," Chicago Tribune, 4/8/04). A bail similar to Eric's bail was set for Christopher Kartzmark, 18, in a routine gang murder in Chicago. Something is amiss, I thought, when the bail for murder and petty-ante drug-dealing so nearly equate killing another and drug dealing between consenting adults. The prohibition of drugs has failed young Eric, as it has failed all of us. Assuming for the sake of discussion before trial that Eric messed up, maybe Eric had an ineffective D.A.R.E. instructor, or maybe D.A.R.E. itself is ineffective, as numerous studies have found. No defense. Or maybe the lawmakers who enacted prohibition laws that make drugs unreasonably valuable and put more drugs everywhere, tempting good kids to go bad, should be on trial with Eric for aiding and abetting drug-dealing everywhere. Won't happen. Too bad Eric. Bad luck. Most people don't get caught. But the police claim they caught you and, now, prohibition has a good chance of destroying your life. Ironically, drug prohibition is supposed to save the kids. But not you Eric. Not you. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake