Pubdate: Sun, 08 May 2005 Source: King County Journal (Bellevue, WA) Copyright: 2005, Horvitz Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.kingcountyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2948 Source: King County Journal (WA) Author: Noel S. Brady, Journal Reporter Cited: King County Bar Association http://www.kcba.org/ Referenced: the KCBA report http://www.kcba.org/druglaw/pdf/Treatment_Policy_Report.pdf Cited: The Sentencing Project http://www.sentencingproject.org/ Referenced: The Sentencing Project study http://www.sentencingproject.org/pdfs/waronmarijuana.pdf Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) COUNTY LEADS SURGE IN MARIJUANA ARRESTS Study Argues Drug War Focus Has Shifted Away From Heroin, Cocaine A recent nationwide study has identified King County as having the sharpest increase since 1990 in marijuana-related arrests among the country's 10 most populous counties. When King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng sparked a political movement three years ago declaring the "war on drugs has failed," marijuana arrests in King County had risen 418 percent between 1999 and 2002, according to the study results released this week by The Sentencing Project. Misdemeanor and felony possession arrests alone were up 465 percent, the study say, while pot-dealer arrests rose 99 percent. The figures illustrate the futility of prosecuting nonviolent drug offenders, particularly those who use marijuana, said Roger Goodman, drug policy director for the King County Bar Association. "It's shocking but true," said Goodman of the statistics produced by The Sentencing Project. "The focus ought to be on crimes against persons, crimes against property rather than psychoactive drugs." In the King County Bar's own Drug Policy Project report released this year, the Bar proposed a plan "for replacing the current framework of criminal prohibition with one of legal regulation." The Bar and a growing contingent of lawmakers, legal professionals and health-care workers want to reduce the roles prosecution and incarceration play in dealing with the drug problem by increasing money spent on addiction treatment. Goodman said he also hopes drugs such as marijuana can be taken off the black market to remove the vast profit motive for people to grow and sell it. Regulating the drug would restrict its access to children and provide prompt health care and essential services to addicts, Goodman said. "It's really about protecting kids and saving money," he said. Bellevue police Capt. Jim Kowalczyk, who leads the multi-agency Eastside Narcotics Task Force, said his narcotics officers aren't interested in putting low-level, nonviolent pot smokers in jail. Maybe so, but one of the Task Force's most effective strategies is arresting recreational users and making deals with them for their help in busting their suppliers. "Our goal is to get to the source and stop it," Kowalczyk said. "We want to go all the way up to the biggest fish we can get. A common way to get to the producer is to go after low-level users." Whether it's marijuana, methamphetamine or heroin, police are responsible for enforcing the law, he said. If there is an emphasis, it's on those who supply the most of any illegal substance. "Are we winning the war on drugs? I don't think so," Kowalczyk said. The study by The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C.-based left-leaning think tank, says the drug war's focus has shifted over the past decade from hard drugs to marijuana, which now accounts for nearly half of all drug arrests nationwide. The numbers in the study were taken from the FBI's uniform crime report, and according to the study's co-author Marc Mauer, those statistics take into account only cases in which marijuana sales or possession was the primary charge. "It calls into question the strategy of the war on drugs at the present," Mauer said. "It doesn't appear that arresting this number of people for marijuana is effective." The study indicates that the percentage of heroin and cocaine cases plunged from 55 percent of all drug arrests in 1992 to less than 30 percent 10 years later. Meanwhile, pot arrests jumped from 28 percent to 45 percent. Mauer said the trend immediately followed the national focus on crack cocaine in the late 1980s. When the crack problem leveled off, the federal government continued spending about $35 billion a year to fund the war on drugs. Along with the rise in pot arrests was a rise in overall drug arrests, from fewer than 1.1 million in 1990 to more than 1.5 million a decade later. Still, about 80 percent of the jump came from marijuana arrests, the study found. The study also showed that although African Americans make up 14 percent of marijuana users generally, they account for nearly a third of all marijuana arrests. "We need to consider whether current law enforcement strategies are having the effect they should have," Mauer said. From a local perspective, Kowalczyk said, the King County statistics don't necessarily correspond with the direction the Eastside Narcotics Task Force has taken. In 1999, he said, the Task Force raided 18 marijuana growing operations, which on average include about 100 plants. The next year, the Task Force busted 22 grow houses, and in 2001 it busted 10. In 2002, the team found only nine grow operations, and in 2003 it busted seven. While police here are concerned with the increasing potency of home-grown pot and the importation of notorious "B.C. Bud," the Task Force in recent years has grown more focused on the damage caused by methamphetamines and the dangerous labs popping up to make crystal meth. "That's scarier to me than anything," Kowalczyk said Despite the statistical appearance that King County has gotten tougher on pot heads, Goodman said, Washington state and King County specifically have led the country in a cultural change for dealing with the drug problem. In 2002, the state Legislature reduced prison sentences for nonviolent drug offenders and earmarked the money saved by releasing them for addiction treatment and drug courts, which offer effective alternatives to jail. So far, the results have been positive, Goodman said. So much so that last week state lawmakers passed a bill for an additional $33 million to be used for drug treatment and an additional $6.7 million earmarked especially to help kids with drug problems. "The Legislature has enthusiastically responded," he said. "I think there has been a cultural change." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake