Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008 Source: Lima News (OH) Copyright: 2008 Freedom Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.limanews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/990 Author: Ronald Lederman, Jr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Tarika+Wilson (Tarika Wilson) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) A WAR WE SHOULD CALL OFF Being some time away from learning specific details of the Jan. 4 shooting that killed Lima resident Tarika Wilson, a lot of people are doing what people do in the absence of facts: They're blaming the victim, the veteran police officer who shot her, or Anthony Terry, the target of the Third Street drug raid. Without knowing those specific details, all anyone outside the investigation has to go on is his own particular world view. Two recent reports from groups advocating reform of the justice system show that, no matter what happened in that house on Third Street, all parties involved stood to be the victims of a war that has gone on for too long with no overall success. This most recent battle in our War on Drugs has claimed at least three lives directly, many more indirectly, all to take one alleged dealer out of circulation. The lives involved include a 26-year mother of six and a 31-year veteran officer. But, truth be told, we can go to many corners of this region to find some manner of drugs, and that's without counting alcohol as the drug it is. If Terry is everything prosecutors accuse him of being, is his being off the streets doing anything other than shifting traffic just a little? But, lawmakers, who want to appear to be keeping us safe, pass increasingly tougher laws. They can claim credit for tougher laws, but we don't hold them accountable enough for their role in what happened on Third Street. Police agencies that want to show they're cleaning up the streets keep making busts without cutting very much into the overall supply. We end up locking many more people away, which means we're spending billions of extra tax dollars, but the rate at which people use drugs isn't declining. The Cato Institute offers on a map (www.cato.org/raidmap) showing botched SWAT and paramilitary drug raids. Ohio is well-represented. The Justice Policy Institute and The Sentencing Project, both, as is Cato, based in Washington, D.C., last month issued reports demonstrating the War on Drugs has been a failure. The reports are available on the group's Web sites -- www.justicepolicy.org and www.sentencingproject.org -- but some highlights of this nation's War on Drugs: . For the first 70 years of the last century, the Justice Policy Institute reported, U.S. incarceration rates remained at about 100 per 100,000 citizens. Since 1970, the rate has ballooned to 491 per 100,000 citizens. That massive increase is due in large part to those we lock up for drugs. The cost for locking up drug offenders in state and federal prisons comes to $8 billion a year, the Justice Policy Institute reports. But, "There is little evidence to suggest that high rates of incarceration affect drug use rates or deter drug users. Researchers have previously found that decreases in crime in the 1990s were not attributable to an increase in the number of prisons or the increase in the incarceration rate. A Justice Policy Institute study further substantiated these findings by investigating the relationship of incarcerations to the rate of drug use in states. In fact, when observed over a three-year period, states with high incarceration rates tended to have higher rates of drug use." . The Sentencing Project, in looking at what it calls a 25-year quagmire -- indeed, this country's longest war by far -- reports drug arrests have more than tripled in that time. Authorities arrested a record 1.8 million people -- more than six-tenths of 1 percent of the total population -- in 2005 for drugs alone. In 2005, 42.6 percent of the arrests were for marijuana alone. Pot arrests alone accounted for 79 percent of the increase in drug arrests during the 1990s. And, the number of drug offenders in jails and prisons has increased 1,100 percent -- meaning 11 times more drug offenders are living at taxpayers' expense. But, nearly six in 10 people in state prisons for a drug offense have no history of violence or high-level drug sales. The War on Drugs has gone on more than twice as long as this country tolerated Prohibition. No one dismisses the need to lock up violent drunks and those who endanger others by getting behind the wheel smashed. Society would have much more money and much more prison space if we limited our police actions against drug users and dealers to those who actually present a serious risk. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake