Pubdate: Thu, 23 Jun 2011 Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Copyright: 2011 St. Louis Post-Dispatch Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/qFJNhZNm Website: http://www.stltoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/418 Author: Pat Gauen 'WAR ON DRUGS' BELIES AVAILABILITY, MADISON COUNTY HEROIN DEATHS One catches my eye at least a couple of times a month. It will be a big car, moderately old, maybe an Oldsmobile or a Buick, riding low in the back under the weight of its big trunk. The lone driver runs at the speed limit or a little less, casting nervous glances at passing vehicles. If I'm wondering what weighs the car down, you can bet the cops are wondering, too. My daily commute takes me along Interstate 55-70 through Metro East, a major drug-smuggling corridor where patrols lurk and large-scale busts have been relatively regular. Not long ago, I saw the resurrection of an old law enforcement trick: Police put a "Drug Checkpoint Ahead" sign along the interstate just ahead of an exit, and park an empty marked squad car, with lights flashing, just beyond the exit. Then they watch for drug mules to reveal themselves by abruptly diving off the ramp in between. This has been done so often for so long that I feel confident I'm not revealing any secrets. Smugglers have tricks, too. Like hidden compartments for drugs, and use of fabric softener dryer sheets to try to throw trained police dogs off the scent. The War on Drugs is like a game. And it turned 40 years old last week. I didn't even know it had an anniversary until I read how it's considered to date to June 17, 1971, when President Richard Nixon first used the term to describe a program to eradicate the menace. Perhaps the date ought to take a place in history beside Jan. 16, 1920. That was the effective date of Prohibition, which otherwise could have been called the "War on Alcohol." That was a game, too. In the days before cop cars had two-way radios, rum couriers would simply try to outrun them. It was, no kidding, the birth of stock car racing, whose early stars included active moonshine haulers. Lots of folks liked liquor, but it was a scourge that killed people, ruined lives and had to be eradicated, according those who backed the 18th Amendment. These days, it is viewed as a failed experiment -- a folly that lasted about 15 years, spawned enormous gang crime and corruption and did little to slow drinking. Alcohol is still a scourge, of course, killing slowly in the body and quickly on the highways. But society has blunted the consequences: Underage drinking is outlawed, and drunken driving taken more seriously. Products are inspected and labeled, so you won't go blind or swill 100 proof thinking it's only 50. And, of course, alcohol taxes make a dandy revenue engine. So we achieved a long-enduring, if imperfect, political equilibrium between public safety and individual rights. Many will say it's blasphemy to equate Prohibition with the War on Drugs, but the parallels are hard to miss. Illicit drugs would seem to be an even worse scourge than alcohol. But, as with liquor, much of the accompanying violence is driven by a high demand deprived of a legitimate source. Al Capone could not compete with Anheuser-Busch in making beer for a legal marketplace. The physical consequences of drug abuse are awful. I truly wish our interdiction and deterrence programs did work. But despite the spending of billions of dollars, loss of many brave officers and imprisonment of thousands of offenders, it looks to me as if any kind of poison you want to smoke, snort, swallow or inject remains readily available. This is underscored by recent data from Steve Nonn, the coroner of Madison County, who is sounding a fresh alarm about the scope of heroin abuse. Not halfway through this year, the county where I live counted its 22nd apparent heroin overdose fatality of 2011. That's on pace to more than double last year's 18, which more than doubled the previous year's seven. So will it be 50 this year, and 100 in 2012? Were I smarter, this is the point where I'd unveil some brilliant fix that had eluded everyone all these years. Maybe a tweak of some kind, or perhaps a whole new strategy. But I'm afraid nobody is that smart. For a starting point, it might help if we were all just smart enough to recognize that what we are doing is not getting the job done. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt