Pubdate: Thu, 10 May 2012 Source: News-Press (Fort Myers, FL) Copyright: 2012 The News-Press Contact: http://www.news-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1133 Author: Rick Diamond Note: Rick Diamond, a Fort Myers resident, was president of Lee County affiliate of Habit for Humanity from 1992-95. AFRICAN-AMERICANS UNFAIR TARGET IN THE WAR ON DRUGS The totally ineffective War on Drugs has made a bad condition even worse, especially for African-Americans. The 40 million drug convictions, since the appointment of the first drug czar in 1971, has disproportionately targeted and imprisoned young black males. It has destroyed the lives of 1 out of every 4 young black men because of felony convictions at an early age. To market cocaine in the inner cities at an affordable price, drug traffickers developed highly addictive crack cocaine, a rock crystal form of cocaine that can be heated and smoked. The drug laws, however, stated that possession or trafficking in crack cocaine carried sentences that were more than 10 times harsher than for powder cocaine. Young black men rapidly got caught up in the prison system while middle-class whites and Hollywood stars, who mostly used powder cocaine, often got probation in exchange for going to rehab facilities. The good news is that the distinction in sentencing guidelines between crack and powder cocaine has been largely removed. With little or no chance of rehabilitation, young black men go back to their neighborhoods and too often return to the violent drug trade, arming themselves with readily available guns. The grim statistics tell the tale. In 2010, of the 7,000 black homicides nationwide, blacks were responsible for over 90 percent of the murders. You do not have to go further than the 33916 ZIP code in Fort Myers to see these statistics follow a local pattern. Last year, there were 20 homicides in the city, with 10 in Dunbar. Already this year there have been five murders in Dunbar. Chances are that less than half of these murders will ever be solved because witnesses, fearing for their lives, do not come forward. Fort Myers police Chief Doug Baker explained that many of the murders in the city today are not easily solved, random acts of violence, but are planned executions of rival drug members or of witnesses to prior slayings. In many of our inner cities the black middle class has fled the chaos and the crime. In Dunbar, however, concerned citizens have formed the 21st Century Collaboration and have taken a stand to stop the crime and the killings. Their No. 1 demand is for more police presence on their streets. Chief Baker has promised to increase patrols but his $28 million budget and 174 police officers are stretched thin throughout the city's 40 square miles. With pockets of unemployment over 25 percent in parts of the city, crime was up 10 percent last year. Baker, along with Lee County Sheriff Mike Scott, is asking for more help from the community. "If you are afraid of being involved," said Scott, "call in an anonymous tip." The U.S. has only 5 percent of the world's population but a staggering 25 percent of the world's prison population. There are 2.3 million people in our prisons, over half of whom are in for drug-related offenses. One way to reduce the prison population is to legalize marijuana. Its overuse is less deadly than tobacco or alcohol overuse. However, when it comes to cocaine, opiates, crystal meth and other potentially deadly drugs, there are few options. Legalization, decriminalization or draconian sentences, which exist in some countries, may not be the answer. Lee County has a drug court where addicts, without a record of violence, gun possession, or dealing, can avoid jail time by completing a program administered by Southwest Florida Addiction Services. It is time to give those felons, convicted on trafficking in crack cocaine, a second chance. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom