Pubdate: Sun, 17 Nov 2013 Source: Star Democrat (Easton, MD) Copyright: 2013 The Star Democrat Contact: http://www.stardem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1233 Author: Neill Franklin Note: Neill Franklin is the director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. IT'S TIME TO END PROHIBITION (AGAIN) BALTIMORE - Ninety years ago, brewing, transporting and selling alcohol were all federal crimes. The prohibition of alcohol was repealed in 1933 because it supported large criminal organizations through the inflated prices of unregulated, illegal booze and because it disproportionately harmed the lower and middle classes. Today we still have prohibition, its largest benefactors are still international criminal gangs, and its victims are still mostly the poor and middle-class. The prohibition of narcotics - including marijuana, cocaine, heroin, LSD, and MDMA - has the same problems that alcohol prohibition did in its time, and then some. International drug traffickers reap huge profits and middle-and lower-class Americans pay the costly price of outdated drug policies. For 34 years, I enforced the drug war as a police officer for the Maryland State and Baltimore Police Departments. My experiences on the front lines brought me face-to-face with the victims of the failed drug war: mostly good people caught in tough positions. I reached a point where I could no longer watch the immense human, financial, and societal toll that our misguided policies were taking and I had to speak out. The cost of even a minor drug conviction is devastating. Employers are much less likely to hire people with criminal records, while students often lose access to financial support and can even be kicked out of school. The social repercussions of drug conviction often make people more likely to turn to crime because they're excluded from most conventional means of income and survival. Even in the rare cases of eventual acquittal, low-income victims of the drug war may have no means to post bail and so often spend months in jail awaiting trial. With no way to keep their lives in order, they can easily lose jobs, houses, cars, even custody of their children. When they're released, they may have no criminal record, but they're left with a ruined life and few resources. This process creates a vicious cycle that ironically leads to more crime as the poor are made poorer and more desperate. This increased focus on drug enforcement takes attention and resources away from violent and property crimes, fewer of which now get solved than was the case before the war on drugs began. Simultaneously, arrests for simple possession create tension between law enforcement and citizens, causing distrust and outright aggression towards police. A mistrust of law enforcement means that people are less likely to call the police when there is a real emergency, thereby creating a space for more violent crime to occur. The drug war is also expensive. The United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world. According to the FBI's Uniform Crime Report, police across the country made more arrests for drug abuse violations (some 1.5 million) last year than for all violent crimes combined. Of those, more than 82 percent were for possession, not even distribution or manufacturing. It costs an estimated $51 billion in tax dollars every year to prosecute the drug war. All this time and money could be used to prosecute and prevent violent crimes, and to improve education, transportation, and other public services. Some drug use can be very dangerous, but it is clear that the current approach to drugs in our society has been disastrously ineffective. Einstein defined insanity as "doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." By that definition, prohibition is insane. We can't expect to have different results than we did 90 years ago by doing the same thing we did then. It's time for us to admit our failures and try a new approach. This reality is being embraced by state governments. Colorado and Washington have legalized marijuana sales and use, 13 states have proposed doing the same, and 20 states plus Washington DC have legalized medical marijuana. We need drug policies that reduce the harmful effects of drugs, not ones that create dangerous new side effects. By legalizing drugs and taking a public health approach, we will not only reduce incarceration rates, we get all the perks that come along with it: less crime, safer communities, and more tax dollars to benefit society, just to name a few. Like an addict, the first step to recovery is to admit we have a problem. Let's become reformed prohibitionists. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom