Pubdate: Fri, 24 Apr 2015 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Gordon D. McAllister Jr. In 2013, 31% of all federal criminal cases were drug cases, and 21% of those cases involved marijuana. As a retired state court trial judge and member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, I read with some interest a?oRecord Backlog Jams Courtsa?? (page one, April 7) about cases in federal courts. These delays often amount to justice denied for litigants who dona?Tt get the relief they seek in a timely manner. The article doesna?Tt mention the elephant in the courtroom: the explosion of drug cases in both federal and state court and their effect on our criminal system. Rather than debate the issue of how and where to put more courtrooms, it is time to have a serious and adult discussion about drug use and the criminal justice system. Statistics from the U.S. Sentencing Commission for 2013 reveal that 31% of all federal criminal cases were drug cases, and 21% of those cases involved marijuana. This is our a?owar on drugsa?? in action. If in fact there is a war, it seems to me we are losing. In my 28 years on the bench, my criminal docket contained a greater percentage of drug cases than the average federal court docket, and if you factored in the crimes committed by drug users to help support their habit, the number was much closer to 50%. The war on drugs has been a decadeslong failed experiment in treating drug use as criminal behavior. The cost of this folly to the judicial system goes beyond the court system and takes valuable man hours from law-enforcement personnel and is the major cause of jail and prison overcrowding. Treatment of drug use as a medical and not criminal issue would benefit not only the individual user, but the court system and society as well. Gordon D. McAllister Jr. Queenstown, Md. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt