Pubdate: Tue, 18 Aug 1998 Date: 08/18/1998 Source: The Dominion (New Zealand) Author: Robert Merkin Website: http://www.inl.co.nz/wnl/dominion/index.html Sir, - The statistics and conclusions which Assistant Commissioner Ian Holyoake supplied to Parliament's health select committee regarding marijuana and homicide (August 6) would be howlingly funny if their potential to affect law and government policy were not involved. Nine of 67 murders in one year out of a population of 3.6 million is what we in the statistics trade call a bizarrely small statistical sample. With such numbers, randomness and poor data collection are far more likely culprits than pattern. No professional statistician would dare suggest a causative link between any two such phenomena, let alone cast the shadow of such a suggestion on legislation. There is an extremely confident, long-established statistical link between substance abuse and homicide - when the substance is alcohol, which Mr Holyoake or The Dominion article neglected to mention. These 67 homicides involving alcohol should have been reported for the obvious comparison of inference it would have yielded. Another revealing statistic is the percentage of violent-crime arrests and prisoners with a history of alcohol abuse. Anecdotally, as manager of an emergency winter shelter for the homeless in the United States, the single most identifiable factor in bringing us our guests is alcohol abuse. Well behind are heroin abuse and psychiatric illness, or a mix of these three. We have never encountered a guest brought in by marijuana abuse. It's just not that kind of substance. Robert Merkin Massachusetts