Source: San Francisco Bay Guardian Website: http://www.sfbg.com Contact: Wed, 14 Oct 1998 Author: THOMAS J. O'CONNELL, M.D., San Mateo THE EL SAUZAL MESSAGE Nearly 70 years ago, in a garage on Chicago's North Side, six known mobsters and an innocent bystander were machine-gunned to death by a hit squad, some of whom were dressed as policeman. The killings, never solved, became legendary as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre. They were also dramatic proof of the failure of the "noble experiment." Prohibition, initiated with such utopian optimism in 1920, had succeeded only in producing a violent criminal market. Repeal, once thought impossible, followed within a mere four years. Last month's massacre in a Tijuana suburb has exactly the same significance; it's a manifestation of the murderous competition in the staggeringly lucrative criminal market created by American drug policy. Despite huge increases in appropriations and the frantic efforts of the DEA and the drug czar, Mexico's enforcement apparatus remains thoroughly corrupt; the army, enlisted with much fanfare and optimism following recent scandals in the antinarcotic police agencies, has proven at least as corruptible and is suspected in the current killings. The El Sauzal massacre sends a strong signal that our drug policy requires urgent and critical reevaluation. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck