Pubdate: Sun, 25 Apr 1999 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 1999 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com:81/webx Author: Rick D. Day DRUG WAR UNFAIRLY TARGETS BLACK COMMUNITY In a recent visit to Dallas, New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani spoke to the Greater Dallas Crime Commission. The arch-conservative politico chastised the Clinton Administration's 93lack of commitment94 to stopping the flow of drugs across the border, even though a record 665,000 Americans were arrested in the U.S. last year for simple marijuana possession. This number has added to a growing prison population that ranks as the highest incarceration level in the Western World. Indeed, when it comes to putting average Americans in jail for drugs, the Clinton camp is making the Nixon Administration look like a group of dope smoking liberals by comparison. Mayor Giuliani went on, warning our fine men in blue to pay close attention to crime statistics, scrutinizing trends to enhance policing efforts. Mayor Ron Kirk proudly said he was pleased at not having any major problems between the police department and the city's minority communities. Perhaps our mayor should take time from his busy agenda of meeting dangerous-thinking individuals like Giuliani, and actually venture into some of his minority communities. He should also heed Giuliani's sage advice. No problems in our minority communities, Mayor Kirk? Look at the statistics. Drug crime statistics for 1998 reveal that Dallas police are clearly and unfairly targeting the black community in the drug war. Using data obtained through the Open Records Act, the North Texas Council of Governments, and the National Institute of Drug Abuse, a disturbing pattern of racial imbalance emerges. When it comes to enforcing our drug laws, statistics show black citizens age 25 to 39 are primary victims, making up 49 percent of all adult drug arrests. Not a surprise, you say? The catch is that statistically the percentage of whites who report they use drugs is about the same as blacks (between 11 percent and 12 percent report having used an illegal drug in the past year). In fact, whites report a higher rate of lifetime drug use (93have you ever used drugs?94) than blacks (38 percent vs. 31 percent). There were 7,227 adult drug-related arrests in Dallas last year out of a total 100,500 arrests. Of that number, 4,600, or 62 percent of all drug arrests, involved black citizens. The overwhelming majority of all drug arrests (80 percent) were for nonviolent possession. According to available statistics, out of 460,000 white people in Dallas not one white was arrested in 1998 for selling marijuana. Not only were arrests for cocaine and opiates lumped together, the city records office also reported statistics for 93white94 as also including Hispanics, muddying the racial disparity figures. When the Hispanic number was subtracted from the artificially inflated white number, disturbing statistics were revealed. Overall, blacks are more than four times as likely as white to be arrested in Dallas for a drug charge. The Dallas Police Department's portion of the drug war 96 which includes apprehension, transportation and booking into jail 96 costs a staggering amount of taxpayers' funds. Mayor Kirk92s total police budget for fiscal year 1999 is a whopping $258 million. According to the office of city management, the amount and percentage of the police budget that is allocated specifically to drug arrests is $28 million, or about 10 percent. When factoring in all of the above, the average cost per drug arrest is $3,500, not counting the additional $16 million in state and federal drug war grants that augment our local taxpayer dollars. Perhaps the most alarming part is that this averaged amount is but a drop in the bucket of the overall cost of our war on Dallas citizens. The cost of prosecution, incarceration, probation and urine testing adds thousands of dollars to this figure. Any good citizen who retorts that 93I don't do drugs, so the drug laws don92t affect me94 should sit down and do the math. And while that citizen is at it, factor in the reality that our city's drug problem is not any better, and will not get better. Why? Simple. Prohibition does not and cannot work in a free-market society. When supporting the job the Dallas Police Department is doing regarding the black community, Mayor Kirk should first remove his well-heeled foot from his mouth and then do the math himself. One of the last things the Dallas Police Department should exemplify is a racially biased group such as 93Giuliani's finest.94 Unless the mayor and City Council drastically change police policy, this racist trend will continue, effectively destroying Dallas' black community, as it is currently known. Rick D. Day is a Dallas business owner and member of the Drug Policy Forum of Texas. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea