Pubdate: Mon, 06 Sep 1999 Source: Newsweek (US) Copyright: 1999 Newsweek, Inc. Contact: 251 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Website: http://newsweek.com/ Author: Ellis Cose THE CASUALTIES OF WAR Using Prisons To Solve The Drug Problem Hurts Not Just The Black And Latino Communities That Have Suffered The Most, But All Of America In search of stories, we sniff the sewer of scandal; and aroused by the scent, we fearless journalists strike. So tell us, George W., did you snort it? Did you smoke it? And assuming that you did, tell us when. Somehow we make of this a test of character. And in some minor sense it is. But in the end it doesn't tell us much about whether a man deserves to be president. Irrespective of what George W. Bush might have done in his wilder, daring days, he and other presidential candidates have a responsibility to reflect on this so-called war on drugs. Largely because of that so-called war, more Americans than ever are behind bars. The federal prison population quintupled in less than two decades, as the number of people sentenced for federal drug offenses multiplied more than 11 times. A huge proportion of those convicted have come from places such as Watts in Los Angeles that are predominantly black and Latino. Part of the reason is that drug dealing in poor inner-city communities is more likely to be out in the open than it is in the suburbs, where it generally takes place behind closed doors. Another reason is that residents of such neighborhoods are less likely to have sophisticated legal help -- or to get the benefit of the doubt from prosecutors. They are also more likely to be caught with crack cocaine, an offense that carries much stiffer penalties than possessing the powdered kind. Connie Rice, cofounder of a Los Angeles-based advocacy group called The Advancement Project, estimates the number of prisoners and ex-prisoners among men from certain parts of Watts at nearly 50 percent. "I don't understand the lack of alarm about it," she says. Dina Rose, a sociologist at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, notes that in such communities prison time is so prevalent it has become a natural and expected part of life. And she questions whether arresting such large numbers of people really drives down crime. Rose's preliminary research in Tallahassee, Fla., has found that arrest levels soon reach a "tipping point" beyond which a community becomes so destabilized that the crime rate goes up instead of down as more people are imprisoned. It would be one thing if we could be confident that this focus on imprisonment was solving the drug problem. But the evidence is, at best, mixed. Overall drug use is down from its peak in 1979 (cocaine use peaked six years later, in 1985). But there is little evidence that incarceration policies had much to do with it. In the get-tough state of Texas, for example, cocaine use is rising. Among students, it is at its highest level since the annual survey of the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse began in 1988. Meanwhile, heroin overdoses in Texas have risen, as has the percentage of adolescents testing positive for marijuana upon arrest -- and all this despite the fact that Texas has the second highest incarceration rate (724 per 100,000 residents) of any state in the nation (just after Louisiana). Texas's prison-focused policy has been a failure. And so, in large measure, has the nation's "war." It has left us with overcrowded prisons, and with hundreds of thousands of people who have lost the right to vote, and have little chance at a job and a slim prayer of being reconnected to the larger society. It has also left many Americans, particularly black Americans, with the sense the judicial system is "the new Jim Crow," in the words of Eric Sterling, president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation. For all that, taxpayers foot a huge bill for prisons as the convict population swells. Obviously, some people are so violent and incorrigible that prison is the only fit place for them. The problem is that we are spending less and less time figuring out who those people are; and we are devoting precious little energy to reclaiming those lives that can be reclaimed. We have also given up on the very idea of rehabilitation, of providing prisoners with skills and hope. Instead, we warehouse the fallen in dismal places that produce nothing more useful, for the most part, than license plates and ruined souls. One reason is that the war rhetoric and the war mentality allow us to create "collateral casualties," in the words of William Mofitt, president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. The tragedy is that many of those collateral casualties are potentially productive human beings. America needs desperately to break its addiction to this witch's brew of angry language, absurd (often dishonest) assumptions and ineffective policy that is poisoning the nation from within. Since presidential-campaign rhetoric -- going back at least to Richard Nixon's celebrated war on crime -- is a large part of what got us into this fix, it's only fair to expect that anyone seriously aspiring to the presidency be committed to getting us out. Ultimately, however, the problem is not just one for politicians -- whether they are suspected of using drugs or not -- but for those who elect them; for all, in other words, who have responded too readily to the whoops of bloodthirsty generals waging war with a strategy that will never win. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea