Pubdate: Wed, 6 Jan 1999 Source: The New York Times Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Author: Fox Butterfield Contact: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ OFFENDERS' DRUG USE INCREASES BUT TREATMENT DECLINES, STUDY FINDS The proportion of new prison inmates who were drug users at the time of their arrest increased this decade, while drug treatment in state and federal prisons fell sharply, according to a study released on Tuesday by the Justice Department. "What is particularly tragic," said Richard Rosenfeld, a professor of criminology at the University of Missouri at St. Louis, "is that drug treatment in prison, where it can be coerced, has proven to be effective as an anti-crime program. "This is an unintended consequence of prison expansion," Rosenfeld said in an interview. "Each time we spend a dollar on building a new prison or expanding an existing one, it is one less dollar for drug treatment." Also Tuesday, President Clinton announced that he would propose $215 million in his next budget for testing and treating prisoners for drug use. About $115 million is currently budgeted for combating drug use by prisoners, parolees and probationers. The anti-drug proposal had been planned for some time as a significant part of Clinton's overall anti-crime strategy, White House aides said. Anticipating bad news in the Justice Department report, they timed its announcement for Tuesday in hopes of blunting the report's impact. The new study, by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, reported that the proportion of state inmates who were had been drug users before arrest -- that is, had used drugs in the previous month -- rose to 57 percent in 1997 from 50 percent in 1990, as the proportion among federal inmates increased to 45 percent from 32 percent. During those same years, the study said, the proportion of inmates in state prisons who received treatment for their drug abuse fell to 9.7 percent in 1997, from 24.5 percent in 1991, while the number receiving drug treatment in federal prisons declined to 9.2 percent from 15.7 percent. The report found that participation by inmates in state and federal prisons in other, nonmandatory drug abuse programs, like group discussions, did increase from 1991 to 1997. But Rosenfeld and other experts said these programs, which are cheaper to administer but lack forced participation, are much less effective. The increase in drug use by prisoners in state and federal prisons in the period leading up to their crimes appears to be the result of increased attention by both law-enforcement officials and legislators to drugs, singling out drug users for more arrests and giving them longer sentences if they have a history of drug involvement, the experts said. The actual number of criminals sentenced to prison for drug crimes increased 6.4 percent a year from 1991 to 1997, only slightly faster than the rate of 6.3 percent for those convicted of nondrug offenses, the Justice Department said. But police, prosecutors and judges are now more likely to take previous drug use into account when making an arrest, bringing charges or passing sentence, the experts suggested. At the same time, the huge increase in the number of Americans in jail or prison, which has more than doubled since 1980 to 1.8 million, has forced many prisons to cut back on a variety of counseling and educational programs in order to make space for more beds for inmates. Bruce Johnson, the director of the Institute for Special Populations Research at the National Development and Research Institutes in New York, a nonprofit research organization, said, "The drop in substance abuse treatment reflects a systematic decision to reduce these treatment programs and the need to use the space for more inmates." The Justice Department report underscored the strong link between drug use and criminality, finding that 83 percent of inmates in state prisons and 73 percent of those in federal prisons had used drugs at some point in their lives. "Increased substance abuse and criminal offending," said Andrew Golub, a principal investigator also at the National Development and Research Institutes, "are often characteristic of the downward spiral experienced by many individuals who end up in prison." Johnson and Golub have found that crack cocaine use has dropped sharply among young people in New York during the 1990s, an important factor in the decline in violent crime in the city. But young people now are more likely to smoke marijuana, the researchers have found, a conclusion echoed by the Justice Department report. The Justice Department report also found that more violent crimes were committed by people who had been drinking alcohol than by those under the influence of drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake