Pubdate: 1 Mar 1999 Source: International Herald-Tribune Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Page: 2 Author: Timothy Egan WAR ON CRACK CHANGED U.S., BUT DID IT HELP CUT DRUG USE? VICTORVILLE, California---Every 20 seconds, someone in the United States is arrested for a drug violation. Every week, on average, a new jail or prison-is built to lock up more people in the world's largest peual system. It was not always so. Ten years ago, half as many people were arrested for drug crimes, and the nation's incarceration rate was closer to those of other democracies. But in the 1980s, crack cocaine scared the country, and the criminal justice system has never been the same. For all the havoc wreaked by crack, however, authorities' worst fears were not realized. Now the violence of the crack trade has burned out, and murder rates have plunged. Yet crack left its mark, in ways that few people anticipated. Crack prompted the nation to rewrite its drug laws, lock up a record number of people and shift money from schools to prisons. It transforrned police work, hospitals, parental rights, courts. Crack also changed the makeup of U.S. prisons. More whites than blacks use crack, surveys say, but as the war on drugs focused on poor city neighborhoods, blacks went to prison at a far higher rate. In California, five times as many black men are behind bars as are attending a state university. But the harsh laws responding to crack have not reduced overall drug use. And the ceaseless march of new drug offenders and the mounting costs of prisons are moving some of the people charged with enforcing the punitive laws to question the assumptions behind them. Since l985 the nation's jail and prison population has grown 130 percent, and it will soon pass 2 million, even as crime rates continue a six-year decline. No country has more people behind bars, and only one, Russia, has a higher incarceration rate, according to the Sentencing Project, which tracks prison rates. Behind the increase is a national gettough mood that has produced longer sentences for all criminals and the end of parole in many states. Polls show that most Americans favor lengthy terms for violent criminals. Crack's legacy can be seen in nearly every corner of the land, even in the Mojave Desert, where the newest federal prison is rising at the dusty edge of Victorville. In an age of government downsizing, the federal corrections budget has grown more than tenfold in a decade, to nearly $4 billion, yet prisons are so stuffed with drug offenders that this one will be at capacity almost from the day it opens. In New York, the police and prosecutors say locking up thousands of drug offenders was a major factor in the city's turning the corner on crime. "What plays havoc with a neighborhood are the low-level dealers," said Bridget Brennan, the special narcotics prosecutor for New York. "When they take over a street or a stoop, everyone else is terrified. When you put those people in jail, it gives the community a sense that order has been restored." What the prison boom has not done however, is reduce illicit drug use, national surveys show. Far fewer Americans use illegal drugs now than in the peak years of the 1970s. But almost all of the drop occurred before crack cocaine or the laws passed in response to it. "Crack probably had more impact on the entire criminaljustice system than it had on the communities and the drug users," said Franklin Zimring, director of the Earl Warren Legal Institute at the University of California School of Law, in Berkeley. "This secondary impact, on police and prisons, may end up being more negative than anything associated with the drug." Throughout America, there is vigorous debate over how the drug laws enacted during the crack panic have transformed the nation---except in Congress, which enacted the laws without a single hearing. For crack has left one other major legacy: The policy discussion in Washington on prisons and drugs has been frozen for more than a decade. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski