Pubdate: Thu, 24 June 1999 Source: New Times (CA) Section: Cover Story Contact: http://newtimes-slo.com/ Author: Steven T. Jones THE DECADE-OLD WAR ON DRUGS: A STATUS REPORT Spending, Arrests, Use, And Support For Legalization Are All On The Rise This spring Maurice Pitesky's front door became collateral damage in the War on Drugs, just one more barrier to a drug-free America that needed to be smashed. San Luis Obispo County Narcotics Task Force officers kicked in the front door to Pitesky's Oceano home on March 3, broke another door and a wall, and ransacked the house before realizing the people who lived there didn't fit the names on their search warrant. So they left, smashing their way into a residence next-door that shared the same address, which is where the alleged drug user on their warrant really lived. Pitesky, a graduate student at Cal Poly, returned home that night to find the damage and no explanation about how it got that way. "If you come home at night, find your place all smashed up, and you don't even know if someone was still inside, it's scary," Pitesky said. Naturally, he called the Sheriff's Department, which sent a deputy out to take the breaking-and-entering report. Only after the deputy left did Pitesky find out what really happened. NTF officers had called his out-of-town landlord to inform him. Pitesky was upset that the police would thrash his home without so much as leaving a note. The next day, hoping for an apology, he called Detective Steve Larson, a contribution to the NTF from the California Highway Patrol office in San Luis Obispo who led the raid. "The first thing he said is, I'm not going to apologize for doing my job, and I can kick down any door at that residence I want," Pitesky said of his conversation with Larson. "He should have left a note, and that's all I wanted him to say." By the end of the conversation, Pitesky felt even worse about the situation, so he followed up with a formal complaint to the CHP and a meeting with NTF commander Craig Wright. Pitesky still didnt get the apology he wanted, but he said Larson did threaten him with forced eviction and a civil lawsuit and told him that "with my attitude" Pitesky was lucky he wasn't home when the heavily armed police burst into his house. During a New Times interview with Wright and Ernie Klevesahl, Grover Beach's police chief and chair of the NTF Board of Governors, the county's two top drug cops were dismissive of Pitesky's desire for an apology. "We're not going to comment on this anymore," Klevesahl said. "This guy has gotten more attention than he deserves. Respect works both ways." "I've been here for five years, and the task force has not made a mistake on a raid yet," Wright said. Others may not agreesuch as Pitesky, or the North County man who says NTF raiders last summer mistook his agricultural operation for a meth labbut Wright's claim is telling. The Pitesky raid wasn't a mistake, Wright argues, because they had a valid search warrant for that address. What NTF did that day was legal and done in the name of the hallowed cause of trying to eliminate drug users from free society. "That's the scariest part. Everything they did was legal," Pitesky said. "But that's doesn't make it right." The Declaration It was 10 years ago this September that then-President George Bush declared our country's current "War on Drugs." Other presidents had made similar statements, but it was President Bush's prime-time declaration that changed things. It was then that "Just Say No" became the "War on Drugs." With the country in the throes of a well-publicized crack epidemic, the public was ready for war. The November 89 Gallup poll showed 38 percent of Americans listing drugs as the most serious problem facing the country, its highest showing ever or since. So Bush declared war, waving a baggie of crack for the cameras as he did. And he launched that war with sharply increased anti-drug spending and zero tolerance, filling jails and prisons with drug offenders. Everybody got into the act, as legislators tried to outdo the president and the courtsstacked with judges appointed by Republican presidents and governorscreated what critics call the "drug exception" to our Bill of Rights. But it is also a war that the drug warriors don't want to call a "war," despite regular increases in both war spending and growing legions of prisoners of the war. "I don't like that phrase," Klevesahl said. "The 'War on Drugs' term came from the federal government. The 'War on Drugs' term never existed back when this task force was formed. It's about a concern for the community and keeping drugs off the street." Wright also doesn't like the term, but says he understands why the war theme is perpetuated by the federal government: "It keeps people aware that there is a problem." And they will grudgingly entertain the notion that their efforts can be gauged in terms of winning and losing. "Are we winning the War on Drugs?" Klevesahl asked rhetorically. "I don't want to use that term, but we put people in jail, we have successful prosecutions, we take narcotics off the street." Yet the warlike undertones of the fight against drugs seem undeniable, evidenced by the now-common use of weapons, tactics, intelligence gathering, and rhetoric that are overtly military in nature. Even children understand the message. For the DARE graduation program at San Gabriel Elementary School in Atascadero on June 2, the drug warriors landed at the school in a military-style Blackhawk helicopter to deliver the speech. The militarism of the anti-drug efforts is a top-down effort. When President Bill ("I Never Inhaled") Clinton had the opportunity to name a new drug czar, he chose a decorated war veteran, Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, for the post. "Few efforts are as important as law enforcement in controlling drug use and related crime," is a statement prominently displayed by the website of McCaffrey's office. In addition to "war," neither Wright nor Klevesahl like the term "drug raid." "I don't like the term 'raid' because it sets the wrong tone. We serve warrants," Klevesahl said. "I don't want you to use the word raid; we're talking about the serving of search warrants." It isn't surprising that they resist the "War on Drugs" label, because if it is a war, the data seem to indicate that it is a war that their army is losing, and one that's increasingly beyond what polls show most Americans support. Americans vs. Americans Whether or not current drug eradication efforts are a "war" is a debatable point, but to call it a War on Drugs is certainly a misnomer. A War on Drug Users is probably more accurate. While the number of drug dealers, traffickers, and manufacturers who get arrested has remained static for the last 10 years, even dropping in 1997, the number of Americans busted for possession of drugs has risen steadily over that time. Of the 1.6 million annual drug arrests in the United States more than three-quarters are for simple possession, a category that has accounted almost entirely for this decade's increase in drug arrests, which numbered 1 million in 1991. Drugs now account for more arrests than any other crime, followed closely by driving under the influence and theft/larceny. And despite high-profile anti-drug campaigns against crack cocaine and methamphetamines, federal figures shows this is mostly a War on Pot Smokers, especially in recent years. In 1997 marijuana surpassed the "heroin/cocaine" category as the drug with the most annual arrests. Nearly 700,000 people were arrested on marijuana charges that year, more than 80 percent for possession, with police seizing and destroying 1.5 million pounds of marijuana. Also in 1997 the Drug Enforcement Administration's military-style marijuana eradication program ripped up 241 million marijuana plants on 69,665 plots, arrested 17,070 people, and seized $39.5 million in personal assets. In 1996, the federal Office of National Narcotic Control Policy sought to gauge public opinion by contracting the prestigious Gallup polling organization to survey Americans on what they think is the best way to allocate federal anti-drug resources. Just 30 percent of those polled advocated stepping up various domestic law enforcement activities, despite the fact that more than 61 percent of federal anti-drug spending goes to domestic law enforcement. The top two answers given in the survey were "stopping drugs from coming into the U.S." (31 percent) and "having more programs to educate both youth and adults about the dangers of drugs" (28 percent). Coming in third at 22 percent was "more efforts by police action and criminal prosecution to stop the drug dealers," followed by "more drug treatment programs in communities and neighborhoods" (9 percent), "more efforts by police action and criminal prosecutors to stop people who buy drugs" (6 percent), and "building more jails and prisons for drug offenders" (2 percent). Yet the overwhelming majority of our anti-drug resources have been focused on the two priorities rated lowest by the survey: busting drugs users and building more cells for them. The SLO County Front The San Luis Obispo County Narcotics Task Force is a 17-year-old organization that Wright says served as the model for similar programs in 48 of California's 58 counties. "It has been one of the top-producing task forces in the state...when it comes to arrests and seizures," Wright said. NTF is a joint powers agency comprised of all the law enforcement agencies in the county, with the exception of the Pismo Beach and Morro Bay police departments (although the Pismo Beach City Council voted last week to rejoin after pulling out several years ago). Each agency contributes money and/or manpower to NTF. But Wright actually works for the California Department of Justice, which pays most of NTF's expenses, from rent and the phone bill to Wright's $20,000 annual budget to pay confidential informants for drug information. "We rely a lot on confidential informants, but we have a stringent requirement before we even include them and make them informants," Wright said, referring to background checks, multiple interviews, and corroborating information from other sources. Yet, as is common in the drug war, most of these informants are current and former drug users who are using their status as a source of income or to reduce their sentences. And most of their affidavits are sealed by judges, preventing public scrutiny of the standards for issuing search warrants. "Most of the confidential informants we deal with are from the criminal element, who are working off a beef, if you will," Wright said. "It takes a criminal to find a criminal." Information from informants, investigations, and citizen tips is regularly entered into massive databases like the Western States Computer Network, offering police intelligence and surveillance information on drug users, dealers, and manufacturers. Asked if they were focused on any particular drug these days, Wright without hesitation said, "methamphetamines," a focus that has become increasingly common throughout California over the last two years. "That's the drug of choice," Wright said. "It's the drug people like and can afford," Klevesahl added. "In the last five years, that is the drug that keeps elevating up. They call it the poor man's cocaine," Wright said. From the perspective of maintaining public support for the drug war, methamphetamines are also an easy drug to demonize, much like crack cocaine was in the 80s. Both cause addiction and are associated with sometimes violent, erratic behavior. Both are also popularly associated with minority groupscrack to blacks, meth to Hispanics (and to gays on the only drug website linked to the California Attorney General's home page)tapping into our racial biases. Yet each drug was used by a minuscule percentage of the population, according to federal figures, and account for a similarly small percentage of our nation's annual drug arrests. Seized Assets Tom Dunbar sits in San Luis Obispo County Jail, just one of hundreds serving time for using drugs. He's about halfway through a six-month sentence for possession of narcotics. Just over a year ago, Dunbar's Arroyo Grande home was invaded by police dressed in commando gear, armed with semiautomatic weapons and a search warrant. They were looking for the marijuana he was growing in his garageDunbar was a vocal medical marijuana activist with a doctor's prescription to use the drugbut they also found opium poppies growing in his back yard (see "Poppy Paradox," New Times, Nov. 19, 1998). As part of a plea bargain Dunbar pled guilty to possession of opium poppies and the marijuana charges were dropped. Prosecutors never alleged that either the marijuana or poppies were for anything but personal use. They never claimed Dunbar profited from drugs or challenged Dunbar's assertion that the $2,000 in cash seized from residence was from the sale of a used car. Nonetheless, attorney Kirk Wilson of the District Attorney's Office went into court two weeks ago and convinced Judge Charles Piccuta to let the police who raided Dunbar's house keep the money. "You cultivated marijuana in violation of the Health and Safety Code, so these were expenses by the people to seize and eradicate the plants," Piccuta told Dunbar, shackled and wearing an orange jail uniform, looking dazed and confused by what was happening. Not only may the police invade the home of drug users, but they can also charge the drug users for the cost of that invasion. Such cost-recovery suits are less used and publicized than the seizure of the ill-gotten gains of drug dealers, but Wilson said both are important weapons in the War on Drugs. "We treat itand are required to treat it by the [Penal] Codeas an enforcement tool," said Wilson, who handles all the asset-forfeiture and cost-recovery cases for the DA's Office. "You can go to jail and you can lose everything you have." Last year was a banner year for drug asset seizures in San Luis Obispo County, with the drug warriors seizing $93,052 in 34 cases, ranging from $402 to $10,863. Of that money the law enforcement agency (the NTF in most SLO County cases) takes 65 percent, the District Attorney's Office takes 10 percent, the state General Fund takes 24 percent, and 15 percent goes into a special fund for "programs designed to combat drug abuse and divert gang activity." Yet the law enforcers say asset-forfeiture revenues are a drop in the bucket compared to the costs of waging the drug war. "Asset forfeiture, costs recovery, none of these things are moneymaking operations," Wilson said. Rather, he emphasized that such cases are enforcement tools, making the penalties for drug use so severe that citizens will choose the straight and narrow path. Or, at least, stick with alcohol. "If, in addition to going to jail, if they know they are going to lose everything they have, I can't help but think it has a deterrent value," he said. Acceptable Loss Military and international relations experts are well-versed in the concept of "acceptable loss," which is the toll taken by a chosen policy or military approach. To NATO, ejecting the Serbs from Kosovo was worth destroying Serbia, causing hundreds of civilian deaths, and blowing up the Chinese embassy. Such damage was an acceptable loss. In the drug war, the invasion of Maurice Pitesky's home was an acceptable price to pay for a war that uses the element of surprise to maintain officer and suspect safety. Fighting the use of drugs in the United States has also been deemed worthy of spending billions of dollars. Weighing the value of a drug-free society versus rights of drug users has been a decision made by judges across the country. The courtswhich in California and in the federal system are now overwhelmingly stacked with appointees from Republican governors and presidentshave consistently ruled that the necessity of a drug crackdown outweighs concerns for privacy, due process, and other civil liberties. The courts have upheld the legality of random drug testing in almost all cases, although protection from illegal searches is why the government is barred from drug testing most of its own employees, a rare court ruling against drug testing. The courts have also upheld most drug asset-forfeiture laws, which allow personal assets to be seized before there is a hearing and without a finding of guilt, even though the Constitution guarantees that our property can't be seized "without due process of law." The courts have refused to throw out evidence illegally obtained by police, refused monetary damages to innocent people injured and killed during mistaken drug raids, and allowed drug police wide latitude in searching individuals who fit profiles of druggies. "Our cases have recognized that a police officer may draw inferences based on his own experience in deciding whether probable cause exists," U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote in a 1996 opinion upholding a police search of a vehicle based on a belief that the suspects fit the profile of drug couriers. An Unwinnable War Despite spending billions of dollars, giving police more authority, and increasing penalties, drugs and drug use are still as common in this country as before the crackdown. While the stated goal of the drug war is to eliminate the supply and use of illegal drugs in the United States, there are few reasonable people who think that is possible, even those whose lives are devoted to fighting drugs. "It's like economics; there's supply and demand. If you have a high demand you are going to find someone to supply it," NTF commander Wright said. "It's money and economics. We're never going to be out of business, never. But our job is to provide a service, and hopefully that service will provide an impact." Few would deny that the War on Drugs has had an impact. But the question is, have the good impacts outweighed the negative ones? The United States has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world, with more than 600 citizens per 100,000 behind bars. And our ratio of police to citizens is also one of the highest in the world. Yet we are also the leading drug-consuming nation in the world, a fact that has been changed little by our decade-old War on Drugs. New Times staff writer Steven T. Jones is among the 37 percent of Americans who have used illegal drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D