Some school leaders in Sunnyside want to explore whether random student drug testing would work in the district's high school. They'll attend a summit later this month in Pasco aimed at giving educators, community members and parents information about how confidential, nonpunitive, treatment-based testing programs work across the country. Educational Service District 123 is putting on the event. Dr. Bertha Madras, deputy director of demand reduction for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, is scheduled to speak. [continues 434 words]
Since Seattle voters reduced pot possession to the lowest law-enforcement priority, marijuana cases and prosecutions have fallen, according to a report released Monday by a review panel. Despite the overall decrease, the report showed a racial gap that some panel members called concerning. Since Initiative 75 took effect in fall 2003, the number of cases involving black men has exceeded cases involving white men. "It's shocking," D'Adre Cunningham said about the numbers at a Seattle City Council meeting Monday. Cunningham served on the 11-member, City Council-appointed panel and is an attorney at The Defender Association. "They obviously show some issues of concern." [continues 484 words]
All Marijuana Cases Down After Initiative White Seattleites have enjoyed a disproportionately larger share of the reduction in misdemeanor marijuana charges -- compared with black people -- since Seattle voters designated such crimes the city's lowest law enforcement priority, according to a new city study. Overall, police and prosecutors less often pursue possession charges against both blacks and whites. But the proportion of those charged who are African-American has grown. In fact, although whites vastly outnumber black men and women in Seattle, authorities arrested and charged more African-Americans in 2006 on marijuana allegations, according to a report presented by the Marijuana Policy Review Panel. The panel recommended officials dig deeper into that data to determine what is causing the disparity. [continues 619 words]
I'm writing regarding Sandra S. Bennett's Dec. 19 letter, "Urge prevention education." It seems to me that in order to properly evaluate our nation's drug policies, we need to compare and contrast our drug policies with those of another nation with substantially different drug policies, such as the Czech Republic. In the Czech Republic, citizens can legally use, possess, grow, or purchase small quantities of marijuana. In the United States, many otherwise law-abiding citizens are locked in prison cages for possessing, growing or selling various amounts of marijuana. The Czech overall drug arrest rate is 1 per 100,000 population. The U.S. overall drug arrest rate is 585 per 100,000 population. [continues 109 words]
Last New Year's Eve, Danielle Mccarthy Took Ecstasy for the First Time With Some Friends. the Puyallup Teenager Died on New Year's Day. the State of Washington Has Charged Mccarthy's Friends in Her Death. But What If the Drugs Didn't Kill Mccarthy? Danielle McCarthy was like a lot of 16-year-olds. She wore Hollister-brand clothes, worked at Orange Julius at the mall, and attended one of those giant suburban high schools. Until December 2006, she'd never taken ecstasy. But she knew plenty of people at Rogers High School in Puyallup, Washington, who had used it, including Donalydia Huertas, a fellow junior. [continues 4162 words]
Alex Four-Horns leans forward as far as his aching body will allow while his pain nurse massages a mixture of castor oil, ginger and lavender into his shoulder. Castor oil has a soothing effect, giving Four-Horns some short-term relief from chronic pain, the result of a life-threatening automobile accident three years ago that left him in a coma for a month, broke both his thigh bones and damaged his knees and hips. Once a strong, athletic man, Four-Horns, 29, now moves slowly, and he finds it difficult to keep up with his sons, ages 2 and 8. "My hip went out when I was putting up the Christmas tree with my boys," he said. [continues 1550 words]
Alex Four-Horns leans forward as far as his aching body will allow while his pain nurse massages a mixture of castor oil, ginger and lavender into his shoulder. Castor oil has a soothing effect, giving Four-Horns some short-term relief from chronic pain, the result of a life-threatening automobile accident three years ago that left him in a coma for a month, broke both his thigh bones and damaged his knees and hips. Once a strong, athletic man, Four-Horns, 29, now moves slowly, and he finds it difficult to keep up with his sons, ages 2 and 8. "My hip went out when I was putting up the Christmas tree with my boys," he said. [continues 1542 words]
KALAMA -- The police department has high hopes that its newest officer will take a bite out of this small town's oversized drug problem. 'Bati," a 65-pound German shepherd nearly two years old, is Kalama's first drug-sniffing canine, though he still needs to complete 80 hours of training and pass a state certification exam before going on the job. "When we're doing patrols, we should have more than enough work" for Bati, said Police Sgt. Steve Parker. [continues 486 words]
The owner of an Evergreen Shores home where detectives found more than $450,000 worth of marijuana on Christmas Day lives in Worcester, Mass., and was renting the house to a man named Hung, the owner said Thursday. "Oh, wow," said Bao Vo, who owns the home on 77th Court Southwest in the Black Lake area, when told that detectives found 300 pot plants at the home. Vo, who did not speak English fluently, passed the phone to his daughter, June. [continues 486 words]
On Dec. 10, the U.S. Supreme Court gave judges some discretion in sentencing for crack cocaine offenses. One day later, the U.S. Sentencing Commission, intending to narrow the stark disparity between sentences for crack versus powder cocaine, revised sentencing guidelines in order to make them retroactive. Why should anyone care about a bunch of drug users -- crack users at that -- who might receive two years off their sentences? It matters because of the racial inequities in our system. It takes the possession of 500 grams of powder cocaine (picture more than two cups full) to earn a five-year prison sentence. It takes only 5 grams of crack cocaine (picture half a teaspoon) to earn a five-year sentence. It is much easier for crack cocaine users to be sentenced to five years of prison. In fact, 85 percent of all federal prisoners in custody for crack cocaine are African American, and the overwhelming majority of them are there for the nonviolent offense of simple drug possession. [continues 369 words]
As a policy analyst for Common Sense for Drug Policy, I'm writing in response to the Dec. 17 editorial, "Solid sentences." Mandatory minimum prison sentences have done little other than give the land of the free the highest incarceration rate in the world. The deterrent value of tough drug laws is grossly overrated. During the crack epidemic of the '80s, New York City chose the zero tolerance approach, opting to arrest and prosecute as many offenders as possible. Meanwhile, Washington, D.C., Mayor Marion Barry was smoking crack and America's capital had the highest per capita murder rate in the country. Yet crack use declined in both cities simultaneously. [continues 116 words]
Recently I heard a speech about legalizing the distribution of marijuana and putting a tax on the substance to raise money for government. I have never really been on the "legalize marijuana" side. I have always thought of it as a negative drug. After more thought and a more realistic sense of what the drug really does to your body, I started thinking, "Maybe it should be legalized." Much as alcohol was available back in the day when it was illegal, pot is being grown and distributed illegally today. After the Constitution was changed to make alcohol legal again, the illegal sale of it was eliminated almost entirely. This made it significantly safer to drink alcohol because safety standards were placed on the companies that mass-produced it. So why would it not be the same for marijuana? [continues 60 words]
Little Effect Seen Regarding Lynne K. Varner's column, "Common sense replaces hysteria with high court's cocaine rulings," Opinion, Dec. 18: Mandatory minimum prison sentences have done little other than give the land of the free the highest incarceration rate in the world. The deterrent value of tough drug laws is grossly overrated. During the crack epidemic of the '80s, New York City chose the zero-tolerance approach, opting to arrest and prosecute as many offenders as possible. Meanwhile, Washington, D.C., Mayor Marion Barry was smoking crack and America's capital had the highest per capita murder rate in the country. Yet crack use declined in both cities simultaneously. [continues 104 words]
Young black and Latino men imprisoned during our 20-year war on crack cocaine see the U.S. Supreme Court's rulings allowing trial judges to show more leniency in drug-related cases, plus changes in the federal sentencing guidelines, as a holiday-timed offer of freedom. Let others debate whether the court's 7-2 majorities in two cases -- including one involving a crack-cocaine-related sentence -- represent a civil-rights triumph unseen since Brown v. Board of Education. To really extend the historical imagery here, it is worth noting that this week in 1865 the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, abolishing slavery, went into effect. [continues 633 words]
The movement to legalize drugs employs sly marketing strategies to desensitize society to the enormous harm caused by the self-indulgent and illegal use of psychoactive and addictive substances. Proponents claim that imposing legal consequences on users, dealers and traffickers brings greater harm to society than would the allowance of wholesale use. Hundreds of thousands of victims and families and friends of victims know this is utterly false. The devastation and heartbreak related to lost and/or degraded lives, child abuse, child neglect, child pornography, unemployment, workplace accidents, lost productivity, poverty, embezzlement, academic underachievement and failure, increased medical costs, social welfare costs and crime, cost society hundreds of billions every year - and that is before adding in the cost of treatment and expenses associated with law enforcement and incarceration. [continues 70 words]
The County Drug Court is definitely a step in the right direction, but an arrest should not be a necessary prerequisite for drug treatment. Would alcoholics seek help for their illness if doing so was tantamount to confessing to criminal activity? Likewise, would putting every incorrigible alcoholic behind bars and saddling them with criminal records prove cost-effective? The United States recently earned the dubious distinction of having the highest incarceration rate in the world, with drug offenses accounting for the majority of federal incarcerations. [continues 112 words]
Supreme Court Ruling Gives Judges Necessary Discretion When Sentencing Drug addicts and drug dealers wreck lives - their own and others'. Neighborhoods are ruined by drug activity, and in the most tragic cases children are hurt. The economy is impacted by addiction. Jails are bursting with people convicted of drug crimes, at great cost to taxpayers. And because violent crimes and property crimes such as burglary are often drug-related, just about every person is a potential victim of drug abuse. The damage drug abusers cause is the reason police, prosecutors, legislatures, Congress, governors and presidents fight a war on drugs. It's a noble fight, even if the weapons and strategies used are often wrong for the job. One of those misguided weapons is a set of drug sentencing guidelines that have proved unfair, blind to extenuating circumstances and detrimental to long-term life changes. But last week, the U.S. Supreme Court, by a 7-to-2 vote, retooled the weapon, bringing it back to a more useful state. [continues 352 words]
Last week's article chronicling the struggles of a young Longview woman trying to break free of meth addiction ought to serve as a powerful deterrent for other youth who may be tempted to experience with meth and other dangerous drugs. Daily News reporter Amy M.E. Fischer's comprehensive report also suggests the value of what this county's Drug Court has to offer -- the drug treatment, counseling and careful monitoring. The story of Cara Lowery's battle with addiction demonstrations nothing so clearly as the need for a strong support network. [continues 292 words]
Silja J.A. Talvi of Seattle is a 21st-century muckraker. The 37-year-old native of Finland is an independent investigative reporter with an intense dedication to exposing societal wrongs in hopes of affecting change. Some of her work is published by "In These Times," a progressive monthly on the East Coast where she is a senior editor. But two years of travel, research and writing have just produced Talvi's first book -- "Women Behind Bars: The Crisis of Women in the U.S. Prison System" (Seal Press, 295 pages, $15.95). This comprehensive and passionately argued indictment of the inhumane treatment of female prisoners is the sort of shocking expose too seldom seen in these media days of so much celebrity fluff. [continues 1091 words]
There's one thing not to like about binding arbitration: If the arbitrator gets it wrong, you're still bound by the results. And that's the case with a ruling last week that the city of Yakima cannot impose mandatory random drug testing on its police officers. For the life of us, we can't figure out why this is such a controversial subject when it should be a slam dunk in the name of common sense and public trust. [continues 615 words]