Since I posted a piece earlier today on the penal system in the U.S., I thought this article was timely:
Published on Monday, December 4, 2006 by the Baltimore Sun (Maryland) |
by Cynthia Tucker
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All wars have a way of creating collateral damage, as the desk-bound bureaucrats euphemistically call the dead innocents, destroyed buildings and decimated towns that just happen to be in the way of bombs and bullets. Kathryn Johnston was collateral damage in America’s misguided “war on drugs.” On Nov. 21, the 88-year-old woman was shot dead by Atlanta undercover police officers who crashed through her door after dark to execute a “no-knock” search warrant for illegal drugs. Living in a high-crime neighborhood, apparently frightened out of her wits, she fired at the intruders with a rusty revolver, hitting all three. That’s according to the police account, which says the officers then returned fire, striking Ms. Johnston in the chest and extremities. The investigation may reveal police incompetence, and it may reveal police malfeasance. Unfortunately, however, it is unlikely to point to the root cause of this tragedy: a foolish, decades-long effort to curb illegal drug use through arrests and incarceration. Raging on mindlessly, the war on drugs has caused untold collateral damage – leaving children fatherless, helping to exacerbate the spread of AIDS, and filling prisons with people who, with minimal rehabilitation, might be contributing to society rather than draining its resources. Although black Americans are no more likely to use illegal drugs than whites, they are disproportionately imprisoned for drug offenses. There are three basic reasons for that, according to The Sentencing Project, a Washington-based nonprofit that advocates alternatives to incarceration: the concentration of drug-law enforcement in inner-city areas; harsher sentencing policies for crack cocaine, used disproportionately by black Americans, than for powder cocaine; and the drug war’s emphasis on law enforcement at the expense of prevention and treatment. It’s clear that Ms. Johnston was no drug dealer. Even if she had been, her crimes would not have justified the intrusive and dangerous tactics police used. Those tactics flow from a failed policy that emphasizes arrests – any arrests, no matter the offender’s stature in the drug-trade hierarchy or the size of the cache of drugs. That policy has kept police busy with penny-ante dealers while the real drug trade flourishes. That strategy also heavily burdens black communities. According to The Sentencing Project’s Ryan King, black drug users tend to engage in more stranger-to-stranger transactions. That makes it easy for police to pose undercover. By contrast, targeting affluent users who buy from friends and acquaintances “would require a lot of police work, months or years of undercover efforts for one or two arrests,” Mr. King said. Most police jurisdictions will choose the easier targets. Of course, the criminal justice system isn’t colorblind, either. Reams of research have shown that white men tend to get probation for nonviolent offenses more often than black and Latino men, who are more often sent to prison. It’s no wonder, then, that an estimated one-third of young black men are under the jurisdiction of the criminal justice system – in prison, on probation or on parole. And once they’ve been tainted with a conviction, they struggle under its stigma for the rest of their lives. This country imprisons its citizens at five to eight times the rate of most other industrialized nations, according to The Sentencing Project. We’ve learned nothing from the earlier period of Prohibition, which produced criminal gangs and an epidemic of lawlessness. Meanwhile, for all the wreckage from this drug war, the use of illicit substances has declined only slightly. Methamphetamine has replaced crack cocaine as the drug plague that enlivens local newscasts; the affluent tend toward “designer” drugs such as Ecstasy, which figure less prominently in arrest reports. And Kathryn Johnston? She’s not the first victim of our foolish, futile war on drugs. Sadly, she won’t be the last. Cynthia Tucker is editorial page editor for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Her column appears Mondays in The Sun Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun |