Pubdate: Tue, 11 Sep 2001
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2001 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Alexandra Marks, Christian Science Monitor

WHERE WALTERS WILL TAKE THE 'WAR ON DRUGS'

Drug-Czar Elect, Set To Testify In Congress, Is Hard-liner Who Now Preaches 
Treatment

NEW YORK - When drug-czar nominee John Walters goes before the Senate 
Judiciary Committee today, his greatest adversary may end up being himself.

Long a cutting-edge conservative voice for "get tough" drug policies and 
controversial theories on youth crime and race, he comes on the scene at a 
time when the country is rethinking the so-called "drug war."

As prisons bulge with nonviolent drug offenders, draining state budgets, 
drug use continues to climb. And many people are tiring of it. Through 
statewide referendums and national polls, they're signaling that they want 
more resources for treatment and prevention - a course that in the past, 
Mr. Walters belittled.

As a result, he's spent this summer busily courting leaders in the 
drug-treatment and prevention communities, trying to convince them that he 
can lead a "balanced" approach to the nation's drug problem.

His efforts have produced mixed results. Some opponents have only hardened, 
fearing a "foxhole conversion" that will last only through his confirmation 
hearing. But others have been impressed with his intellect and openness.

"I found it refreshing that he's so willing to talk to his opponents," says 
Jennifer Collier of the Legal Action Center, a drug-treatment and 
- -prevention advocacy group in Washington. "He made it clear that treatment 
and prevention are issues he's willing to pursue seriously for the 
president and the nation."

As is customary for a nominee before a hearing, Walters is not speaking to 
the press. But he is sending signals. The latest came last week, when the 
White House announced it was nominating Andrea Barthwell, one of the 
nation's leading treatment advocates, to be Walter's deputy director for 
"demand reduction" - jargon for drug treatment.

Among other things, Dr. Barthwell is president of the Board of Directors of 
the American Society of Addiction Medicine and a board member of the 
American Methadone Treatment Association. That move helped solidify support 
for Walters in some unusual quarters.

"I'm sure the president consulted with John Walters," says Mark Parrino, 
president of the American Methadone Treatment Association in New York. 
"That's a reflection to me that we will be dealing with a much more 
enlightened approach, which will include treatment. And I don't think I've 
been misled."

But Mr. Parrino says Walters is accountable for his "prior writings and 
speeches," which he admits might make "an observer wary." Last week, a 
coalition of civil rights, public-health, and drug-reform groups pointed to 
that controversial record and called on the Senate Judiciary Committee to 
closely scrutinize Walters during the hearings.

"He's been a leading hard-liner on this issue, one of the nation's main 
cheerleaders for more prisons, particularly with respect to drugs," says 
Vincent Schiraldi, president of the Justice Policy Institute, a 
criminal-justice-policy think tank in Washington.

 From 1985 to 1989, Walters worked on drug policy as an assistant to 
William Bennett when Mr. Bennett was secretary of Education. When Bennett 
became drug czar under the elder President Bush, Walters went with him as 
chief of staff for the Office of National Drug Control Policy. He stayed on 
until resigning in 1993, when he became an outspoken critic of the Clinton 
administration. At one point, according to former drug czar Barry 
McCaffrey, Walters said the country had plenty of drug treatment and 
questioned whether it worked. While supporting Walters now, McCaffrey still 
wants him held accountable for such statements.

In 1996, Walters raised more controversy in a book he co-authored called 
"Body Count." In it, he argues that a "false premise has emasculated the 
criminal justice system." The premise is that prisons' first purpose is to 
help rehabilitate criminals.

"We disagree. Strongly," Walters and his co-authors wrote. "The first 
purpose is moral, to exact a price for transgressing the rights of others."

That alarmed critics, but not as much as Walters's writings about what he 
called the "great urban myths of our time," which he described in an 
article for the Weekly Standard last spring. The "myths" are that "we are 
imprisoning too many people for merely possessing illegal drugs," that 
their sentences are too long and harsh, and that "the criminal-justice 
system is unjustly punishing young black men."

To others, those are not myths, but social realities that need to be 
addressed urgently and thoughtfully. "There is a great deal of racial 
disparity in how our drug laws are being implemented," says Hilary Shelton 
of the NAACP Washington bureau. "If you have such a cavalier attitude about 
this racial disparity and an insensitivity to treatment, it raises major 
concerns."

Mr. Shelton's organization has yet to take a stand on Walters's nomination. 
He and his colleagues are waiting to see how Walters handles the hearings.

Walters's supporters are optimistic. "I found him to be extremely 
reasonable - not just articulate and aware, but extremely balanced," says 
Parrino.

But Walters's opponents are unmoved. "He's going to try to come off as 
reformed and balanced in the hearings," says Mr. Schiraldi, "but I don't 
think any rational assessment of this man puts him a balanced position."
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