Pubdate: Mon, 29 Sep 2003
Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune (FL)
Copyright: 2003 Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Contact:  http://www.heraldtribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/398
Author:  Neil Peirce, Washington Post

FSU ECONOMISTS SPEAK

Has the time come for the federal government to cede the "war on drugs" to 
America's state and local governments?

A powerful case for devolving critical drug policy -- choices of which 
substances to forbid, whether to focus police on drug cases, imprisoning 
vs. treating offenders -- has been made by two Florida State University 
economists, David Rasmussen and Bruce Benson.

The common-sense case for fresh thinking has become overwhelming. Largely 
because of drug cases, the United States, with 2,071,686 people behind 
bars, had the world's highest incarceration rate in 2000. It cost the 
country $26 billion that year to imprison 1.3 million nonviolent offenders 
- -- including hundreds of thousands of drug offenders.

Rigid prohibition remains federal policy even as substantial experiments in 
decoupling hard and soft drugs, especially decriminalizing possession of 
small amounts of marijuana, are spreading in Europe and Canada. U.S. 
Attorney General John Ashcroft is even cracking down hard on California 
co-ops that administer marijuana to relieve the acute pain of terminally 
ill persons -- a policy specifically approved by California voters in a 
1996 referendum.

But it's not just authoritarian or moralistic ideology that drives harsh 
drug policy. Our political system continues to condone stiff penalties, 
long sentences -- even though there's ample evidence that treatment of 
addiction, dollar for dollar, is far more effective. Indeed, a much-cited 
RAND study which focused on cocaine use concluded that an added dollar on 
drug treatment is seven times more cost- effective than a dollar more for 
drug enforcement.

 From 1968 to 1998, drug arrests per capita rose from 26 per 100,000 
population to 615 per 100,000. Yet illicit drug use is still flourishing. 
Why aren't we objecting?

Most blame is usually thrown at politically opportunistic legislators. But 
legislators, argue Rasmussen and Benson in a law review article, respond 
largely to interest groups. And there's a massive lobby out there pushing 
the drug war -- the police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors and their allies 
in federal enforcement bureaus.

Indeed, goes this argument, bureaucrats instinctively fight to expand their 
funds and turf, using direct lobbying, policy manipulation and selective 
release of information and misinformation. Back in 1937, enforcement 
agencies pushed for the Marijuana Tax Act, which proved pivotal in the 
subsequent criminalization of marijuana. The federal Bureau of Narcotics 
fed the "reefer madness" of the time, claiming -- contrary to scientific 
fact -- that marijuana causes insanity, incites rape and leads to delirious 
rages and violent crimes.

More recently, police departments have tended to blame most local crime on 
drug use, thus expanding their budgets as well as encouraging legislators 
to pass increasingly strict sentencing for drug offenders. Which of course 
keeps the prosecutors busy and pleases yet another lobby -- contractors who 
build prisons.

On top of that, police and sheriffs' groups lobbied successfully to let 
their departments retain proceeds from the sale of assets confiscated in 
drug raids. Result: They profit directly from drug busts, a practice 
raising serious ethical and constitutional questions.

The net result, argue Rasmussen and Benson, is "a tragedy in the criminal 
justice commons," as drug enforcement dominates budgets, making funds 
scarce for such unfolding needs as community policing and homeland security.

Plus, drug operations expose police departments to corruption -- the peril 
of officers going bad, even lining up with one group of drug dealers 
against another, as they deal in a sub rosa world awash with literally 
millions of illegal dollars.

So how do we introduce new ideas, innovate, experiment, think afresh about 
the drug issue?

Only, the Florida State authors argue, by decentralizing drug policy. They 
would leave the federal government to deal with such issues as interstate 
drug shipments but revoke national rules (like blanket prohibition of 
marijuana) and hold state legislatures, agencies and bureaucrats more 
directly responsible for the costs and results -- positive or negative -- 
of their policies.

Would such a move lead to wholesale liberalization of drug laws? Probably 
no time soon, in most states. The same law enforcement bureaucracies would 
almost surely fight change.

Yet we're not a uniform nation regarding drugs -- only marijuana and 
cocaine are said to be used throughout the country, with other drug usage 
varying dramatically, even within states. Different places may need quite 
different approaches.

Plus, with a loosening of the federal hand, at least we could have debate 
about new research in physiological effects of various drugs, consequences 
of less regulation and dramatic treatment alternatives. Reform -- where the 
public is willing -- would have a fighting chance. States could compare 
notes, be "laboratories of democracy."

Less Washington dictation plus more local autonomy equals federalism at 
work. What's not to like about that?
- ---
MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart