Pubdate: Wed, 06 Apr 2005
Source: Mountain Xpress (NC)
Copyright: 2005 Mountain Xpress
Contact:  http://www.mountainx.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/941
Author: Clare Hanrahan, freelance writer
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05.n348.a01.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues)

FAILED DRUG WAR WON'T PROTECT OUR CHILDREN

In their recent commentary ("Where We All Live," March 2 Xpress),
Council member Terry Bellamy and Vice Mayor Carl Mumpower use the
poetry of a child living in public housing to evoke sympathy and
elicit support for increased drug-law enforcement in Asheville. But
why is it that communities of color face far more scrutiny than the
condominiums and gated homes of wealthy Asheville -- despite
statistics showing that illicit drug use is many times more prevalent
in white communities? People of color are overindicted,
underrepresented and overimprisoned in a failed war on drugs that
targets low-level distributors, their addicted customers, and friends
and family members who often have minimal involvement in the crimes.

In this duplicitous and sentimental appeal to protect children, the
two Council members make no mention of the 1.5 million children with a
parent in prison who have been orphaned by this war on drugs. Are you
not aware, Ms. Bellamy, of the draconian sentences meted out to
low-level distributors and first-time offenders? Mandatory sentences
of five, 10 and 20 years are a financial disaster and a human-rights
horror. Murderers, rapists and pedophiles serve less time. Does this
make our communities and our children safer? Do you not know about the
drug-conspiracy laws and the rampant prosecutorial misconduct in this
war on drugs, in which uncorroborated charges result in sentence
enhancements that far exceed any definition of justice? Do you not
realize that the children of drug-war prisoners seldom, if ever, have
an opportunity to visit their parents (who are often incarcerated
thousands of miles from home)? Did you know that children with parents
in prison are five times more likely to end up in a prison cell
themselves? What kind of poems are these children writing?

These and other disturbing facts about how the war on drugs destroys
children's lives are available through The November Coalition, a
national organization devoted to ending drug-war injustice.

Out of sight/out of mind is not the answer to the problems spawned by
illegal-drug distribution and use. Public money does need to be spent
- -- but not on prison cells in abusive and debilitating state and
federal systems, and not on potentially deadly taser guns or armored
police vehicles capable of breaking down our front doors in no-knock
raids. What we need is affordable housing, so low-income families
aren't concentrated in ghettos of despair. We need drug-treatment
programs, so we can reduce the demand for illegal substances and
provide addicts with ongoing community support on the road to recovery.

I'm surprised, Ms. Bellamy, that you would align your voice with that
of Mr. Mumpower -- a self-admitted procurer of crack cocaine -- in
calling for even more police power. The current policies of
interdiction, enforcement and imprisonment for illegal drug use are
racist and futile and have not protected our children.

Dr. Ernest Drucker, writing for the U.S. Public Health Service, notes,
"While these efforts have produced large numbers of arrests,
incarcerations and seizures, drug-overdose deaths have increased 540
percent since 1980, and drug-related problems have worsened."

Prohibition is also irrationally selective. More violent crimes and
family abuses are associated with alcohol use than with any illegal
substance, and nicotine is a far greater public-health problem than
marijuana. The drug war has escalated for decades, yet it has not
reduced adolescent drug use. If you were truly interested in an
effective drug-control strategy, you would be advocating far more
strongly for public-health approaches, investing in our children, and
confronting the underlying economic and social problems that are the
root causes of drug abuse.

Ms. Bellamy, I urge you to look more deeply into the consequences of
the enforcement you are calling for. Under the guise of protecting
children, you are adding your voice to those supporting a failed drug
war that results in the ongoing destruction of communities of color.

As for Mr. Mumpower, when you solicited drugs in the public-housing
project, how is it that you weren't arrested?

Freelance writer Clare Hanrahan lives in Asheville.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin