Pubdate: Sat, 27 Oct 2007
Source: Morning Call (Allentown, PA)
Copyright: 2007 The Morning Call Inc.
Contact:  http://www.mcall.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/275
Author: Donald P. Russo
Note: Donald P. Russo is an attorney in Bethlehem.

GOOD POLICE WORK ASIDE, DRUG CRIME IS SOCIETY'S CHOICE

"We will choose to have the criminals in our midst  deliver a product 
that is highly in demand."

On Tuesday, federal, state and Schuylkill County law  enforcement 
officials praised the teamwork that caused  a routine traffic stop in 
2004 to lead to the breakup  of a New York City gang's drug 
operations in  Minersville, Shenandoah and Pottsville. The 
federal  district court in Scranton has now closed the case 
and  announced the sentencing of the drug ring's leader,  Bremen 
Miranda. All but one of the men arrested were  affiliated with the 
Latin Kings gang. They have been  sentenced to a total of more than 
88 years in prison  for selling crack, cocaine and heroin. Martin 
C.  Carlson, acting U.S. Attorney for the Middle District  of 
Pennsylvania, characterized Miranda -- who pleaded  guilty to 
conspiracy to distribute and possession of  crack cocaine -- as the 
"architect" of the drug  operation.

It has become obvious that New York City gangs have  entered our 
communities in eastern central Pennsylvania  to carry out criminal 
operations. This is an issue I  learned about earlier this year, when 
I was the host of  a local radio program in Bethlehem. Northampton 
County  District Attorney John Morganelli was my guest, and he 
discussed the concern his office has for this  insidious, slowly 
encroaching infestation of our  community by these gangs. 
Fortunately, vigilant law  enforcement is making it clear to this 
scum that they are not welcome here. According to U.S. 
Attorney  Carlson, the gangs "see an opportunity to engage 
in  criminal conduct in the small towns and boroughs and  counties in 
central Pennsylvania. They see it as a place where there may be ready 
markets for drugs, and a  place where they wrongly assume that there 
isn't much  of a law enforcement presence. The results of this 
case  tell folks who assume that this is a good place to deal  drugs 
that they! are wrong."

I commend the law enforcement officials who cracked  this case and 
put these animals in jail. Obviously, we  are much safer when creeps 
like this are incarcerated.  These are people who are perfectly 
capable of committing any monstrous misdeed. They are without  souls, 
without conscience, and are as prone to  committing acts of violence 
as a shark is to eating a  bloody sirloin steak tossed into the 
ocean. They are  sociopaths, and their mere presence among us 
should  always be viewed as an extreme danger.

It was rather odd, however, that Bremen Miranda and his  Latin Kings 
chose Schuylkill County as a place to  pursue their sordid business. 
The vast majority of the  good citizens of Schuylkill County are gun 
owners who  are locked and loaded. They are more than capable of 
defending their homes against the Latin Kings or any  other New York 
City gang members who decide they like  the local real estate.

We are not, however, dealing with the type of crime  that generally 
would require a homeowner to take out  the .12 gauge Remington 
shotgun to confront a home  invader. These invaders are invaders of 
the street, the  schoolyard, the barroom, and the pool hall. The 
users  of their products seek them out, not vice versa. Truth  be 
told, it is truly amazing how much of a demand there  is for their 
products. That is precisely the problem,  in my estimation.

As much as I applaud the efforts of law enforcement  officials to put 
these people in jail, I am afraid we  are only seeing the tip of the 
iceberg. We are doing  nothing to curtail the actual demand for 
drugs. For  generations, we have read news accounts of drug 
rings  broken up by the police. Despite all of the good police  work, 
does the problem go away? Of course not. Drug  users continue to seek 
out a supply. The demand for  drugs is inelastic, and in fact, may be 
on the rise. We as a society have made a choice: We will choose to 
have  the criminals in our midst deliver a product that is  highly in demand.

In this sense, the criminals become distributors of a  product 
society wants. I do not use illegal drugs, but  I would be naive not 
to assume that there are people  around me daily who do, indeed, use 
illegal drugs.  Herein lies my concern, and herein lies the source 
of  my frustration.

It seems that as a society we are providing these drug  dealers with 
a very nice life-style. They live well,  and they have every material 
thing money can buy. And  yet, they are Frankenstein monsters of our 
own  creation.

One can only wonder what would happen if we were to  legalize, 
regulate and tax drugs, thereby putting these  criminals out of 
business. While no politician in his  right mind would ever be so 
foolish as to advocate the  legalization of drugs, it is still 
interesting,  nonetheless, to savor the thought of making the drug 
dealers irrelevant, once and for all.
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