Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008
Source: Lima News (OH)
Copyright: 2008 Freedom Newspapers Inc.
Contact:  http://www.limanews.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/990
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Tarika+Wilson (Tarika Wilson)

RACE MATTERS

A new report tells us something most already knew: Blacks are far 
more likely than whites to be incarcerated for drug crimes. Following 
the shooting death of 26-year-old Lima resident Tarika Wilson during 
a police SWAT raid, the data show it's naive to think the anger is 
about her death alone, but rather people are upset about a system 
that they have good reason to think works against them.

In 193 of the country's largest 198 counties, blacks face 
disproportionately higher rates of incarceration that whites for drug 
offenses, based on a national report by the Justice Policy Institute, 
a Washington, D.C.-based organization that wants to reform sentencing 
policies. Of the nine Ohio counties in the study - Allen County is 
not among them - blacks are imprisoned 10 times more often than 
whites in Lucas County. The scale goes to a high of 21 percent in 
Butler County.

Lima attorney Ken Rexford last year made a similar charge against the 
criminal justice system, saying blacks in Allen County face double 
the charges whites do, based on factors such as police waiting to 
make an arrest until more sales have taken place. Few people wanted 
to have the discussion last year. It is a conversation that must take place.

The solution to this de facto racism, of course, is simple: Stop 
imprisoning people for trading in drugs or using them.

Black leaders, as well as white leaders, should do everything 
possible to eradicate recreational drug use from their communities. 
But the government's war on drugs has done little, if anything, to 
curtail drug use among blacks or any other Americans. A reduction in 
drug use involves the work of counselors, parents, teachers, 
preachers, doctors and friends. It takes a culture, not armed state 
agents charged with feeding a growth industry of incarceration.

Joel Dyer, author of "The Perpetual Prisoner Machine; How America 
Profits from Crime," told Freedom Communications that blacks are 
disproportionately arrested for drugs mostly because of their 
collective economic plight. "We still have a higher percentage of 
blacks than whites living in poverty," Dyer said. "In policing, 
communities tend to have more enforcement in minority and low-income 
neighborhoods. That means if you're using drugs, and you live in one 
of those neighborhoods, you're more likely to get caught. You are 
likely to be defended by a busy public defender's office, rather than 
a private lawyer who can spend ample time and money on your case. 
Once you're in prison for drugs, you stand a good chance of becoming 
a violent criminal because it's tough to survive in prison."

Dyer, an expert on the public/private prison phenomenon, explains 
that for nonviolent drug convicts, survival in the joint often 
involves joining a race-based prison gang that mandates violent behavior.

"Stiff penalties for drug crimes can actually generate violent crime 
because drug convicts eventually get released, having become violent 
in prison," Dyer said.

Research by author and former law professor David Kopel, of the 
Colorado-based Independence Institute, has found incarceration of 
drug criminals diverts law enforcement resources from violent crime 
and results in shorter sentences for violent criminals. That's partly 
because imprisonment of common drug offenders has created a cell 
shortage. Burgeoning inmate populations have left sheriffs and 
politicians throughout the country clamoring for new and bigger 
prisons for the past decade.

Official drug prohibition results in a dangerous and sometimes 
violent black market, as forbidden trade usually does. In this case, 
the underground market has spawned a judicial racket that places a 
price on human heads. Based on our history, it's not surprising that 
the humans in our modern inmate trade are disproportionately black. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake