Pubdate: Tue, 06 May 2008 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2008 Journal Sentinel Inc. Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/news/editorials/submit.asp Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Eugene Kane BLACKS' RISK OF DRUG ARREST IS A GRIM REALITY "Whites are the majority of drug offenders, but blacks are the majority sent to prison on drug charges." - From "Targeting Blacks: Drug Law Enforcement and Race in the United States." An African-American father in Milwaukee with teenage sons noticed that when the older one borrowed the family car, there was a peculiar smell the next day. It made the father go ballistic; he had a stern talk with his sons about the dangers of marijuana. He told them he didn't condone them smoking weed (even if his baby-boomer background didn't exactly make him all that credible on the issue). Mainly, he wanted them to understand young black males couldn't take those kinds of chances these days. "If a cop stopped them and smelled it, their future would be ruined," he said. His point was well-taken. African-Americans are arrested and convicted for drug offenses at a much greater rate than whites in America and, as it turns out, particularly in Milwaukee. While some suburban teenagers probably use illegal drugs as frequently as teens in the central city of Milwaukee, the difference is law enforcement in those places doesn't pursue drug laws in the same way. The end results are statistics like those in two new reports from The Sentencing Project, a non-profit criminal justice advocacy group, and the Human Rights Watch. According to the reports, Wisconsin has the nation's highest racial disparity in incarceration for drug offenses, and Milwaukee has the second-highest racial disparity in drug arrests among U.S. cities. This is a city where blacks are seven times more likely to be arrested for a drug offense than whites, and a state where they are 42 times more likely to receive a prison term. I'd say the black father's advice to his sons was pretty sound. It's one of the most glaring inequities in the criminal justice system; while most studies show that both blacks and whites of various economic levels use illegal drugs at the same rate, the vast majority of people behind bars for using illegal drugs are African-Americans. When you consider the wide range of illegal drugs in America - not only street drugs like marijuana, cocaine and crystal meth, but also improperly obtained prescription drugs and other substances - it seems clear only one group of people is paying the legal price for a nation of abusers. It reminds me of the line by comedian Chris Rock, who noted all the late-night commercials from drug companies offering mood-altering medications. Rock said that was proof the government wasn't against all drugs; they just wanted you to use their drugs. The Sentencing Project puts real numbers behind a push for incarceration that has raised Milwaukee's drug arrest rate more than 200% since 1980. Similar increases have been found in other U.S. cities, usually with the same kind of racial disparity. It's a situation many African-American families - including my own - know all too well. Family members with drug addictions get in legal trouble but seldom receive the help they need through the criminal justice system. Many times, it's a rootless existence until they either hit rock bottom or finally seek help with the guidance of family or friends. In a society that makes self-medication seem almost normal, it seems absurd to make taking drugs to escape personal problems a criminal offense. Particularly if only one color of people end up paying the price. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake