Pubdate: 29 Sep, 1999
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Copyright: Guardian Media Group 1999
Contact:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/
Section: Analysis
Author: Alan Travis, Home Affairs Editor.

TESTING TIME FOR CRIME

The New Drugs Testing Policy Is Based On A Misreading Of The Facts And Will 
Do Little To Stem Crime Or Help Addicts Break Their Habits (Alan Travis)

The New Drugs Testing Policy Is Based On A Misreading Of The Facts And Will 
Do Little To Stem Crime Or Help Addicts Break Their Habits (Alan Travis)

Tony Blair yesterday defended his plans to introduce new powers including 
the mandatory drug testing of all those arrested by the police. He had 
launched this plan under the impression that hard drug abusers - 
particularly those on heroin and cocaine who steal to feed their habits - 
are one of the engines driving the crime rate in Britain.

His claim rests on research which showed that 61% of those arrested in some 
inner city areas had illegal drugs in their system. For the prime minister 
the study provided further evidence for his long-held belief that 
drug-related offences account for a major proportion of all crime committed 
in Britain. This in turn justified introducing new police powers to allow 
the testing of those arrested. In addition, bail will be denied to those 
found to be heroin or cocaine abusers, whatever their original crime.

But if tackling drugs is to form the centrepiece of this autumn's Queen's 
Speech, the government's well-intentioned long-term drugs strategy is 
clearly in the doldrums. Despite the appointment of a drugs tsar and the 
welcome change in emphasis from punishment to education, prevention and 
treatment, the new strategy has not yet made much of an impact. A national 
audit of policy earlier this year had to conclude that many of the 
initiatives launched in the drive against drug abuse were overloaded, 
ineffective or had never even been evaluated in the first place. There are 
no signs that any headway has been made in stemming the availability of 
drugs to young people.

A closer look at the research on which this new clampdown is based shows 
that the prime minister is only giving half the picture.

The ground-breaking study was carried out by Trevor Bennett, deputy 
director of Cambridge University's institute of criminology. Commissioned 
by the home office it tried out for the first time in Britain a 
well-established US research programme based on voluntary urine tests on 
some of those arrested. It included people arrested over a two-year period 
by officers based at police stations in Cambridge, Hammersmith, Nottingham, 
Sunderland, and Trafford in Manchester.

The research did indeed find that 61% of those interviewed had taken at 
least one illegal drug. But what Tony Blair did not mention was that 
cannabis was the most common drug found in their blood with 46% testing 
positive. And as the research report puts it : "Those who tested positive 
for cannabis alone were not heavily involved in acquisitive crime."

The second major finding - also ignored by Blair - was that, at 25%, 
alcohol was actually the next most common drug found. In fact heroin users, 
at 18%, did account for a surprisingly large proportion of those arrested 
but nowhere near the 50% plus implied by Blair. Cocaine users also 
accounted for 10% but the study found a lot of overlap between class-A drug 
users who had multiple drug habits.

The last group are undoubtedly responsible for a significant amount of 
property crime in Britain. It is estimated that a heroin addict who also 
uses crack raises about pounds 20,300 a year illegally with about a third 
spent financing their habit. A heroin user alone raises about pounds 13,500 
a year illegally to spend on smack. This compares with an estimated annual 
illegal income of about pounds 4,000 a year for the others arrested in the 
study. Those who tested positive for alcohol were much more likely to be 
involved in crimes of disorder than property.

But the research suggested the group of class-A hard drug abusers were less 
likely to be burglars (only one in 10 arrested burglars tested positive for 
opiates) than shoplifters (of 90 shoplifters half tested positive for 
opiates and 30% for cocaine). This raises the question of whether addicts 
who have been arrested for shoplifting will be denied bail and kept on 
remand for such a minor offence if their drug test proves positive. What 
the research actually shows, then, is that although illegal hard drugs are 
a significant factor in driving up crime they are nowhere near as big an 
engine as Blair has implied.

The next question is: what will happen to those who test positive once the 
new powers are introduced? Presumably most will be bailed for their 
original offence - having traces of cannabis in your bloodstream is not a 
criminal offence.

Research into the effectiveness of the mandatory drug testing programme in 
Britain's prisons has yielded some interesting results. A study last year 
by the national addiction centre and a home office study based on 
interviews with staff and prisoners found that mandatory drug testing had 
had a substantial impact on the prevalence of drug misuse. Some 27% of 
those who had formerly misused drugs when in custody had claimed to have 
stopped completely; a further 15% said they had reduced their consumption; 
6% reported they were taking less cannabis but continuing to use heroin; 
and 4% said they had experimented with heroin to avoid detection but had 
not carried on.

The results show that if money is spent on providing treatment it can work. 
The government already has drug treatment and testing orders which can 
enforce attendance for those convicted of an offence. If the mandatory drug 
testing of arrestees is to produce any good Blair should make sure that 
there are sufficient drug treatment services to give those who test 
positive a chance to kick the habit. Now that could cut crime.

Alan Travis is the Guardian's home affairs editor. 
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