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Archive for January, 2005

Mobile, Alamaba Police Chief Blames Drugs, Guns, Domestic Violence for Homicide Rate

The Mobile Register in Alabama reported today that homicides in 2004 were on the upturn -- 28 within the Mobile Police Jurisdiction, which extends three miles beyond the city, up from 24 homicides during 2003.

The article discussed the much higher homicide rate during the mid 1990s -- 1995 had the peak with 56 -- implicitly raising the question of whether 2004's increase means that violence is again going back up. Police Chief Sam Cochran isn't worried about that, according to the article, for among other reasons arguing that three of the 28 are likely to be cut from the statistics -- they were killed by police and ruled "justifiable."

It seems awfully cavalier for Chief Cochran not to be worried about a possible rise in violence, if that characterization by the reporter is accurate. To be fair, four homicides or one out of 28 is not very conclusive statistical evidence; maybe it's not going up. But there have been ominous signs in other parts of the country in recent years, such as Baltimore, which in 2002 saw a wave of juvenile murders putting the city on track to exceed the mayor's hoped for reduced homicide target by more than 25%. And two weeks ago the Baltimore Sun reported on a wave of drug trade killings and the stunning admission by police that their drug crackdown was the cause.

More unfortunate was Chief Cochran's predictably unimaginative response -- he wants more cops, 600 instead of the current 475 -- and he credits the work of the Street Level Interdiction Drug Enforcement (SLIDE) team for reducing violence in the city. Cochran should look to the Baltimore events for an example of why his analysis may be off base.

Regardless of that, the national homicide rate, and the individual rates in our big cities, are unacceptably high and only go to show just how bad the situation was a decade ago when they were even higher. As Chief Cochran points out, one of the cause is drugs. By and large that means the drug trade, which means that the way to stop them is clear -- end prohibition, legalize drugs. Then Cochran and the taxpayers wouldn't need 125 more cops on the payroll. And they might be able to do something about those five remaining unsolved homicides from last year -- at least they could try harder if they weren't spending so much on the futile drug fight. But Cochran loves his SLIDE team too much for that.

Letters to the editor can be submitted here.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

State Dept. Issues Mexico Border Travel Advisory Over Drug Fighting

Fighting among rival drug gangs near the US-Mexico border has prompted the US State Dept. to issue a travel advisory, and Mexican officials are not happy, according to an article by Ginger Thomas in the New York Times. The US ambassador to Mexico, Antonio O. Garza, Jr., predicted a "chilling effect on the cross-border exchange, tourism and commerce" if Mexico could not rein in the violence.

Mexican president Vicente Fox shot back at Garza and the State Dept., saying "Mexico's fight against drug trafficking is firm," and "The Mexican government does not admit judgment from any foreign government about political actions taken to confront its problems."

If Fox really meant that, he would push harder for legalization, which once a few years back he said was the right way for the world to go. Mexico suffers terribly from the drug trade violence that prohibition has created, and they have the right to an effective solution. Only replacing the illicit drug traffic with a legal trade that is governed by laws has a chance of providing that.

E-mail letters@nytimes.com to send a letter to the editor. And send good thoughts for peace southward to our peoples on both sides of the border.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

Heroin Fatalities Double in Austin, Texas, Despite Prohibition

KXAN News 36 in Austin, Texas has reported that despite drug prohibition remaining fully in place, heroin deaths in Austin nevertheless more then doubled, from the low-mid twenties in 2003 to 50 in 2004 -- 2005 has gotten off to a bad start with the latest fatality coming this past Tuesday. According to the report, prosecutors are seeking severe prison terms even for low-level players in the distribution chain as a result.

It would be unfortunate if they got them. The way to reduce heroin overdoses and poisonings is to move the trade into a legal, regulated environment in which users can know what they are getting. Certainly there are some, probably many dealers who knowingly put their customers' lives at risk by providing bad stuff, and there are dealers who engage in violent behavior and who are legitimate targets of the criminal justice system for that reason. Going after the former group might help a little in preventing ODs; going after the latter will clearly not. Many low-level suppliers are addicts who have been driven to it by the high price of heroin that prohibition has caused. Many others are just down and out people who are doing what they need to do to survive.

In the end, the government shares in the blame for most if not all of these deaths, because the government's prohibition laws made them more likely. Legalization, not prosecutions or lengthy sentences, will rescue generations of heroin addicts.

KXAN News 36 accepts comments online here. I haven't seen this story run anywhere else yet; please post back here if you do.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

Dozens Including School Official Indicted in Virginia Trafficking Bust

The Daily Press in Newport News, Virginia, reported today on the arrest of dozens of people in a major operation by the Peninsula Narcotics Enforcement Task Force. The 324-count indictment refers to drug trafficking going back to 1996 and charges that the numerous defendants "would and did on a consignment and cash basis obtain, distribute, and possess with the intent to distribute in excess of 10,000 pounds of marijuana, in excess of 300 kilograms of cocaine and 20 kilograms of cocaine base, known as crack, throughout the course of the conspiracy." It follows eight months after the task force seized "$2.2 million in cash, a money counting machine, and digital scales from a storage shed in Newport News," according to the article.

One of the people indicted is an assistant superintendent in Prince Georges County, Maryland, Pamela Hoffler-Riddick, which has led to coverage by the local NBC affiliate. That's nearby to where DRCNet is based in Washington. I haven't seen the report, which was posted on the web at about 6:30pm this evening. The CEO of the county school system, Hoffler-Riddick's boss, made some appropriate remarks in which he refrained from rushing to judgment and expressed compassion for her and her family. Hoffler-Riddick has been placed on administrative leave for the time being.

Obviously I don't whether she is innocent or guilty, and the law presumes her innocent until proven guilty. The federal jurisdiction is the one headed by US Attorney Paul McNulty, according to an article about the same operation in The Virginian-Pilot, and he is scheduled to make an announcement and provide further information tomorrow. McNulty is the son-of-a-bitch who prosecuted Dr. Hurwitz, and that makes any indictments brought by his division suspect in my book, especially high profile indictments such as those against Hurwitz or Hoffler-Riddick -- McNulty and his crew may have a special penchant for seeking to make high-profile takedowns on prominent citizens that biases their decisions. But that is speculation only and is neither here nor there in this case insofar as the information currently available is concerned.

Regardless of my suspicions of anything prosecutor McNulty does, my main suggestion in this post is directed at the newspapers that have reported on the indictments. They should investigate whether the cash and equipment seizures done eight months ago had any noticeable impact on the price or availability of drugs on the Peninsula, and they should return to the topic in a month or so to see whether this week's indictments have had any effect. If, as is overwhelmingly likely, the answers are "no" and "no," their editorial boards should ponder what the rationale is for drug busts or prohibition itself.

Get Virginian-Pilot letter-to-the-editor information here. Get Daily Press letter-to-the-editor information here. NBC4 accepts comments online here.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

Niagara Falls Stun Grenade Incident Shocks Residents — DRCNet and LEAP Quoted

An article in Friday's Buffalo News, 'Stun' Device Burns Woman in Drug Raid, quoted yours truly as well as upstate New Yorker, retired police captain Peter Christ of Prohibition in the Media partner organization Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), to whom I had referred the reporter after he called. That's not the only reason I'm blogging it, though. :) The incident, which occurred in nearby Niagara Falls and in which police used a dangerous military-style device on a routine drug suspect raid, makes two important points.

One of those points is about the extremity of the current drug war, the use of paramilitary tactics such as stun grenades. This has been driven in part by the dilution of the strict separation between the military and domestic law enforcement, a dilution which began in earnest under the Reagan administration. My quote in the article characterizes the use of pyrotechnic devices in routine drug raids as "reckless" and takes the position that such equipment should be limited to extremely dangerous situations such as those involving hostages. An unidentified local woman also used the word "reckless." While withholding judgment on the specific situation without knowing more details, Peter makes some trenchant observations about the dangers inherent in such tactics and the values that lead to them being used so widely.

John Chella, Niagara's police superintendent, while regretting the injury caused still defended their use of the device, noting that police recovered a loaded weapon during the raid. I stand by my criticism fully -- results are what count, and the harm is not limited to the injured bystander but is felt in the fear of all her neighbors that their police could one day do the same thing to them. Policing is an inherently risky profession -- we should be grateful to our police officers for that reason -- but that does not afford them the luxury to used any available tactic to minimize all risk to themselves while increasing it to others. The least risky course for the officers would have been to just blow the house up and kill everybody inside. Obviously that's the most extreme example, and I'm not by any means implying that what the officers did in this case resembles it. But it's a question of balance and where in a given situation the line gets drawn. In my opinion pyrotechnics crossed the line in what by all appearances was a routine drug raid -- and again, results are what count.

But this leads to the second important point. The use of such tactics by police is not hard to understand, given that the dangers that the drug trade and drug war often present to them. There is an arms race going on between the drug fighters and the drug suppliers, and amongst drug suppliers, with prohibition is at the root of both. Hunting down marijuana dealers and their product is clearly not worth arms races with their attendant collateral damage. But the same principle applies even to the more dangerous drugs, which could be controlled instead and more effectively through some form of legalization.

Check out Dan Herbeck's and Bill Michelmore's critical examination of stun grenades in drug enforcement here, and click here for letter to the editor information or here to submit one online.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

Harlem “Drug Apartment” Slaying Ilustrates Prohibition’s Deleterious Impact on the Inner City

An article in last Friday's New York Post illustrates the corrosive impact of prohibition on the quality of life in our nation's poor inner-city neighborhoods. The article Slaying at Harlem "Drug" Apartment described the killing of a marijuana dealer by robbers targeting his presumed cash and stash, and the critical and possibly fatal wounding of his girlfriend and her 17-year old son.

Whether or not one regrets the loss of a marijuana dealer's life in a robbery targeting his cash or supply, Henry King did not deserve to be killed and his girlfriend and her son did not deserve to suffer life-threatening wounds. But most clearly, their neighbors don't deserve to have to live in an environment characterized by violence. Nor should they have had to deal with the constant stream of visitors his business brought in and out of the building every day -- that also affects the quality of life.

Decades of the "war on drugs" have shown that the drug trade cannot be extinguished in that way. This means that blaming the dealers, deservedly or otherwise, accomplishes nothing. Only some form of drug legalization can put those kinds of dealers out of business, stop the violence and disorder, and give inner city neighborhoods a chance to finally heal and prosper.

I've submitted a letter to the editor -- and you can too. Click here to do so online.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

Pompano Beach-Area Dealer Rapes Woman as Cocaine Debt “Repayment”

Local 10 TV news in Florida reported that a cocaine dealer raped a woman who was unable to pay her debt to him to make things "even." Sergio Barr, the accused, previously served time for burglary and armed robbery. If convicted of sexual battery, he could face life in prison this time.

Rape is a horrible crime, and Barr if found guilty should be punished for it. But that will be small comfort. Wouldn't it be better if the rape had never taken place at all? The victim, whom police and Local 10 mercifully did not name, was forced into contact with the criminal underground because the drug on which she is hooked is banned under law. If she had had access to a legal source of cocaine, through a pharmacy, perhaps, or some other appropriate outlet, she would probably not have come into contact with Barr, certainly not for the same reason or with the same frequency; there would have been no necessity for her to associate with such unsavory characters.

And, how many people who get victimized, in this or other ways, by people with whom they have engaged in drug transactions, don't report the crimes because they are afraid of being criminally prosecuted as drug possessors or worse themselves?

Local 10 can be contacted here.

- Dave Borden, DRCNet

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