Mon, Sep 4, 2003 - The Chronicle (Duke University, NC)
Is the Drug War on Crack?
by Christopher Scoville
The only reason I read the crime briefs section of The
Chronicle is to learn even more synonyms for the word 'stolen.'
This summer while I was perusing The Chronicle Online,
one section of the crime briefs stood out from the pilfered laptops
and lifted wallets. A student on West Campus was apparently duped
into handing over all of his money ($3000) and drugs by local
men impersonating police officers. The three men returned later
and demanded "more money, drugs or names of other drug dealers."
The crime briefs also noted that all of them were African-American
and in their twenties. The student was probably about the same
age. He no doubt attended a decent high school, achieved excellent
grades and SAT scores and landed at Duke University. The student
was also allegedly a drug dealer. The three men were presumably
drug dealers, as well. The former attends a top-10 private university
with its own police force and rampant drug and alcohol violations.
The latter probably live somewhere in Durham in a 'no-go zone'
for Duke students.
No doubt, the students involved in last semester's "shake-down"
on West Campus were petrified by the intrusion. No doubt, Duke
Police became involved to stop local men from intimidating Duke
students. No doubt, the University was worried about violence
against Duke student drug dealers. And no doubt, Duke drug dealers
got a taste of the workings of drug circles outside of the Ivory
Tower.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, if the student-cum-drug
dealer was white, he was four times more likely than his African-American
classmates to be a regular cocaine user in high school. The National
Household Survey on Drug Abuse of 1998 found that "most
current illicit drug users are white. There were an estimated
9.9 million whites (72 percent of all users), 2.0 million blacks
(15 percent), and 1.4 million Hispanics (10 percent) who were
current illicit drug users in 1998."
Yet, the Bureau of Justice Statistics of the Department of
Justice paints a different picture. Blacks constitute over 35
percent of those arrested for drug violations -- more than twice
the percentage of black drug users of the total population. This
"double representation" is also true of Hispanics.
It does not require much research to find dozens of shocking
surveys and statistics that further corroborate these findings.
Racial minorities are the prime targets of the drug war in this
country.
While the statistics on-face indicate race, the primary reason
for the plight of these individuals is socioeconomic status.
Minorities constitute a disproportionate percentage of our nation's
poorest people. They face police discrimination and violence,
while often lacking knowledge of their civil liberties. The reason
for drug involvement is irrelevant, whether it be desperation,
self-medication or economic prosperity. What really matters is
that minorities do not have the protections that people in the
higher stations of our society take for granted.
Corporate executives deal cocaine under conference tables;
college students smoke marijuana in secured dorm rooms; doctors
prescribe one another pain killers; suburban moms and dads get
high after their kids go to bed. The table, the dorm room, the
prescription, and suburbia represent institutions and infrastructures
that isolate these activities outside the reign of the law. Police
officers cannot simply barge into board meetings to confiscate
speed; but they can break down the doors of suspected crack dealers
in 'drug neighborhoods.'
Likewise, Durham police do not infiltrate dorm rooms to arrest
the frat boy cokehead or hippie pothead ( or whoever for that
matter ) when they can drive a few miles and prey upon poor communities
that lack the protection that is a major, private university.
These poor communities in Durham are a hop, skip and a jump away
from the "nice" neighborhoods where some Duke professors
enjoy their weekly joints. The student dealing drugs on-campus
last semester was undoubtedly shocked when three local men walked
onto campus and upset this balance of power and privilege.
The wall surrounding Duke momentarily crumbled, and at least
one unsuspecting student was smothered by the rubble. Everyone
else at Duke can probably continue to hide behind that wall now
and in the future. The racial inequities in police targeting
and prosecutions are just the tip of the iceberg. The drug war
in America is a failed machine. It's time to demolish the machinery
and create a more just and effective system to address drug use
in this country.
Christopher Scoville is a Trinity junior. His column appears
every other Thursday.
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