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Based on my experience as a federal prosecutor with the United States Attorney's Office in Los Angeles, as a criminal defence attorney for the U.S. Navy JAG Corps, and as a trial judge in Orange County, Calif. since 1983, I've concluded that the U.S. government policy of drug prohibition has not only failed, but that it is hopeless. The problem is not that our law enforcement officers aren't doing a good job. In truth is they have a dangerous and difficult task, and are doing better than we have a right to expect. They are no more to blame for the failure of drug prohibition than was Elliott Ness for the failure of alcohol prohibition. The problem, rather, is that our prohibitionist laws make the trafficking in illegal drugs so obscenely profitable that we will never exhaust the supply to criminals willing to take the risk of imprisonment in order to produce and sell them. In fact, our present system is giving us the worst of all worlds. As a direct result of our policy of drug prohibition, crime, violence, corruption, taxes and -- in many cases -- even drug usage have increased, while the health and civil liberties of citizens have suffered. America's "prison-industrial complex" has gotten so fat and powerful from the money our governments have budgeted for the War on Drugs that it has become politically dangerous for elected officials to speak out against the current policy. Under these circumstances, it is up to ordinary people -- as citizens, taxpayers and voters -- to call a halt to these failed policies. We should begin by asking the following questions:
History is instructive. Consider that when alcohol prohibition was repealed in the United States, homicides went down by 60% after only one year, and they continued to decline each year thereafter until the beginning of the Second World War. There is no question in my mind that we will experience similar results when we finally repeal drug prohibition. In June of 1994, the RAND Corporation released a study that found we get seven times more value for our tax money by drug treatment programs than by the incarceration of drug addicts. So let's make drug treatment available upon demand, and get the non-problem users of drugs out of the criminal justice system. This will enable us to focus our scarce resources upon the problem users -- men and women who are driven by drugs to commit violent crimes. Further, let's do what we can to take the profit motive out of the sale of drugs. Programs of decriminalization and medicalization are working effectively in countries like Holland and Switzerland. They can work in the United States and Canada as well. |
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