Category Archives: Uncategorized

War on Drugs continues to incur collateral damage

Since  I posted a piece earlier today on the penal system in the U.S., I thought this article was timely:

Published on Monday, December 4, 2006 by the Baltimore Sun (Maryland)
by Cynthia Tucker
 

 All wars have a way of creating collateral damage, as the desk-bound bureaucrats euphemistically call the dead innocents, destroyed buildings and decimated towns that just happen to be in the way of bombs and bullets. Kathryn Johnston was collateral damage in America’s misguided “war on drugs.”

On Nov. 21, the 88-year-old woman was shot dead by Atlanta undercover police officers who crashed through her door after dark to execute a “no-knock” search warrant for illegal drugs. Living in a high-crime neighborhood, apparently frightened out of her wits, she fired at the intruders with a rusty revolver, hitting all three. That’s according to the police account, which says the officers then returned fire, striking Ms. Johnston in the chest and extremities.

The investigation may reveal police incompetence, and it may reveal police malfeasance. Unfortunately, however, it is unlikely to point to the root cause of this tragedy: a foolish, decades-long effort to curb illegal drug use through arrests and incarceration. Raging on mindlessly, the war on drugs has caused untold collateral damage – leaving children fatherless, helping to exacerbate the spread of AIDS, and filling prisons with people who, with minimal rehabilitation, might be contributing to society rather than draining its resources.

Although black Americans are no more likely to use illegal drugs than whites, they are disproportionately imprisoned for drug offenses. There are three basic reasons for that, according to The Sentencing Project, a Washington-based nonprofit that advocates alternatives to incarceration: the concentration of drug-law enforcement in inner-city areas; harsher sentencing policies for crack cocaine, used disproportionately by black Americans, than for powder cocaine; and the drug war’s emphasis on law enforcement at the expense of prevention and treatment.

It’s clear that Ms. Johnston was no drug dealer. Even if she had been, her crimes would not have justified the intrusive and dangerous tactics police used. Those tactics flow from a failed policy that emphasizes arrests – any arrests, no matter the offender’s stature in the drug-trade hierarchy or the size of the cache of drugs. That policy has kept police busy with penny-ante dealers while the real drug trade flourishes.

That strategy also heavily burdens black communities. According to The Sentencing Project’s Ryan King, black drug users tend to engage in more stranger-to-stranger transactions. That makes it easy for police to pose undercover. By contrast, targeting affluent users who buy from friends and acquaintances “would require a lot of police work, months or years of undercover efforts for one or two arrests,” Mr. King said. Most police jurisdictions will choose the easier targets.

Of course, the criminal justice system isn’t colorblind, either. Reams of research have shown that white men tend to get probation for nonviolent offenses more often than black and Latino men, who are more often sent to prison.

It’s no wonder, then, that an estimated one-third of young black men are under the jurisdiction of the criminal justice system – in prison, on probation or on parole. And once they’ve been tainted with a conviction, they struggle under its stigma for the rest of their lives.

This country imprisons its citizens at five to eight times the rate of most other industrialized nations, according to The Sentencing Project. We’ve learned nothing from the earlier period of Prohibition, which produced criminal gangs and an epidemic of lawlessness.

Meanwhile, for all the wreckage from this drug war, the use of illicit substances has declined only slightly. Methamphetamine has replaced crack cocaine as the drug plague that enlivens local newscasts; the affluent tend toward “designer” drugs such as Ecstasy, which figure less prominently in arrest reports.

And Kathryn Johnston? She’s not the first victim of our foolish, futile war on drugs. Sadly, she won’t be the last.

Cynthia Tucker is editorial page editor for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Her column appears Mondays in The Sun

Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun

Non-violent “Criminal” to spend most of life in prison

The U.S. Supreme court refuses to hear the case of a Salt Lake man who sold marijuana. His punishment: 55 years in prison.

The case of Weldon Angelos, who was sentenced to a mandatory 55 years for selling marijuana, was among a list of cases released Monday that the U.S. Supreme Court rejected for consideration, shocking many in the legal field who say a constitutional review of minimum-mandatory federal sentences is long overdue.
Attorneys representing Angelos expressed disappointment in the news, calling it a “miscarriage of justice.”
“We are extremely disappointed that the Supreme Court did not agree to hear the case,” University of Utah law professor Erik Luna said. “This case presented a great opportunity for the Supreme Court not only to correct this miscarriage of justice but also to clarify the scope of the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.”

And even though Angelos can appeal his sentence and conviction in a “writ of habeas corpus,” it would be the same courts that upheld his sentence that would review the appeal. The other option is a presidential pardon. How likely is that?

It is continually amazing that persons charged with non-violent crimes incur these types of punishments while many persons charged with violent crimes often incur sentences of much lesser severity. The penal system in the U.S. is long overdue for a serious overhaul and restructuring, from the types of sentences according the severity of the crime, to the de-privatization of our prisons to the development of programs for those who need rehabilitation to the decriminalization of certain “drugs”.

Bolton Resigns

U.N. Ambassador
John Bolton Resigns

bolton_resigns

“I have concluded that my service in your administration should end when the current recess appointment expires.”

– John Bolton in a letter to President Bush, 12/04/06
______________

Posted in This Blog

National Congressional Call-In Day

VotersForPeace email banner


Remember National Congressional Call-In Day TODAY – Monday, December 4th

Members of Congress return to Washington, DC, today, Monday, December 4, to discuss their legislative priorities for the new session. Let’s greet them with a flood of phone calls, because many still don’t understand that the troops need to come home from Iraq — NOW!  Even Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, has said “We’re not going to do anything to limit funding or cut off funds.”

We can’t let the new Democratic leadership sit back on their hands and refuse to take responsibility for the Iraq war. YOU can help us send this message to Congress. Here’s what to do:

– Call the Congressional Swithboard at 202.224.3121 and ask for the office of your Representative or Senators.

– Ask to talk to the foreign policy advisor. If he or she is not there, ask to leave a voicemail.

– Once you have them on the phone, use these talking points:

1. This election was about the Iraq war, and we want a change!

2. I insist that Congress act immediately to bring all U.S. troops home from Iraq NOW! This includes limiting funding ONLY to withdrawal.

3. The US needs to pursue regional diplomacy for Iraq’s future. It is the only way that the Middle East can find a way out of the chaos the US has created.

4. Congress has the power to end the U.S. occupation in Iraq and if it fails to do so, we will hold them responsible for the continued violence in Iraq. 

Please make 3 phone calls: to your Representative and to each of your Senators. Call the Capitol Switchboard TODAY at 202.224.3121 and help us ensure that a withdrawal from Iraq will be a top priority!

PS. Don’t forget to email us at Action@VotersForPeace.org to let us know who you speak to and if you get a response.

Sincerely,

Linda Schade
Executive Director
VotersForPeace.US

Getting messages out

The Deseret News today has an article about a woman in a wheelchair stopping traffic on a highway to call attention to the lack of health insurance her husband is able to get for treatment of a medical condition. Medicare won’t pay for the treatment that he needs.

Police met the woman and her supporters at the intersection of the protest and compromised on escorting her around the intersection with her signs.

I had to cringe, however, at this:

….traffic speeds on Bangerter are too high in early evening hours to ensure Landers’ safety and that she would more effectively call attention to her story if she told it to a nearby newspaper reporter.
If she had wanted to stay on the sidewalk and hold a sign, officers said, they had no problem with that.
“I’ve tried everything else,” Landers said with tears in her eyes.

Uh, we all know that the media does not cover everything and when this woman says she has tried everything, I believe her. I’ll bet she has written letters and contacted newspapers and this was a desperate measure on her part.

And guess what – it made the news.

Miller Defends the New Arena Name

Today’s Salt Lake Tribune has an article in which Entrepenuer Larry H. Miller Defends the name of the Center formerly known as Delta.

I find these comments of his particularly disturbing:

Miller said he has heard complaints from Utahns, but when he asks them about nuclear waste and storage, they cannot provide answers.
“I would ask them before they just hit a panic button when they hear the word ‘nuclear waste’ that they at least understand what it is that’s done there, stored there, what that business is about,” he said.
He later added: “I want to listen and learn and see what [people have] got to say if it’s rational.”

Every Utahn I have spoken to does have a rational solution and explanation. I haven’t run into anyone yet who hesitates at what the solution is for storing toxic waste:

Keep it in the state in which it is generated. Stop generating it if there is nowhere to store it in your state

.

I question what people Miller has talked to (and how many). He needs to look at and read the polls.

Meanwhile, I still support the boycott of all Miller holdings, since he has chosen a name for our state basketball team center that portrays Utah as a nuclear waste dump. That should do wonders for tourism in our state.

World AIDS Day

Today is World AIDS Day. This year’s theme is “Paint the Town Red”.
Here is a list of events happening around the Salt Lake Valley today:

  • Art exchibition and ocumentaries in memory of DeWayne Sessions, a
    renowned artist and AIDS victim.
    Continue reading
  • Holiday Gift Giving – adopt a sea creature!


      
    is having a fundraising push for its adoption center – another option for holiday gift giving!

    Holiday Gift Giving – Vegan Gift Basket

    What could be a more perfect gift for your favorite vegetarian or vegan than a vegan gift basket? The Mail Order Catalog for Healthy Eating, a supporter of Vegetarian Resource Group, offers 4 terrific gift baskets: organic, small, large, and body care. And all products in the gift baskets are vegan! By ordering a gift basket through the following link, you will also be helping VRG as The Mail Order Catalog is kind enough to donate a percentage of each sale to the

    THE VEGETARIAN RESOURCE GROUP

    Cottonwood Mobile Home Residents Story – continued

    I’ve been following the saga of Cottonwood Heights Mobile Home Residents facing eviction from their homes due to development of the land on which their homes sit.

    KUER Radio’s site has this piece from September that I imagine is still relevant (for donations)to help displaced residents with the costs of having to move:
    Mobile Home Owners Move to Make Way for Development

    COTTONWOOD HEIGHTS, UT (2006-09-18) Children, the elderly, and the working poor – all residents of the 50-year-old Meadows Mobile Home Estates in Cottonwood Heights are faced with moving out of their mobile homes to make way for a new upscale development. But most of the families don’t have the money to move.
    Tax deductible donations to the Meadows Relocation Fund can be made to the Community Action Program in Salt Lake City or deposits can be made at any JP Morgan Chase Bank in the Meadows Relocation Fund account.

    Salt Lake Community Action Program
    764 S 200 West Salt Lake City, Ut 84101 (801)359-2444 (801)355-1798 (f)