Pubdate: Fri, 26 Dec 2003 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2003 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: SAM SLOSS STUMBO'S PLAN 'WILL NOT REDUCE KENTUCKY DRUG USE' Denis Fleming's Dec. 5 Forum article on incoming Attorney General Greg Stumbo's plans for fighting drugs was anything but reassuring. Obviously, Stumbo and Fleming (the deputy attorney general-designate) are not well read in the criminal justice literature, or they are more concerned with their political images than with the health and welfare of Kentuckians. Their plan calls for expanding the tried and true failures of the past with a blind eye to what research shows us actually works. For years, academic researchers of the right and left have noted that U.S. drug policies actually elevate drug usage, diminish health, increase murder rates and waste tax dollars. Where the rest of the civilized Western world treats drug addiction as a medical problem and addresses the problem compassionately with scientific solutions, Stumbo and Fleming want to continue to treat drug addicts as vermin wasting valuable police time and public money rounding up the sick. Countries like the Netherlands that decriminalized soft drug use like marijuana found their adolescent consumption rates dropped and are now well below U.S. adolescent consumption rates. And rather than pumping money into the criminal underground economy, the money goes to legal businesses and is taxed. Conservative Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman estimates that the U.S. incurs an extra 10,000 murders each year as dealers fight for market share. Crimes like theft and robbery remain high, in part because illegal drugs cost more than legal ones. Fleming notes that in the past 10 years, Kentucky has experienced significant growth in the prosecution and imprisonment of Kentucky drug addicts. Nationwide, we have increased our prison populations by 400 percent since former President Reagan stepped up the drug war in 1980, making the U.S. the planet's No. 1 country in terms of putting its citizens in prison. I don't mean to question Stumbo or Fleming's motives. Drug addiction is a national and Kentucky problem. And at first blush, it would seem reasonable that increased surveillance and punishment would reduce the incidence of unwanted behavior - in this case, drug use. However, like many things in life, it does not work that way. The evidence is clear that what Stumbo is proposing will not reduce Kentucky drug use. By driving the behavior underground, diseases like hepatitis and AIDS will be more difficult to contain. Theft, robbery and murder rates will remain high. Prisons will remain crowded with drug addicts while police lack time and money to protect senior citizens, go after child and spouse abusers, enforce environmental laws and protect us from white-collar crimes. Stumbo's plan will not make Kentuckians safer or healthier. Let's be honest. Tobacco smokers will kill and maim far more innocent bystanders with their second-hand smoke than deaths from all illegal drugs combined. The deaths and health costs from first-hand smoking will dwarf the harm from our pot heads. While there is some irony in this, for an increasingly educated public, Stumbo's plan is no longer funny. Kentucky needs leaders who are ready to make a difference and think outside the box. Maybe Stumbo could actually read the academic literature on reducing drug use and abuse. Then follow up on what is in the best interest of the public rather than his reelection. SAM SLOSS Louisville 40205 - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart