Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2004 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: James E. Gierach Note: The author is a speaker for Law Enforcement Against Drug Prohibition DRUG PROHIBITION IS THE SOURCE OF MANY SOCIAL ILLS Chicagoans really have to hand it to Chicago Police Supt. Philip Cline, U.S. Atty. Patrick Fitzgerald, and federal prosecutor David Hoffman who coheads Project Safe Neighborhoods --- murders are down in Chicago. ("Murder and the wave machine," Chicago Tribune, Editorial, July 4, 2004) This progress has been accomplished by increased cooperation among city, county, state and federal agencies; targeting drug-gang leaders for prosecution; selective federal gun prosecutions that carry severe penalties for routine gun violations; greater use of federal wiretapping authority; and the Chicago Police Department's rapid deployment of police following a shooting to prevent retaliation. A lull in Chicago's murder rate is as good as it gets in a drug-prohibition society. With drug prohibition still the law of the land, some neighborhoods continue to boil over with shootings, drugs, gangs and guns. Rather than re-examining the merits and demerits of drug prohibition, government leaders pour resources into the anti-murder campaign in Chicago with gusto. As a result, many gang leaders now sit in jail awaiting trial, and the number of murders in Chicago is down. But ganging up on the gang members in an effort to overcome the inevitable consequences of drug prohibition remains a "Band-Aid" solution and has other deleterious effects. The U.S. prison population continues to soar, civil liberties continue to erode, privacy rights are traded for surveillance cameras mounted along the public way, and suburban kids continue to trek to Chicago's West Side for heroin pure enough to snort. Drug prohibition produces one overdose death per day in the unregulated Chicago-region heroin trade. Misguidedly, the Tribune calls for the institutionalization of these intergovernmental anti-murder initiatives and says nothing about drug-prohibition policy. The Tribune editorial is almost giddy with the "progress" made with the crack down on the gangs, guns and murders in Chicago and criticizes the Internal Revenue Service for not moving fast enough to join the gangbanging, recalling that it was tax evasion and not murder prosecution that sent Al Capone up the river. Unfortunately, the Tribune editorial fails to further recall that the violence associated with alcohol prohibition did not end with Al Capone's conviction in 1931 but rather with an end to alcohol prohibition. Rather than institutionalizing polices that better enable us to live with the inevitable consequences of drug-prohibition polices --- endless waves of killings, shootings, gangs, corruption, and the defilement of our youth --- why not end drug prohibition and stop the problems at their source? James E. Gierach Speaker for Law Enforcement Against Drug Prohibition - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin