Pubdate: Fri, 29 Aug 2014 Source: Progress-Index, The (VA) Copyright: The Progress-Index 2014 Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=2271 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2274 Author: Ronald Fraser Page: A4 IN FERGUSON, THE FRUITS OF A FAILED DRUG WAR To the Editor: In the 1960s, civil rights demonstrators in Selma, Alabama, and elsewhere faced local police officers armed with hand held batons, fire hoses, attack dogs and horse-mounted riot control officers. Recently, in Ferguson, Missouri, civic rights protestors went up against aggressive local police officers equipped with body armor, automatic weapons, armored personnel carriers and at least one police sniper aiming a telescope-equipped assault rifle at the protestors. Street protests today look a lot like those of the 1960s but, with drug war-driven militarization of local law enforcement agencies since then, the police response in Ferguson now looks a lot like urban warfare. As is the case in many other nations, drug use might have been designated a public health and education issue. Instead, drug use was declared to be a criminal and law enforcement matter followed by a long, costly and failed "war" on drugs - especially against marijuana. Tough on crime advocates flourished. Legislatures passed tough drug use laws that filled American prisons with a few drug kingpins and tens of thousands of recreational drug users and small time dealers. Decades ago, as big time drug dealers in key cities became better armed and more violent, police departments reacted by creating special weapons and tactics teams (SWAT) to combat drug gangs. As SWAT teams became fashionable in law enforcement circles, smaller police departments climbed aboard. Once upon a time, police departments first assessed their town's unique law enforcement, training and equipment requirements and only then went shopping. That process is now reversed. Today police departments first load up on "free," hand-me-down military equipment available from the Department of Defense thrift store. Once formed and equipped, police chiefs needing to keep their militarily-armed and trained, violence-ready troopers busy, turn to less violent tasks, such as serving court warrants. Actual situations, for which SWAT teams are genuinely needed, such as the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, are rare. A June 2014 American Civil Liberties Union study, War Comes Home: The Excessive Militarization of American Policing, found that seventy-nine percent of the SWAT deployments examined were search warrant executions in support of drug investigations. In the majority of the cases the police did not face genuine threats to their safety and security. The study adds that, "SWAT teams were often deployed - unnecessarily and aggressively - to execute search warrants in low-level drug investigations; deployments for hostage or barricade scenarios occurred in only a small number of incidents.... Thus, the use of a SWAT team to execute a search warrant essentially amounts to the use of paramilitary tactics to conduct domestic drug investigations in people's homes." Tens of thousands of police SWAT raids take place each year resulting in excessive damage to private property and injury and death for innocent bystanders. These raids, concludes a recent New York Times analysis, drives up the demand for combat weapons and equipment. Since 2006, according to the Times, a sampling of the combat gear received by state and local law enforcement agencies includes, in addition to assault rifles, body armor and grenade launchers: 432 mine-resistant, ambush protected armored vehicles; 435 other armored vehicles; 93,763 machine guns, 44,900 night vision sights, binoculars and goggles. Do 432 American cities really need mine-resistant armored vehicles? Do American police departments really need 93,763 machine guns? The ACLU study once again confirmed that Blacks are more likely to be impacted by a SWAT raid than whites. For example, in Allentown, Pa., police SWAT raids were 23 times more likely to impact blacks. The comparable figures for other police departments are: Burlington, N.C., 47 times; Fort Worth, Texas, 12 times; Huntington, W.Va., 37 times; Ogden, Utah, 39 times; and Spokane, Wash., 10 times. The events in Ferguson make the ACLU's advice for change even more urgent: "The use of paramilitary weapons and tactics to conduct ordinary law enforcement-especially to wage the failed War on Drugs and most aggressively in communities of color-has no place in contemporary society. It is not too late to change course-through greater transparency, more oversight, policies that encourage restraint, and limitations on federal incentives, we can foster a policing culture that honors its mission to protect and serve, not to wage war." Ronald Fraser DKT Liberty Project Washington, D.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom