Pubdate: Sun, 25 Oct 1998 Date: 10/25/1998 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Author: Coyt Randal Johnston Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98.n911.a04.html Re: "Fugitive since 1970 found, officials say - Dallas man fled court after heroin conviction," Oct. 14. How totally absurd! In 1970, Charles Edward Garrett was sentenced to life in prison for possessing heroin; not dealing, but just having 23 capulets of this controlled substance on his person. Absurdity No. 1: Take people with a drug problem and spend tax dollars putting them through the "University of Crime" we call our prison system. Our prisons are overflowing because of the war on drugs. We have telethons and charity golf tournaments and ballroom dances and auctions for every disease imaginable except, of course, diseases associated with drug addiction. For drugs, we declare war and then lock up the afflicted. I hope we never declare a war on cedar pollen allergies! Absurdity No. 2: Lock them up for life. Fortunately, our state penal code has become a little less "absurd" since 1970, when possession of a small amount of marijuana (that would today be treated as a misdemeanor) would result in a life sentence. Lots of people were sentenced to life in prison because of small amounts of marijuana or heroin in the early '70s. This continues in the federal system even today. Mr. Garrett, however, did not go to prison to serve his life sentence: he walked out of the courtroom and assumed a new, law-abiding identity. For 28 years, he worked, paid taxes, and began raising a family. He did on his own what we would not have done for him if we had sent him to prison: He learned how to be a law-abiding citizen. On Oct. 12, Dallas Sheriff's Department officials arrested Mr. Garrett at his job as a maintenance technician at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and now our tax dollars are finally going to be spent the way we intended: He is going to be sent to prison to start serving his life sentence, at the age of 56. Am I the only one who thinks this is stupid? His story graces the same pages that include a mother's failure to come to the aid of her murdered child, a police officer arrested for rape, the death of a 3-year-old child who was the victim of physical abuse, and an arrest warrant for a man alleged to have broken into over 300 storage facilities in Tarrant County. If these people are ultimately convicted, are we really serving any purpose by sending Mr. Garrett to prison to live with them? COYT RANDAL JOHNSTON Dallas, Tx 75202