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- From: Jim Rosenfield <jnr@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Date: 24 Jul 93 12:47 PDT
- Subject: USA Today: RACIST Policies
- Message-ID: <1484000280@igc.apc.org>
-
- IS THE DRUG WAR RACIST? DISPARITIES SUGGEST THE ANSWER IS YES
-
- USA Today, 7/23/93, Front Page, Cover Story
- by Sam Vincent Meddis
-
- >>>>>>> chart:
- Blacks are four times as likely as whites ti be arrested on drug
- charges -- even though the two groups use drugs at almost the
- same rate.
-
- Drug arrests per 100,000
- Blacks 1,609 Whites 408
-
- U.S. Adults who used illegal drugs within the past year:
-
- Nationwide 13% Whites 12% Blacks 16%
-
- Sources: USA TODAY analysis of drug arrest records filed with the
- FBI: NIDA Household Survey on Drug Abuse. (1991-latest available)
-
- ----------------------
-
- first part of article:
-
- If you are black in the USA, you are four times as likely to be
- arrested on drug charges as a white person.
-
- If you live in Minneapolis, youa re 22 times as likely.
-
- In Columbus, Ohio, 18 times; in Seattle, 13 times.
-
- Although law enforcement officials say black and whites use drugs
- at nearly the same rate, a USA TODAY computer analysis of 1991
- drug arrests found that the war on drugs has, in many places,
- been fought mainly against blacks.
-
- In every part of the country -- from densely packed urban
- neighborhoods to sprawling new suburbs, amid racial turmoil and
- racial calm -- blacks are arrested at rates sometimes wildly
- disproportionate to those of whites.
-
- At the same time, cr4itics charge, the decade-old war against
- drugs -- the largest and costliest mobilization against crime in
- U.S. history -- routinely has not paid as much attention to drug
- use and dealing where it happens most: among whites.
-
- "It's just astonishing," says Allen Webster, president of the
- National bar Association, the USA's largest black legal group.
- "Basically, it's a war against minorities."
-
- "it just shows how deep racism is institutionalized in American
- criminal justice," says Jesse Jackson, Washington D.C.'s shadow
- senator, upon seeing USA TODAY'S analysis.
-
- "It's racist, that's the bottom line," says Rep. Charles Rangel
- D-NY, head of the House narcotics abuse caucus.
-
- ..........................
-
- Lee Brown, new director of the White House Office of National
- Drug Control Policy, says it is time for a change in drug control
- policy -- an issue that will be taken up by Congress this fall.
- He wants the focus to shift more to treatment and prevention.
- ..........................
-
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