More and more ordinary people, elected
officials, newspaper columnists, economists, doctors, judges and even
the Surgeon General of the United States are concluding that the effects
of our drug control policy are at least as harmful as the effects of
drugs themselves.
After decades of criminal prohibition
and intensive law enforcement efforts to rid the country of illegal
drugs, violent traffickers still endanger life in our cities, a steady
stream of drug offenders still pours into our jails and prisons, and
tons of cocaine, heroin and marijuana still cross our borders unimpeded.
The American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) opposes criminal prohibition of drugs. Not only is prohibition a
proven failure as a drug control strategy, but it subjects otherwise
law-abiding citizens to arrest, prosecution and imprisonment for what
they do in private. In trying to enforce the drug laws, the government
violates the fundamental rights of privacy and personal autonomy that
are guaranteed by our Constitution. The ACLU believes that unless they
do harm to others, people should not be punished -- even if they do harm
to themselves. There are better ways to control drug use, ways that will
ultimately lead to a healthier, freer and less crime-ridden society.
Currently Illegal Drugs Have Not Always
Been Illegal

During the Civil War, morphine (an opium
derivative and cousin of heroin) was found to have pain-killing
properties and soon became the main ingredient in several patent
medicines. In the late 19th century, marijuana and cocaine were put to
various medicinal uses -- marijuana to treat migraines, rheumatism and
insomnia, and cocaine to treat sinusitis, hay fever and chronic fatigue.
All of these drugs were also used recreationally, and cocaine, in
particular, was a common incredient in wines and soda pop -- including
the popular Coca Cola.
At the turn of the century, many drugs
were made illegal when a mood of temperance swept the nation. In 1914,
Congress passed the Harrison Act, banning opiates and cocaine. Alcohol
prohibition quickly followed, and by 1918 the U.S. was officially a
"dry" nation. That did not mean, however, an end to drug use.
It meant that, suddenly, people were arrested and jailed for doing what
they had previously done without government interference. Prohibition
also meant the emergence of a black market, operated by criminals and
marked by violence.
In 1933, because of concern over
widespread organized crime, police corruption and violence, the public
demanded repeal of alcohol prohibition and the return of regulatory
power to the states. Most states immediately replaced criminal bans with
laws regulating the quality, potency and commercial sale of alcohol; as
a result, the harms associated with alcohol prohibition disappeared.
Meanwhile, federal prohibition of heroin and cocaine remained, and with
passage of the Marijuana Stamp Act in 1937 marijuana was prohibited as
well. Federal drug policy has remained strictly prohibitionist to this
day.
Decades of Drug Prohibition: A History
of Failure
Criminal prohibition, the centerpiece of
U.S. drug policy, has failed miserably. Since 1981, tax dollars to the
tune of $150 billion have been spent trying to prevent Columbian
cocaine, Burmese heroin and Jamaican marijuana from penetrating our
borders. Yet the evidence is that for every ton seized, hundreds more
get through. Hundreds of thousands of otherwise law abiding people have
been arrested and jailed for drug possession. Between 1968 and 1992, the
annual number of drug-related arrests increased from 200,000 to over 1.2
million. One-third of those were marijuana arrests, most for mere
possession.
The best evidence of prohibition's
failure is the government's current war on drugs. This war, instead of
employing a strategy of prevention, research, education and social
programs designed to address problems such as permanent poverty, long
term unemployment and deteriorating living conditions in our inner
cities, has employed a strategy of law enforcement. While this military
approach continues to devour billions of tax dollars and sends tens of
thousands of people to prison, illegal drug trafficking thrives,
violence escalates and drug abuse continues to debilitate lives.
Compounding these problems is the largely unchecked spread of the AIDS
virus among drug-users, their sexual partners and their offspring.
Those who benefit the most from
prohibition are organized crime barons, who derive an estimated $10 to
$50 billion a year from the illegal drug trade. Indeed, the criminal
drug laws protect drug traffickers from taxation, regulation and quality
control. Those laws also support artificially high prices and assure
that commercial disputes among drug dealers and their customers will be
settled not in courts of law, but with automatic weapons in the streets.
Drug Prohibition is a Public Health
Menace
Drug prohibition promises a healthier
society by denying people the opportunity to become drug users and,
possibly, addicts. The reality of prohibition belies that promise.
No quality control. When
drugs are illegal, the government cannot enact standards of quality,
purity or potency. Consequently, street drugs are often contaminated or
extremely potent, causing disease and sometimes death to those who use
them.
Dirty needles. Unsterilized
needles are known to transmit HIV among intravenous drug users. Yet drug
users share needles because laws prohibiting possession of drug
paraphernalia have made needles a scarce commodity. These laws, then,
actually promote epidemic disease and death. In New York City, more than
60 percent of intravenous drug users are HIV positive. By contrast, the
figure is less than one percent in Liverpool, England, where clean
needles are easily available.
Scarce treatment resources. The
allocation of vast sums of money to law enforcement diminishes the funds
available for drug education, preventive social programs and treatment.
As crack use rose during the late 1980s, millions of dollars were spent
on street-level drug enforcement and on jailing tens of thousands of low
level offenders, while only a handful of public drug treatment slots
were created. An especially needy group -- low-income pregnant women who
abused crack -- often had no place to go at all because Medicaid would
not reimburse providers. Instead, the government prosecuted and jailed
such women without regard to the negative consequences for their
children.
Drug Prohibition Creates More Problems
Than It Solves
Drug prohibition has not only failed to
curb or reduce the harmful effects of drug use, it has created other
serious social problems.
Caught in the crossfire. In
the same way that alcohol prohibition fueled violent gangsterism in the
1920s, today's drug prohibition has spawned a culture of drive-by
shootings and other gun-related crimes. And just as most of the 1920s
violence was not committed by people who were drunk, most of the
drug-related violence today is not committed by people who are high on
drugs. The killings, then and now, are based on rivalries: Al Capone
ordered the executions of rival bootleggers, and drug dealers kill their
rivals today. A 1989 government study of all 193
"cocaine-related" homicides in New York City found that 87
percent grew out of rivalries and disagreements related to doing
business in an illegal market. In only one case was the perpetrator
actually under the influence of cocaine.
A Nation of Jailers. The
"lock 'em up" mentality of the war on drugs has burdened our
criminal justice system to the breaking point. Today, drug-law
enforcement consumes more than half of all police resources nationwide,
resources that could be better spent fighting violent crimes like rape,
assault and robbery.
The recent steep climb in our
incarceration rate has made the U.S. the world's leading jailer, with a
prison population that now exceeds one million people, compared to
approximately 200,000 in 1970. Nonviolent drug offenders make up 58
percent of the federal prison population, a population that is extremely
costly to maintain. In 1990, the states alone paid $12 billion, or
$16,000 per prisoner. While drug imprisonments are a leading cause of
rising local tax burdens, they have neither stopped the sale and use of
drugs nor enhanced public safety.
Not Drug Free -- Just Less Free. We
now have what some constitutional scholars call "the drug exception
to the Bill of Rights." Random drug testing without probable cause,
the militarization of drug law enforcement, heightened wiretapping and
other surveillance, the enactment of vaguely worded loitering laws and
curfews, forfeiture of people's homes and assets, excessive and
mandatory prison terms -- these practices and more have eroded the
constitutional rights of all Americans.
Prohibition Is A Destructive Force In
Inner City Communities
Inner city communities suffer most from
both the problem of drug abuse and the consequences of drug prohibition.
Although the rates of drug use among
white and non-white Americans are similar, African Americans and other
racial minorities are arrested and imprisoned at higher rates. For
example, according to government estimates only 12 percent of drug users
are black, but nearly 40 percent of those arrested for drug offenses are
black. Nationwide, one-quarter of all young African American men are
under some form of criminal justice supervision, mostly for drug
offenses. This phenomenon has had a devastating social impact in
minority communities. Moreover, the abuse of drugs, including alcohol,
has more dire consequences in impoverished communities where good
treatment programs are least available.
Finally, turf battles and commercial
disputes among competing drug enterprises, as well as police responses
to those conflicts, occur disproportionately in poor communities, making
our inner cities war zones and their residents the war's primary
casualties.
Drugs Are Here to Stay -- Let's Reduce
Their Harm
The universality of drug use throughout
human history has led some experts to conclude that the desire to alter
consciousness, for whatever reasons, is a basic human drive. People in
almost all cultures, in every era, have used psychoactive drugs. Native
South Americans take coca-breaks the way we, in this country, take
coffee-breaks. Native North Americans use peyote and tobacco in their
religious ceremonies the way Europeans use wine. Alcohol is the drug of
choice in Europe, the U.S. and Canada, while many Muslim countries
tolerate the use of opium and marijuana.
A "drug free America" is not a
realistic goal, and by criminally banning psychoactive drugs the
government has ceded all control of potentially dangerous substances to
criminals. Instead of trying to stamp out all drug use, our government
should focus on reducing drug abuse and prohibition-generated crime.
This requires a fundamental change in public policy: repeal of criminal
prohibition and the creation of a reasonable regulatory system.
Ending Prohibition Would Not
Necessarily Increase Drug Abuse
While it is impossible to predict
exactly how drug use patterns would change under a system of regulated
manufacture and distribution, the iron rules of prohibition are that 1)
illegal markets are controlled by producers, not consumers, and 2)
prohibition fosters the sale and consumption of more potent and
dangerous forms of drugs.
During alcohol prohibition in the 1920s,
bootleggers marketed small bottles of 100-plus proof liquor because they
were easier to conceal than were large, unwieldy kegs of beer. The
result: Consumption of beer and wine went down while consumption of hard
hard liquor went up. Similarly, contemporary drug smugglers' preference
for powdered cocaine over bulky, pungent coca leaves encourages use of
the most potent and dangerous cocaine products. In contrast, under legal
conditions, consumers -- most of whom do not wish to harm themselves --
play a role in determining the potency of marketed products, as
indicated by the popularity of today's light beers, wine coolers and
decaffeinated coffees.Once alcohol prohibition was repealed, consumption
increased somewhat, but the rate of liver cirrhosis went down because
people tended to choose beer and wine over the more potent, distilled
spirits previously promoted by bootleggers. So, even though the number
of drinkers went up, the health risks of drinking went down. The same
dynamic would most likely occur with drug legalization: some increase in
drug use, but a decrease in drug abuse.
Another factor to consider is the lure
of forbidden fruit. For young people, who are often attracted to taboos,
legal drugs might be less tempting than they are now. That has been the
experience of The Netherlands: After the Dutch government decriminalized
marijuana in 1976, allowing it to be sold and consumed openly in small
amounts, usage steadily declined -- particularly among teenagers and
young adults. Prior to decriminalization, 10 percent of Dutch 17- and
18-year-olds used marijuana. By 1985, that figure had dropped to 6.5
percent.
Would drugs be more available once
prohibition is repealed? It is hard to imagine drugs being more
available than they are today. Despite efforts to stem their flow, drugs
are accessible to anyone who wants them. In a recent
government-sponsored survey of high school seniors, 55 percent said it
would be "easy" for them to obtain cocaine, and 85 percent
said it would be "easy" for them to obtain marijuana. In our
inner-cities, access to drugs is especially easy, and the risk of arrest
has proven to have a negligible deterrent effect. What would change
under decriminalization is not so much drug availability as the
conditions under which drugs would be available. Without prohibition,
providing help to drug abusers who wanted to kick their habits would be
easier because the money now being squandered on law enforcement could
be used for preventive social programs and treatment.
What The United States Would Look Like
After Repeal
Some people, hearing the words
"drug legalization," imagine pushers on street corners passing
out cocaine to anyone -- even children. But that is what exists today
under prohibition. Consider the legal drugs, alcohol and tobacco: Their
potency, time and place of sale and purchasing age limits are set by
law. Similarly, warning labels are required on medicinal drugs, and some
of these are available by prescription only.
After federal alcohol prohibition was
repealed, each state developed its own system for regulating the
distribution and sale of alcoholic beverages. The same could occur with
currently illegal drugs. For example, states could create different
regulations for marijuana, heroin and cocaine.
Ending prohibition is not a panacea. It
will not by itself end drug abuse or eliminate violence. Nor will it
bring about the social and economic revitalization of our inner cities.
However, ending prohibition would bring one very significant benefit: It
would sever the connection between drugs and crime that today blights so
many lives and communities. In the long run, ending prohibition could
foster the redirection of public resources toward social development,
legitimate economic opportunities and effective treatment, thus
enhancing the safety, health and well-being of the entire society.
What You Can Do
You can help bring about drug policy
reform:
- Demand candid discussion of
alternatives to prohibition by public officials.
- Break the silence -- write letters to
your elected representatives and letters-to-the-editor of your local
newspaper.
- Support incremental harm-reduction
measures like needle exchange programs and medical marijuana
legislation.
- Use this briefing paper to raise the
consciousness of your friends and co-workers.