PERSPECTiVE ON DRUGS
How Legalization Would Cut Crime

The no-win 'drug war' keeps driving up the price.
Users commit crimes to cover the cost.
The public is the loser.
By STEVEN B. DUKE

In her assertion that legalizing drugs would markedly reduce
crime, Dr. Joycelyn Elders was clearly correct. Given the
enormity of the nation's crime problem, her suggestion that
legalization should be "studied" was also plainly right. In
asserting that the matter should not even be thought about, the
Administration behaved like religious rulers decrying heresy.
What should be embarrassing to an Administration elected on a
promise of "change" is not what its surgeon general said, but her
White House colleagues' contemptuous dismissal of what she said.

That drug prohibition is responsible for much of the crime in
this country is beyond dispute. In terms of crime rates, the most
serious mistake America ever made was to limit its repeal of
Prohibition to a single drug -- alcohol, the only drug that
commonly triggers violent propensities in its users.  Had we
fully repealed drug prohibition in 1933, our crime rates today
would be no more than half what they now are.

Property crime rates have tripled and violent crime rates have
doubled since President Richard M. Nixon created the Drug
Enforcement Agency in 1973 and declared an "all-out global war"
to end the "drug menace." The connection is not coincidental.

The more effective are law-enforcement efforts against drug
distribution, the more costly the drugs become to their
consumers.  After a generation of escalating drug war efforts,
the costs of marijuana, cocaine and heroin are about 100 times
what they would be in a free market.  The inevitable effect of
jacking up the cost of drugs is the commission of crime by drug
users to obtain money to buy drugs.

In a recent survey of persons in prison for robbery or burglary,
one out of three said that they committed their crimes in order
to buy drugs. In a survey of adolescents, those who admitted
using cocaine, 1.3%, accounted for 49% of the admitted crimes. In
several studies of prisoners, 65% to 80% have admitted regular or
lifetime illicit drug use. About 75% of our robberies, thefts,
burglaries and related assaults are committed by drug abusers.
Numerous studies show that drug users commit far fewer crimes
when undergoing outpatient drug therapy or even when the price of
drugs drops.

Creating incentives to steal and rob to buy drugs is not the only
crime-inducing effect of prohibition, perhaps not even the main
one.  Murder and assault are employed to protect or acquire
drug-selling turf, to settle disputes among drug merchants and
their customers, to steal drugs or drug money from dealers.  In
major cities, at least one-fourth of the killings are systemic to
the drug trade.  The victims of internecine drug warfare are
often innocent bystanders, even infants and school-children.

Drug prohibition also accounts for much of the proliferation of
handguns.  Drug dealers must enforce their own contracts and
provide their own protection from predators, even "mules" who
deliver drugs need weapons.  Packing a gun, like fancy clothing
or gold jewelry, has become a status symbol among many
adolescents. In such an atmosphere, other youngsters carry guns
for--they hope--protection. A decade ago, only 15% of teenagers
who got into serious trouble in New York City were carrying guns,
now the rate is 60%-65%.

The drug trade and the crime and violence attached to it take
place mainly in our cities, rendering whole neighborhoods unfit
for human habitation.  As the rot spreads, even more crime is
generated by the climate of disorder and ennui it produces.

Drug prohibition also fosters crime by producing official
corruption.  The news media are full of accounts of cops caught
stealing money or drugs from dealers or simply taking money to
look the other way.  Even judges and prosecutors are sometimes
implicated.  Such pervasive corruption denigrates and demoralizes
all law enforcers and causes disrespect for law among citizens.

The distractive effects of the drug war on law enforcement
indirectly but profoundly encourage crime.  In many cities, half
or more of arrests are for drugs or related crimes, expending
police resources and energy that might otherwise be available for
domestic violence, fraud and other serious offenses.  As a
consequence, all criminals have a much better chance of escaping
detection and punishment than if drugs were legal.

The drug war also deeply undercuts the role of incarceration in
dealing with people convicted of such serious crimes as child
molesting, rape, kidnaping and homicide.  There is no room in our
prisons: 40 states are under court orders for overcrowding.
Funds are not available to build prisons fast enough to provide
the needed space.  Violent criminals are being paroled early or
are having their sentences chopped to make space for drug users
and dealers.

The drug war (excluding treatment and preventive education
expenditures) costs about $9 billion at the federal level and
about twice that on the state and local levels. These estimates
do not count the law-enforcement cost chargeable to crimes that
are prohibition-caused but not technically drug-related --
probably another $15 billion at all levels of government.  Thus,
law-enforcement costs attributable to the drug war are at least
$40 billion per year.  The losses to crime victims in property
alone (not counting lives lost or bodies maimed) are probably
another $10 billion. In addition, the drug war imposes a premium
of at least $50 billion on the price of drugs and the cost to
drug consumers.  The total annual costs of the drug war,
therefore, are about $100 billion.  If drugs were legalized, most
of this money could be spent on long-term crime prevention.

Legalizing drugs would not be cost free.  We could expect
somewhat more use of presently illicit drugs and, all other
things remaining the same, more drug abuse.  But things would not
remain the same.  Vast sums would be freed for prevention and
treatment of drug abuse and for reducing its root causes.  Among
the many other benefits of legalization would be the reduction of
AIDS and other diseases transmitted by drug abusers, less risk of
drug overdose or poisoning, better prenatal care for pregnant
women with drug problems and restoration of our civil liberties,
to name a few.

How the law should treat the distribution and consumption of
psychoactive drugs is an issue on which reasonable people can
differ.  There is, however, no room to doubt that legalizing such
drugs would greatly reduce our crime rates.  Everyone familiar
with the crime problem knows that no bill pending in Congress and
no other anti-crime measure proposed by anyone has the slightest
chance of substantially reducing the ravages of crime.

A society that regards crime as one of its greatest problems yet
allows its leaders to refuse to consider the only known solution,
deserves the leaders -- and crime -- it gets.

************************************

Steven B. Duke is a Yale law professor and the co-author, with
Albert C. Cross, of "America's Longest War. Rethinking Our Tragic
Crusade Against Drugs" to be published by Jeremy P. Tarch/Putnam.

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