Pubdate: Mon, 02 Jul 2001 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: John Chase DRIVING UP THE PRICE OF DRUGS (AGAIN) Re the June 26 article In Dade, Ashcroft touts river cocaine seizures: John Ashcroft is not the first U.S. attorney general to brag about driving up the price of illegal drugs in Miami. In 1928 the then assistant U.S. attorney general, whose job was to enforce Prohibition, bragged how she had blockaded Rum Row -- the Florida and New Jersey coasts -- and caused the Miami price of a case of good liquor to climb to $125 from $35. She was Mabel Walker Willebrandt, writing in her 1929 book The Inside of Prohibition. The title of Chapter 17 is ``Routing Rum Row.'' Her blockade made bootleggers so desperate to meet demand that they adulterated good liquor with wood alcohol and other solvents, thus triggering an epidemic of blindings, paralysis and death from adulterated liquor. This, in turn, eroded public support for Prohibition and contributed to its demise four years later. Interdicting any popular drug makes it more dangerous. The higher price drives off casual users, who are no problem anyhow, and motivates abusers to commit property crimes to get their fix at the higher price, even if it means using a drug of unknown composition. Ashcroft should tell us what is different about drug interdiction now that will make it succeed when the last time it was tried, in 1928, it failed. JOHN CHASE Palm Harbor - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart