Pubdate: Thu, 01 Aug 2002 Source: Greenwich Time (CT) Copyright: 2002, Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.greenwichtime.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/697 Author: Robert Sharpe Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n1390/a04.html DRUGS AND PRISON Drug courts are definitely a step in the right direction (Advocate editorial, July 25), but an arrest should not be a necessary prerequisite for drug treatment. Would alcoholics seek help for their illness if doing so were tantamount to confessing to criminal activity? Likewise, would putting every incorrigible alcoholic behind bars and saddling them with criminal records prove cost-effective? The United States recently earned the dubious distinction of having the highest incarceration rate in the world, with drug offenses accounting for the majority of federal incarcerations. This is big government at its worst. At an average cost of $25,071 per inmate annually, maintaining the world's largest prison system can hardly be considered fiscally conservative. The threat of prison that coerced treatment relies upon can backfire when it's actually put to use. Prisons transmit violent habits and values rather than reduce them. Minor drug offenders are eventually released, with dismal job prospects resulting from criminal records. Turning users of politically incorrect drugs into unemployable ex-cons is a senseless waste of tax dollars. Alcohol and tobacco are by far the deadliest recreational drugs, yet the government does not go out of its way to destroy the lives of drinkers and smokers. Imagine if every alcoholic were thrown in jail and given a permanent criminal record. How many lives would be destroyed? How many families torn apart? How many tax dollars would be wasted turning potentially productive members of society into hardened criminals? Robert Sharpe Washington, D.C. Via e-mail The writer is a program officer with the Drug Policy Alliance, a drug policy reform organization. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh