Pubdate: Sun, 09 Aug 1998
Source: Washington Post 
Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm 
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ 
Author: Stanton Peele

A DRUG-USERS' ADVOCATE

In the debate between Terry Hensley, executive director of the Drug Free
America Foundation [Free for All, July 25], and David Lewis and June Osborn,
who argued for replacing prison for drug users with treatment [op-ed, July
20], Mr. Hensley says that, for the most part, only heavy drug dealers go to
prison.

I work as a public defender in Morris County, an affluent suburb in New
Jersey. All my clients are drug users. I leave messages for my clients at
church drop-in centers because they don't have regular homes.

As I negotiate their fates, the prosecutor screams at me: "Stanton, every
one of your clients is, according to you, some kind of victim."

I answer: "Why don't you get me some of the drug dealers with money? My
clients are all people who are out there doing what they can -- prostituting
themselves, carrying drugs -- simply to get a share to use."

Maybe I'm missing something, but looking over the daily stream of drug
offenders I encounter, I don't think any of them has seen the 5.5 pounds of
heroin (not to mention 3.5 tons of marijuana and 180 pounds of cocaine)
that, according to Mr. Hensley, the Justice Department says are the average
charged amounts for those in federal prison.

At the same time, Mr. Lewis and Ms. Osborn are wrong to fantasize that these
street people are susceptible to ordinary treatment -- one's life has to be
organized to benefit from a treatment opportunity. But taking up my time, as
well as the prosecutor's and the court's, parading the same pathetic lot of
people through the criminal system is something Kafka could not exaggerate.

STANTON PEELE

Morristown, N.J.

Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company

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