This Blog analyzes current drug policies and related prison realities.

About Me

The continued imprisonment of non-violent drug offenders is an important issue to take action on because the victims of this policy have lost their rights and cannot take action as a free person. These laws are hard to change because the mulitudes of people who oppose them are often trying to fly under the radar, are imprisoned, are an oppressed population, or have lost their voting rights.

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Saturday, September 26, 2009

Drug Offenses in the Bush Family


Drugs seem to be a part of the human condition, because even the Bush family partakes at times.

No, I'm not talking about W's famous coke use.


According to CNN in 2002, Noelle Bush attempted to obtain Xanax with a fake prescription and was arrested.



While in rehab, she was found to be in possession of 2 grams of cocaine according to another article. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeb_Bush


Even though this was her second drug related offense, Noelle received only 10 days in jail.


Within a five minute google search of case law I found that a man named Leon Wiley was sentenced to 10 years for possession of 1.6 grams of watered down coke, or crack--which is simply cocaine and baking soda cooked together.

http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=mo&vol=/appeals/082002/&invol=4080602_2002

LESSON: THERE IS NO CONSISTENCY OR JUSTICE IN OUR DRUG LAWS. IT'S ALL ABOUT WHO YOU ARE, WHO YOU KNOW, WHAT COLOR YOUR SKIN IS, and WHAT KIND OF LAWYER YOU CAN AFFORD

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Women in Prison for Drug Crimes


The American Civil Liberties Union put out a heartbreaking publication that depicts the current situation with women in jail for drugs:




I recommend reading this document because it is very well thought out and comprehensive. Not only does it give basic facts and figures, it also gives personal stories and describes the domino effect, or the collateral damage, when you put a woman in jail.


Can you imagine living a lifestyle where selling drugs, or living with a drug dealer, was the only was you could get by?


Or maybe you got hooked and later got caught.


I don't believe that any woman really feels proud that her life has led her to be a dealer or to be addicted to drugs.


Nor do I think that any woman wants to have her children taken from her, or to give birth in jail and have her infant taken by the state.


Unfortunately, right now there is a woman somewhere giving birth to a baby and having that baby taken away by strangers.


There is a woman somewhere who was transferred to a different state to go to prison and hasn't seen her own children in years.


There is even a woman being raped in prison, with no one to believe her or care.


Many of these women are in prison because of their affiliation with men who committed crimes, but were not themselves profitting from drug sales.


Main points of the article:


*1997 incarceration cost:$26,000 per year

(or at least $52,000 per year for a woman with children in foster care)

*1997 cost of drug treatment: $6,800 residential per year


26K for a pointless excercise in punishment or 6.8K for real treatment? Hmmmm.

Do you want to pay for that? I can think of better ways to spend that 19.2K!!! How about child care, grants for college, or treatment for victims of domestic violence?



*2003: 58% of women in federal prisons were non-violent drug offenders


Drugs are definitely the main cause of women being behind bars.



"Researchers
consistently have found high levels of past
and current physical and emotional abuse in
the lives of women drug abusers."


Women are abused and turned to drugs, and then go to prison to have the message that they are worthless further pounded into their heads.


Women have barriers to seeking drug treatment:


"First, many would be forced to leave their children in the care of relatives or friends. Second, obtaining treatment requires them to disclose their drug use..."


By doing either one of the above, a woman risks the custody of her children.


WOMEN OF COLOR ARE DISPROPORTIONATELY REPRESENTED IN PRISON!


One glaring example: In New York, women of color make up about a third of the general population. However, only 10 percent of the women in jail are white!




At least 65% of women in prison have a child.


Isn't the damage done to the child more criminal than the crime done by the mother???

PLEASE GO TO THE ARTICLE TO READ MORE!







Friday, September 11, 2009

NY Times and WA Post

According to articles by the NY Times and the Washington Post in 2008, America imprisons more people than any other country.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/23/world/americas/23iht-23prison.12253738.html



http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/02/28/ST2008022803016.html



We had 2.3 million people imprisoned at the time these articles were written.

This number consitutes a fourth of the world's prison population!



Other interesting statistics cited:



*One in 9 black men are in jail between the ages of 20 to 34.

*751 for every 100,000 Americans (all ages) are incarcerated versus 151 in 100,000 for England.

*Prisoners cost citizens $55 billion a year... what is that?
55,000,000,000 divided by 300,000,000 is about $183 that every man woman and child in the US pays to keep people in prison. That doesn't include parole or probation or policing efforts or the impact of lost workers in the community.



The Bureau of Justice Statistics website is a great place to find reports regarding prison rates.

"Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2002" can be found online at: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/pjim02.htm