The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #118 - Dec. 10, 1999
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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================

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1.  INTERVIEW:  Lynn Curtis, President, Eisenhower
    Foundation
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#eisenhowerinterview

2.  Republican Congressman, Senate Candidate Calls for Drug
    Maintenance Programs
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#tomcampbell

3.  Protesters Take Over Office of NYC Secretary of Human
    Resources
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#nycprotest

4.  FDA-Approved Medical Marijuana Research Blocked Under
    New Federal Guidelines
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#researchblocked

5.  Study Finds Poverty More Harmful to Children than Pre-
    Natal Exposure to Cocaine
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#prenatalexposure

6.  Newsbriefs
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#newsbriefs

7.  Rebroadcast of Snitch Next Week
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#snitch

8.  New Issue of Harm Reduction Communication Available
    Online
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#hrcnews

9.  Deadline Extended for Year 2000 Drug Policy Foundation
    Achievement Awards
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#awards2000

10. EDITORIAL:  A Typical Week in the Drug War
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#editorial

================

1. INTERVIEW:  Lynn Curtis, President, Eisenhower Foundation
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#eisenhowerinterview

Lynn Curtis was a graduate student, working on his Ph.D. in
criminal justice at the University of Pennsylvania, when he
was chosen to work on the bipartisan President's National
Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence in 1969,
just months after the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy
and Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.  The report, the product of
tens of thousands of hours of work by an esteemed panel of
experts from a broad range of philosophical and professional
disciplines, concluded that "The greatness and durability of
most civilizations has been finally determined by how they
have responded to challenges from within.  Ours will be no
exception."

Thirty years after that historic effort, Mr. Curtis is
President of the Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation, the
private sector offspring of that original commission.  Last
week, the foundation released "A Thirty Year Update of the
National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of
Violence."  The report, entitled, "To Establish Justice, To
Insure Domestic Tranquility," reaches back three decades to
the findings of the original report, especially to the
warnings contained therein, and finds that in 1999, our
public policies have, to a large degree, ignored the wisdom
of the original findings.

Read about the report's findings in last week's issue at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/117.html#eisenhowerfoundation>.
The report can be obtained by calling (202) 429-0440, or
writing to The Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation, 1660 L St.,
NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20036.

This week, The Week Online spoke with Dr. Curtis.

WOL: What does the Eisenhower Foundation do?

LC:  In the early 1980's, we were able to reconvene a good
number of the commissioners and staff of the original Kerner
Commission and the original Violence commission and we
reconvened them in the private sector.  The mission is to
focus on the agenda of those commissions, to make grants to
inner-city, non-profit organizations that do everything from
crime and drug prevention to youth development to
educational reform to economic development and jobs.  We
demonstrate new programs, we replicate success, we evaluate
that.  We also give technical assistance to enhance the
capacity of inner-city groups, we do a lot of reports to
communicate what works and to criticize policies that don't.

WOL:  The Office of National Drug Control Policy keeps
saying that we can't arrest our way out of the drug problem,
and yet they oversee a budget that is heavily weighted
toward law enforcement and a policy that is the primary
engine in the growth of the prison-industrial complex.

LC:  Our report quotes the drug czar saying that the drug
war has failed.  We don't try to take on the mission of
ONDCP, or to engage any agency directly.  We do address
drugs by talking about the racial bias in drug sentencing
and we talk about the fact that 70% of the drug war budget
being enforcement and 30% being treatment and prevention.
We point out that in many European countries those numbers
are basically reversed, and that we might well benefit from
a realignment of that balance.

WOL:  The report talks about states spending more on prisons
than on higher education.  Can you tell us what has brought
that on, is there political consensus behind that trend, and
what will need to happen to turn that around?

LC:  Well, it is a fact that the states collectively spend
more on prisons than on higher education, and we relate that
fact to a 25% child poverty rate and that we're the only
superpower in the world and the fact that one in every three
young African American men are under criminal justice
supervision.  This is the litany of inequality, and we are
saying that these are not wise investments based on what we
know to work, and that these need to be turned around.  We
give a number of examples in the report of prevention
programs up-front that are simultaneously crime and drug
prevention programs and also develop youth, keep them in
school and better employ them.

At the back end, there are some models like the one in
Arizona, where the citizens of that state voted twice for a
diversion.  We think that that represents good progress and
illustrates the type of policy that can be beneficial in
terms of reduced recidivism and also in terms of reduced
costs to the taxpayer.  The report also points to after
school programs, Head Start, the Ford Foundation's Quantum
Opportunity Program, YouthBuild USA, the San Francisco
Delancey Street model for the reintegration of ex-offenders
and others.  These are successful programs that need to be
replicated to the scale of the problems they address at a
national level.

Is it political?  Sure.  Politicians are emphasizing prison
building and "zero tolerance," which the report states are
clearly oversold as successful, at the expense of the
consideration of other factors [for recently reduced violent
crime rates] such as the booming economy.  In the long run,
though, we are still way, way out of line with the rest of
the developed world in terms of violence, crime and
imprisonment.

WOL:  The report talks a lot about the fact that we know
what works.  How will it convince the public that we know
what works and that the investment that the report advocates
will be worthwhile?

LC:  I look back to the 1992 riot in South Central Los
Angeles after the first Rodney King verdict.  There was a
New York Times/CBS poll taken and they asked a national
sample, "are you prepared to do more about the problems in
the inner-city, especially when it comes to education and
employment?"  The majority said yes.  The next question
asked what the major obstacle to doing more, and the
majority responded "lack of knowledge."  So there's a real
sense out there that we don't know what works.

Part of that has to do with the success of the constituency
that believes in tax breaks for the rich and prison building
for the poor in getting their message out.  There is a level
of sophistication there in terms of their financing and the
elaborateness of their communications structure.  Part of it
has to do with the media, which, as you know, is controlled
by eight large corporations, and they have their interests.
But most people today get their information from the half-
hour local newscasts, and there, there is a propensity to
cover crime and violence, which is inexpensive and gets
ratings.  This tends to lead to a mindset among the public
that nothing works.

WOL:  So, having said that, is there hope?

LC:  Again, I go back to what we found in the report, and
that is, we do in fact know what works.  And I think that
there has been a realization, very recently, by progressive
foundations, that the non-profit sector, which had lost a
lot of its momentum during the eighties, is beginning to be
rejuvenated.  There does seem to be a stirring of people and
institutions toward more organizing and advocacy on some of
these issues.  We are still, to a large degree, rolling the
boulder up the hill.  But yes, I am hopeful.

================

2. Republican Congressman, Senate Candidate Calls for Drug
   Maintenance Programs
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#tomcampbell

U.S. Representative Tom Campbell (R-CA), the Republican
frontrunner in the U.S. Senate race in California, made
headlines this week when he told reporters from the Contra
Costa Times that state and local governments should be
allowed to set up programs to distribute drugs to addicts.
"Why not take those people who are already addicted and give
them the drug to which they are addicted at a government
distribution center?" Campbell asked.

The story received top billing in the local papers, but
Campbell's campaign spokesman, Suhail Khan, said the idea
was not a new one for the Congressman.  "Representative
Campbell has been looking at what's happened in Europe for
the past couple of years," Khan told The Week Online.  "He
feels like it's time to take a new look at drug policy at
home, and that some of those programs could be tried here."

Campbell sees promise in programs like the Swiss heroin
prescription experiment, which provided more than 1,000
long-term heroin addicts with inexpensive, pharmaceutical
grade heroin in a clinical setting along with counseling and
other services over a three year period.  Studies of that
program indicated significant decreases in crime, disease,
homelessness and unemployment among participants.

Khan said Campbell thinks the results could be as successful
here.  "Drug treatment should be a priority," he said.  "But
for a small population who can't stop, drug maintenance may
be a better option.  It would reduce the spread of diseases
like AIDS, as well as health problems associated with
tainted street drugs.  And it would reduce crime, because
addicts wouldn't have to steal to get their drugs."

Just as importantly, Khan said, the distribution of drugs to
addicts would disrupt the supply side of the black market,
putting an end to violent turf battles.  And lest anyone
think Campbell is soft on crime, Khan added, he has been
known to say he favors the death penalty for people who sell
drugs to children.

Just a few years ago, any U.S. politician who dared to
question the status quo on drug policy was risking political
suicide, but Khan said he thinks the climate is beginning to
change.  "My gut reaction from the responses we've been
getting from people and from recent press coverage on this
is very positive," he said.  "The bottom line, we're
hearing, is that people know we need a change.  They know
'just say no' isn't working."

And what has been the response within the Republican Party?
"Mixed," Khan said.  "There are some that have a more
traditional conservative approach, but others are more
willing to take a look.  The recent needle exchange vote in
Congress was the first vote we've seen in this regard, where
more Republicans came down on the side of needle exchange."

Khan said he does not expect drug reform to be a major focus
of Campbell's Senate campaign.  "It won't be a particular
focus, but overall, this is something that's important to
him," he said.  Campbell has cosponsored medical marijuana
and civil forfeiture reform bills in Congress, and has been
a staunch supporter of needle exchange.

Campbell faces his Republican rivals in a primary in March
and, if he is nominated, will go up against incumbent
Democratic Senator Diane Feinstein in November, 2000.

The Lindesmith Center provides a collection of scholarly and
popular articles about drug maintenance online at
<http://www.lindesmith.org/library/focal11.html>.

Rep. Campbell's Senate campaign web site provides extensive
information about the Congressman's views on a variety of
topics, and includes a "Town Hall" forum for constituents to
e-mail him with questions and comments.  Visit the Campbell
campaign online at <http://www.campbell.org>.

================

3. Protesters Take Over Office of NYC Secretary of Human
   Resources
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#nycprotest

Angrily denouncing a city policy that would drug test all
welfare recipients and deny benefits to anyone who fails,
protesters chained themselves to furniture in the office of
NYC Human Resources Director Jason Turner this week.  The
protesters, members of the AIDS services and advocacy group
Housing Works, Act Up of New York and the Urban Justice
Center, arrived at the downtown office in groups of two and
three, rode to the 25th floor and began their occupation.

The theme of the protest was "Stop Criminalizing Poverty and
Addiction," and a list of ten demands was presented to
Turner.

The protesters contend that the policy represents an
unnecessary intrusion, especially for those recipients
already in treatment.  Studies indicate that relapse, even
multiple times, is normal during the course of drug
treatment.  Stripping aid to those who are in the process of
getting clean is likely to drive the individual back to
problematic drug use, protesters said.

Keith Cylar, co-executive director of Housing Works, a New
York-based AIDS services and harm reduction agency, told The
Week Online that the proposed policy would prove harmful to
those recipients attempting to put their lives back in
order.

"The city of New York, under Mayor Giuliani, has pursued a
policy of expansive criminalization of the poor and the
vulnerable.  This proposed policy flies in the face of
everything that the medical community knows about addiction
and recovery.  Many people who are receiving assistance are
either in treatment or are receiving harm-reduction services
with an eye toward eliminating the problematic use of
substances.  But nowhere, under no program known to
medicine, do people with substance abuse problems simply
stop using, immediately and permanently.

"To tie people's health benefits, access to their treatment
programs and food and shelter assistance to the results of
random drug tests is not only unscientific, it's inhuman.
This policy will undoubtedly mean more people put out on the
street, more people reverting back to problematic substance
abuse and, quite frankly, more people dying.  We went to the
Department of Human Resources this week to let them know
that we are not going to stand idly by while they put our
people at risk for political gain."

Among the protesters' demands are that the city of New York
rescind the clinical practice guidelines and leave treatment
decisions to treatment professionals, reopen the working
group on substance abuse and workfare, recognize recovery as
a process and stop punishing relapse with sanctions, stop
forcing welfare recipients to waive their medical privacy
rights, and recognize harm reduction as a viable and valid
treatment modality.

Housing Works can be found on the world wide web at
<http://www.housingworks.org>.

================

4. FDA-Approved Medical Marijuana Research Blocked Under New
   Federal Guidelines
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#researchblocked

On December 6, the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) prevented a privately funded, FDA-approved
medical marijuana study from taking place by refusing to
allow the researcher to purchase marijuana from a legal
source.

HHS's rejection of Dr. Ethan Russo's request to purchase
marijuana from the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA)
came just five days after HHS implemented its new medical
marijuana research guidelines amidst widespread criticism
that the guidelines are still "too cumbersome."

Last week, a coalition of doctors, patients, medical groups,
members of Congress, and other concerned citizens delivered
a statement to HHS Secretary Donna Shalala, arguing that
"many of the new guidelines would still be too cumbersome to
enable research to move forward as expeditiously as
possible."

The statement was signed by Susan Sarandon, Richard Pryor,
scientist Stephen Jay Gould, Ph.D., former Surgeon General
Joycelyn Elders, National Review senior editor Richard
Brookhiser, AIDS Action Council, New York State Nurses
Association, National Black Police Association, Reagan
administration official Lyn Nofziger, and hundreds of other
patients, doctors, medical organizations, and concerned
citizens.  (The statement and a critique of HHS' guidelines
are online at <http://www.mpp.org/guidelines>.

Secretary Shalala responded to the statement last Tuesday on
C-SPAN's Washington Journal, vowing to "defend" the
guidelines, claiming that they enable "the kind of rigorous
research that everybody else is required to do on drugs...
We need to do what we do for every drug."

Chuck Thomas, director of communications for the Washington,
DC-based Marijuana Policy Project, charged, "In fact, the
new federal guidelines actually place a much greater burden
on medical marijuana researchers than on drug companies that
develop and study newly synthesized pharmaceuticals.  HHS
proved our point by rejecting Dr. Russo's request to
purchase marijuana for a privately funded, FDA-approved
study.  A privately funded researcher wishing to study a
newly synthesized pharmaceutical would have been allowed to
begin the research as soon as FDA approved the study
design."

"The special HHS review panel told me, via telephone, that
they 'didn't like' my study, but they have yet to put their
concerns in writing," said Dr. Russo, a neurologist in
Missoula, Montana.  "The FDA and a local Institutional
Review Board had already approved my study design.  That's
good enough for pharmaceutical companies, so it should be
good enough in my case.  The Clinton administration has no
business micromanaging my study after FDA approved it as is.
It is to be privately funded, and I am willing to purchase
the marijuana from the federal government, so there is no
financial justification for requiring extra reviews.  They
apparently do not want to risk that clinical research will
allow the FDA to approve natural marijuana as a prescription
medicine."

================

5. Study Finds Poverty More Harmful to Children than Pre-
   Natal Exposure to Cocaine
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#prenatalexposure

A report in the December issue of the Journal of
Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics concludes that the
negative effects of poverty far outweigh the effects of
fetal exposure to cocaine in terms of childhood development.
The report follows a study of more than two hundred children
from birth through four-and-a-half years, half of whose
mothers had been frequent users of cocaine during pregnancy,
and all of whom came from low-income families.

"The findings are overwhelming and persistent -- there may
be a drug effect, but it's totally overshadowed by poverty,"
Dr. Hallam Hurt, the chairman of the division of neonatology
at the Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia and
the study's lead author, told a Reuters reporter.

The study found that all of the children tested below the
norm, based on studies of mixed-income children, but that
the cocaine-exposed children's scores were not significantly
different from those of the others.

"A decade ago, the cocaine-exposed child was stereotyped as
being neurologically crippled -- trembling in a corner and
irreparably damaged. But this is unequivocally not the case.
And furthermore, the inner-city child who has had no drug
exposure at all is doing no better than the child labeled a
'crack-baby,'" Hurt said.

This is not news to many who have worked on the front lines
in poverty-stricken communities, according to Lynn Paltrow,
the program director of National Advocates for Pregnant
Women and an attorney who has defended women against "crack
mother" laws that seek to imprison pregnant women and
mothers who test positive for drugs.  "For ten years, this
is exactly what I've been hearing from drug treatment
programs, like Operation PAR in Florida," she told The Week
Online.  "It's no coincidence that the alleged epidemic of
crack babies occurred after eight years of Reagan-era budget
cuts," she added.

Nevertheless, the myth of the "crack baby" has been a
persistent one.  And for that reason, Paltrow said, studies
like Hurt's are crucial.  "It's extraordinarily important to
have careful, well-constructed research to support what many
of us who are opposed to the War on Drugs -- and Women and
Children -- have long suspected," she said.

Phillip Coffin, a research associate at the Lindesmith
Center, agrees.  "This is exactly the sort of research that
should have been done years ago," he said.  "If we took the
time to compare the effects of poverty, and hunger, and
spousal abuse, and discrimination, and lack of good medical
care to the effects of prenatal drug exposure, we'd find the
former would almost always greatly outweigh the latter.
Hurt has done an extraordinary, high-quality study."

You can read Phil Coffin's research brief on "Cocaine and
Pregnancy," as well as writing by Lynn Paltrow and others on
the subject of women and drugs, on the Lindesmith Center web
site at <http://www.lindesmith.org>.

================

6. Newsbriefs
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#newsbriefs

Mass Graves Reveal Two FBI Informants

In a none-too-surprising twist, the bodies of two Mexicans
who worked as informants for the FBI were found among the
first eight bodies exhumed from mass graves in Juarez,
Mexico.  Informants, many of who are peripheral players
forced into service by law enforcement under threat of long
prison sentences, are at serious risk of discovery and
death.  Experts have long criticized U.S. drug enforcement
for its over-reliance on informants.  In January (1999) the
10th circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, en banc, overturned an
earlier ruling which would have prohibited the federal
government from exchanging money, leniency or freedom for
information (http://www.drcnet.org/wol/074.html#singleton).

Teen's Death Spurs Inquiry of Abuse at State-Run "Boot Camp"

The death of a 14 year-old girl has prompted an FBI inquiry
into the practices of state-run "boot camps" for juvenile
offenders.  The girl, who weighed over 200 pounds, was
dragged, shackled, on a nearly 3-mile run last July 21, then
left lying in the sun, untreated for more than three hours,
by staff at the South Dakota State Training School.  The
probe has given rise to a debate over the widespread
practice of sending teens, some adjudicated and some because
their parents simply turned them over to the state, to
institutions where, many say, they are physically and
emotionally abused.  South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow, a
former U.S. Marine, defended boot camps, saying, "we're
getting the booze and drugs out of their mind."

"Super Poppy" Developed in Australia

Scientists who work in Australia's legal opiate industry
have genetically designed a "super poppy" capable of
producing double the amount of opiate of normal poppies.
This report follows similar reports of "super coca" plants,
reportedly being used in Colombia by farmers.

================

7. Rebroadcast of Snitch Next Week
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#snitch

The PBS FRONTLINE documentary "Snitch" is scheduled to be
rebroadcast on public television on Tuesday, December 14 on
most public TV stations, from 10:00-11:30pm in many markets.
(Local times can vary.  Visit http://www.pbs.org/whatson/ to
look up your local PBS station and schedule.)  For further
information, including excerpts and other background on the
issue, visit the Snitch web site online at
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/snitch/>.

Eric Sterling, president of the Criminal Justice Policy
Foundation, a featured interviewee in Snitch, authored an
editorial on the mass graves in Mexico and the need for
legalization, in the Los Angeles Times this week, online at:

http://www.latimes.com/news/comment/19991206/t000111230.html

================

8. New Issue of Harm Reduction Communication Available
   Online
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#hrcnews

The latest edition of the Harm Reduction Coalition's
newsletter, Harm Reduction Communication, is now available
on the web at <http://www.harmreduction.org>.  The issue
features articles on the realities of opiate overdose, how
it happens, vital interventions, and controversial options
like Naloxone (Narcan).  It also has information on New
Jersey's needle exchange struggle, articles on housing and
alternative healing, and information for active users.

================

9. Deadline Extended for Year 2000 Drug Policy Foundation
   Achievement Awards
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#awards2000

The extended deadline for nominations for the 2000 Drug
Policy Foundation Achievement Awards is Wednesday, January
5, 2000.  The Achievement Awards have been handed out during
DPF conferences since 1988, recognizing those individuals
who have significantly contributed to reform both overall
and in the fields of citizen action, enforcement,
journalism, law, scholarship, and treatment.  Nominations
can be submitted by e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or mailed
to the DPF office at 4455 Connecticut Ave., NW, Suite B-500,
Washington, DC 20036.

================

10. EDITORIAL:  A Typical Week in the Drug War
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/118.html#editorial

David Borden, Executive Director, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

A young person in boot camp dies of abuse.  Two murder
victims at the U.S.-Mexico border are found to have been
killed for their work as informants.  An important study of
marijuana as medicine is forbidden from being performed.
It's a typical week in the drug war.

New York City welfare recipients suffering from addiction
fall victim to typical ignorance of the realities of
treatment and recovery.  Hundreds of thousands, perhaps
millions of pain patients, are left without adequate
medication, because of typical ignorance about the proper
use of narcotics for pain control and typical fear of the
medical boards and the DEA.

Thousands of injection drug users, and many others
indirectly, including newborn children, contract HIV or
hepatitis through needle sharing.  Opponents of needle
exchange express typical disregard for the loss of life --
in Judge Judy's case, a little more callously than is
typical -- and, typically, ignore the overwhelming
scientific and public health case for needle exchange and
lifting the laws that prevent users from obtaining sterile
syringes.

Tens of thousands of young people are arrested on drug
charges.  The week is not very typical -- for them -- but is
a typical week.  Hundreds of thousands of drug offenders
languish behind bars.  For most of them the week is
tragically typical, and it's a typical year in the late 20th
century United States.  Nevertheless, drugs continue to pour
over our borders, into our cities and our prisons, oblivious
to the mass arrests and incarcerations -- unstoppable, and
therefore typical.

A mainstream foundation blasts U.S. drug and crime policies
as wrongheaded -- not so typical -- and a government
mouthpiece defends the national drug strategy by dissembling
and misrepresenting facts -- very, very typical.  A U.S.
Congressman and Senatorial candidate of the Republican Party
calls for addicts to legally receive drugs, to reduce crime
and misery.  The resulting attacks on him by political
opponents are typical -- in fact, predictable.  But the act
of speaking out for drug policy reform and against the
failed drug war by a mainstream politician is an atypical
showing of courage and candor.

Atypical, but gradually becoming less unusual; for in this
atypical year, he joins two governors in questioning drug
war dogma.  And it is gradually becoming harder for the drug
warriors to use their typical tactics of demonization and
marginalization to dismiss calls for drug policy reform.

It's a typical week of suffering and death and wasted
resources in the failing U.S. drug war.  But it's an
atypical time, a time of awakening and of hope for a better
future: a time when the forces of ignorance and repression
will give way to reason, justice and compassion; a time when
war will give way to peace.

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