Hi all,
    This is a bit off topic, but it such a good, short article, I felt I 
should pass it on.
    Peace,
    Preston

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

Please take a moment to read an extremely important column by Arianna
Huffington:

Elian And The Drug War
                   Filed May 4, 2000 

     This sort of thing just doesn't happen in America. At
     least that's the unexamined assumption behind the
     full-plumed outrage at the ``excessive force'' used during
     the predawn raid to get Elian Gonzalez. ``When you see
     those photographs of those INS agents in combat gear with automatic
weapons
     entering that house ... and snatching the kid away,'' fumed Sen. Orrin
Hatch
     (R-Utah), ``that's not America. That's not America.'' 

     ``I couldn't imagine something like that could happen in America,''
echoed Mayor
     Rudy Giuliani. ``My first thought,'' protested Sen. Trent Lott
(R-Miss.), ``was that
     this could only happen in Castro's Cuba.'' 

     My first thought was -- you gotta be kidding, right? Can these savvy
politicians
     really be oblivious to the thousands of SWAT-like night raids that
take place every
     year in America in the name of the drug war? The only thing missing
from them are
     AP photographers leaping fences to capture the action -- and media
eager to
     disseminate it around the world. 

     Truth be told, Elian's Miami relatives got off easy. These ``dynamic
entries,'' as
     they are known, regularly involve tear gas, residents thrown to the
floor and
     handcuffed, and percussion grenades -- explosive devices intended to
disorient
     everyone present while the police move in. And the raids usually take
a lot longer
     than a surgical three minutes. But the elected officials who were
``sickened'' by
     what Elian was forced to witness do not seem remotely concerned by the
fact that
     children are routinely exposed to such un-American -- or, in the words
of Sen. Bob
     Graham (D-Fla.), ``intolerable, unnecessary, outrageous'' -- behavior. 

     ``There was no excuse whatsoever,'' railed Miami Mayor Joe Carollo
after Elian had
     been whisked away, ``to have a military force to come in, as a SWAT
team, with
     machine guns at a home where all that you had were patriotic, 
law-abiding,
     humble, working men, women and children.'' 

     But the spotlight-loving Carollo was nowhere to be found last year,
when a SWAT
     team at least 15 strong, armed with assault rifles and the wrong
address, stormed
     into the South Florida home of Eddie and Loretta Bernhardt -- a
law-abiding,
     humble, working couple. They were roughed up, humiliated and, in
Eddie's case,
     hauled off to jail. Of course, if they wanted the Miami mayor's
attention, they
     should have had the foresight to be Cuban and cute. 

     And where was the voluble mayor three months ago, when a SWAT team,
heavily
     armed and dressed in black, burst into the home of Tracey Bell --
another humble,
     hard-working (and nine months pregnant) South Floridian with no
criminal record?
     Bell claims she was hauled to the floor and handcuffed in front of her
two small
     children while the officers searched for drugs. There weren't any. Is
there, in Mayor
     Carollo's words, any ``excuse whatsoever'' for his silence in these
cases? 

     And where were the ``sickened'' politicians when Accelyne Williams, a
retired
     75-year-old minister from Boston, died of a heart attack after being
chased around
     his apartment and forced to the floor by a 13-member Police Drug
Control Unit that
     had knocked down the wrong door? Did anyone hear Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas)
     complaining that this was a ``frightening act ... and we all ought to
be very
     concerned''� 

     Or did Sen. Bob Smith (R-NH) protest of ``an abuse of power ... a
violent abuse of
     power'' when black-hooded policemen shattered the bedroom windows in 
Tracy
     White's apartment in Los Angeles? They did not find the drug dealer
they were
     looking for (who, incidentally, didn't live there), but in the process
they held a gun to
     the head of White's 12-year-old niece and terrified her three young
children. But did
     anyone hear Sen. Graham complaining about the raid leaving ``a scar
deep in the
     mind'' of these children, as he complained of the scar ``deep in the
mind'' of Elian? 

     And when 8-year-old Xavier Bennett was accidentally shot and killed by
police
     during another predawn raid, this one in Atlanta, why didn't we hear
Rep. DeLay
     say that he was ``ashamed'' and that ``we ought to hold people
accountable'' for
     what had been done? 

     If Easter Eve in Little Havana was the first time all these
politicians noticed the use
     of ``excessive force,'' they've been missing a very important trend:
the militarization
     of our local police forces in the name of the drug war. ``What you saw
in the Elian
     case,'' says Ethan Nadelmann, director of the Lindesmith Center, a
leading drug
     policy institute. ``is standard operating procedure in drug cases.
Policing in the
     United States is becoming increasingly paramilitarized. It's not just
violent drug
     dealers who are targeted, but hundreds of thousands of Americans
suspected of
     some involvement with drugs. The photos not being seen are the tens of
thousands
     of children exposed to paramilitary police tactics in their homes
because some
     family member is suspect.'' 

     So in the name of fighting drugs, we have not only gutted the
principle of ``innocent
     until proven guilty,'' but also the Fourth Amendment, which guarantees
``the right of
     the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
against
     unreasonable searches and seizures.'' 

     Perhaps all the investigative zeal unleashed by the tactics used in
Miami can now
     be applied to hearings not on Elian's seizure, but on the drug war
raids that daily
     violate everything our outraged politicians claim to revere: the rule
of law, the Bill of
     Rights, freedom, children, the norms of civilized behavior and the
sanctity of our
     homes. That would be great, but that sort of thing doesn't seem to
happen in
     America. 


Chad Thevenot, Operations Manager
Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
1225 Eye Street, NW, Suite 500
Washington, DC 20005
Tel: 202-312-2015
Fax: 202-842-2620
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.cjpf.org





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