-Caveat Lector-

Federal (Feral) Police plan their attack on the citizens of Appalachia.

Your tax dollars at work paying for more Police State abuse of our fellow
citizens. It is becoming more apparent that the "War On Drugs" is the
biggest
rip off of individual rights and taxpayers money in the history of our
country.

How many 100,000's of cops, lawyers, politicians are on the Drug Tit?

Drug Cop Welfare, the real Welfare Ripoff!
FLW

Appalachia: Under the Gun
Paul Lewin, Common Sense For Drug Policy,
http://www.csdp.org

In May of this year, the Federal Government designated 65
counties of Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia in the
Appalachian Mountain Range, a High Intensity Drug

Trafficking Area (HIDTA). This means that the DEA, ATF, FBI,
IRS, National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service and the U.S.
Attorney's Office will coordinate with each other, and the
local sheriffs, police departments, and DAs to stomp out all
forms of drug production, trafficking and use.  The
designation also comes with a $6 million federal grant as
"seed money" to set up the new agency with staff, computer
equipment, offices and the typical array of vehicles.

If past experiences are any guide to what the residents of
Appalachia can expect, the alphabet soup of law enforcement
agencies will set up road blocks on rural roads to perform
search and seizure sweeps, armed men in camouflage with
automatic weapons will patrol by helicopter, and a small
army of undercover narcotics agents will set up local men
and women for arrest.

Poverty and Little Economic Opportunity Cited As
Justification

The federal government's labeling of 65 counties in 3 states
as a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area would seem to
imply that violent gangs and Colombian drug cartels were
terrorizing millions of residents of Appalachia,
necessitating a massive federal response.  In fact, nothing
could be further from the truth.

In the official 'Appalachia HIDTA FY 98 - Threat Abstract,'
the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) states
that Appalachia warrants a federal crackdown because "in
this tri-state area financial development is limited,
poverty is rampant, and jobs are few.  Marijuana has become
a substantial component of the local economy, surpassing
even tobacco as the largest cash crop.  This has contributed
to a high level of community acceptance of marijuana
production, distribution, and consumption.  Many honest
local merchants do not recognize signs of illegal drug
enterprises and in effect help launder drug proceeds.  In
such an environment eradication and interdiction efforts are
difficult, as is obtaining intelligence, indictments, or an
unbiased jury."  In other words, people are poor, locals
aren't that concerned about residents who are doing this,
and people aren't informing on their friends and neighbors
to the extent that the government desires.

The economic stress felt by the residents of Appalachia is
not adequately described in the ONDCP's "Threat Assessment."
In reviewing the latest census data, one quickly notices
that these folks aren't just poor, this is one of the most
economically deprived regions of America.  West Virginia
ranks dead-last (50th) for median household income and
unemployment (48.6% of the civilian population was
unemployed in 1996 - of course, prisoners aren't counted).
Kentucky and Tennessee are also in the bottom 10% of the
nation for median household income, and they rank 8th and
11th, respectively, in the nation for the highest number of
infant deaths per 1,000 live births.  In fact the only
categories where these three states lead the nation is in
their percentage of public aid recipients, their percentage
of population living below the poverty line, and in teen
pregnancy.  Of course, the 65 counties designated as HIDTA,
have fared even worse.

The New War on the Poor

In the 1960s, federal officials toured Appalachia and
witnessed its tragic poverty.  The attention brought to it
shocked America, which overall was enjoying an era of
unprecedented economic growth and prosperity.  Together, the
federal government and the people of America vowed to fight
a War on Poverty so that all Americans would have an equal
opportunity in life.  In that era, roads were built, schools
provided, and utilities like clean water and electricity
reached deep into Appalachia to bring relief.  In the 1990s,
we live in another era of unprecedented economic prosperity,
yet this new War on Poverty has taken an ominous turn,
courtesy of the War on Drugs.

Rather than respond to the economic disparity which still
plagues most of the region with investment and development,
the federal government intends to respond by arresting
fathers and mothers (creating a generation of Drug War
orphans), seizing family homes, cars and businesses.  Rather
than small business loans or investment in infrastructure,
federal dollars will be spent on guns, prisons and payoffs
to informants.

Citizen Observation Groups Can Work

Forewarned is forearmed, or so the saying goes. Gathering
together the forces of the U.S. Government to pounce on
Appalachia will take time -- perhaps up to an entire year.
A lot can happen in one year, and if the citizens of the
HIDTA counties exercise their civil right to influence their
local government, the states involved can reject federal
plans.

In Northern California, residents have turned out to oppose
aggressive marijuana eradication, because of the negative
community impact it has.

Forming "Citizen's Observation Groups," locals have
documented government helicopters violating federal laws on
flying altitude, environmental regulations, and endangered
species protection, plus they have kept track of illegal
search and seizure operations, and how many children have
been terrified by the men with face paint and automatic
guns.  More importantly, by documenting what the government
was doing, they have been able to raise awareness within
their own communities and present a united front to their
local government, which eventually led to some county
supervisors voting to reject funding for the program.

(For more information on citizens' efforts to halt federal
eradication programs in Northern California, go to
<http://www.civilliberties.org>.)
You can contact Paul Lewin via e-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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