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Hostage Mom Exposes Drug War Double Standard

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted September 30, 2005.


The woman who traded meth for freedom is an example of how our drug policy has failed.
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Last March, Atlanta hostage Ashley Smith got a rousing cheer from public officials, law enforcement, and much of the media for cajoling accused rampage shooter Brian Nichols to give himself up. Smith deserved the praise. It took courage, compassion, and good sense to do what she did. But it also took something else, drugs. In her recently released tell all book, Unlikely Angel, Smith admits that she got Nichols to give up by plying him from her stash of Methamphetamine. Meth is deadly, destructive, and, of course, patently illegal.

A month before Smith publicly announced she's a former drug user at the launch of her national book promo tour; Attorney General Alberto Gonzales called Meth a scourge that devastates families and communities. Gonzales, Bush drug czar, John Walters, and Mike Leavitt, Health and Human Services Secretary met in Nashville, Tennessee in August. They announced that the feds would pour more resources into drug prevention and treatment, but they also promised a big crack down on Meth sale and use.

Gonzales claimed that the Justice Department had more than quadrupled the number of cases filed during the past decade. The DEA has aggressively targeted Meth producers and traffickers, resulting in the initiation of nearly 3000 criminal cases related to Meth production, distribution, or diversion of ingredient chemicals in 2004.

But Smith didn't have to worry about being one those prosecuted. Police didn't catch her with the dope in her apartment and prosecutors quickly made it clear that they wouldn't file charges. And they shouldn't. Smith is a victim, and needs counseling and treatment, not jail. Smith, however, is white, middle class, and a former housewife, and she would likely get the help she needed anyway without risk of a prison sentence. Yet Smith, far more than her captor Nichols, fit the profile of a Meth user, as well as the profile of the majority of America's drug users. Surveys have repeatedly shown that middle-income young whites use drugs more frequently than blacks or Latinos.

The drug pass that Smith got, and thousands of low level, war mostly, poor, and desperate small time black drug offenders don't get, once again exposed the glaring racial hypocrisy and double standard in America's drug war. That double standard has been enshrined in the popular culture. The entertainment magazines, scandal tabloids, and TV talk shows are crammed with legions of articles, and news features on and interviews with high-profile white stars, starlets, and athletes who openly brag or cry about their drug escapades. They are not vilified or stereotyped. They are the object of public pity for their heroic battles against addiction. Hollywood celebrities such as Robert Downey, Jr., and conservative talk show mouthpiece, Rush Limbaugh continued their careers even after they had been convicted or accused of drug offenses.

Newly turned celebrity Smith got the same royal treatment. An exuberant Oprah shouted to her audience, "Jesus loves you girl, during Smith's appearance on her TV show as part of her national book tour. She was publicly praised for her heroic fight against drug addiction. While the lop-sided Meth use by middle-income whites, such as Smith, ignites no public outcry for mass arrests, prosecutions, and tough prison sentences, the consequences to society are just as disastrous as heroin or crack cocaine use.

Meth manufacture and use is blamed for automobile accidents; explosions and fires environmental contamination; increased criminal activity, including domestic violence; emergency room and other medical costs; spread of infectious disease, including HIV, AIDS and hepatitis; and lost worker productivity.

The penalties for use and sale are every bit as severe as crack cocaine sale and use. The basic mandatory minimum sentences under federal law are 5 to 10 years in prison. Lawmakers even talk of dropping the amount of Meth that an individual caught with can be prosecuted for. It's not clear just how much Meth Smith had in her illegal stash, but presumably if police found even a small amount she could have been prosecuted.

If whites such as Smith, though, were jailed and prosecuted for their criminal drug use, it would radically change the complexion of the nearly two million prisoners that now jam America's jails and prisons. At present, nearly half of them are black. The overwhelming majority of them are there for petty crimes, and drug offenses.

The Comprehensive Methamphetamine Control Act of 1996 mandated seizures of chemicals, the destruction of Meth labs, and longer prison sentences. That was supposed to be a major step toward preventing Meth from becoming the next crisis in drug abuse. A decade later, Smith is glaring proof that the act didn't do much to stop that from happening. Smith was declared a hero for getting Nichols to surrender. She is not a hero for using or kicking her Meth habit. If the public and law enforcement praised her for her action, thousands of others who aren't heroes but are drug addicted should get help, not jail. After all, Jesus loves them too.

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of 'The Crisis in Black and Black' (Middle Passage Press).

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Medical and controlled
Posted by: liberalibrarian on Sep 30, 2005 2:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not criminal. When are we going to get enlightened enough to stop criminalizing drugs and start treating them and their addictions as medical problems? Until the US pressured Britain into curtailing their heroin (addiction) centers, they were onto something productive. We are simply continuing to create and propogate an underground, criminal society that just gets rich.

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Thanks Earl, you touch my heart in a kind way
Posted by: La Femme Nikita on Sep 30, 2005 4:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here in my county, I hear heart broken upper class Anglo parents lament their sons and daughters meth addictions every week. Heartbroken. They are powerless in the face of their children's addiction.
Drug addiction crosses economic and racial lines. It destroys lives, whole families, whole family systems, generations.
I am thankful you emphasized it was illegal. The illegality is a controversial topic down here on the ground on Alternet. I wish I were up there like you when it came to talking about drugs. I get beat up down here for my point of view.
I appreciate your last two articles. Things are getting gritty and they need to.
We are, I am, down here living in the grit, and we, I, need help. Good journalism is certainly a help! And you are doing good work. You give me hope Earl, you really do...

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It is so ironic...
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Sep 30, 2005 6:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that initially everyone was so willing to embrace the Hollywood version of events. It was co-branded with the best seller "Purpose Driven Life" and she was the heroic white girl. Made for TV manna from Heaven.

Now that the truth is out--to her credit, by her own hand--it ought to be a time for reflection. But you don't see that story 24/7 on Fox. It's not on message and makes them and their ilk look like the superficial dolts they are.

Thanks for telling the story our intrepid press won't touch.

Here are a couple of mine if you're inclined...a stinging critique of Andy Card's WH management in "This House of Card’s was not built for a perfect storm"; and the case of the incredible failing presidency in "Mission Demolished,"


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Phoney War
Posted by: Sparks56 on Sep 30, 2005 9:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, Mr. Hutchinson, for bringing to light yet more evidence of the failure of drug criminalization and the racial hypocracy with which drug laws are applied.
The "War on Drugs" is a self-perpetuating failure. That is, it is a failure at its expressed goal of reducing and eliminating drug use. However, it has done wonders for law enforcement budgets, people in the prison construction business, and for the US Gov't., it is second only to the "War on Terror" as an excuse to provide financial and military support to repressive regimes around the world.
The war on drugs provides market conditions that provide a nifty way for criminal enterprises of all sorts to be financed.
All of this promotes the fear that the few in power need to dominate the many.
In many ways, the War on Drugs has been a smashing success.
It was never really meant to help get people off of drugs.

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the real hypocrite
Posted by: kittykat on Sep 30, 2005 9:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If mr.hucksterson is 'so' bothered by the double standard then why doesn't he call out some WHITE people in the media who created it in the first place? And another thing he isn't exactly doing anything to help matters when he writes a suck-up cover your ass article bending over backwards to sing her praises would HE have done that if she were black? Maybe to most people she is a 'hero' but she's also a crackhead and THAT would have gotten for more attention than her 'heroism' if the races were reversed. Maybe even by him.

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» RE: the real hypocrite Posted by: La Femme Nikita
» RE: the real hypocrite Posted by: kittykat
She's no angel.
Posted by: WhatNow? on Sep 30, 2005 9:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Must be nice to spend the day doing meth with some murderer, then writing some drivel, calling yourself an angel, and then prospering. Isn't amerika wonderful?

If only I could totally lack responsibility and become an addict, I might get some sympathy and prosperity too.

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Mr. Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Posted by: La Femme Nikita on Oct 1, 2005 9:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ok, I see he gets heat too, as he has been since I stepped on Alternet. Why? What is the beef with Earl? I like his writing. I told you all that from the start. He is a black intellectual. Rare commodity folks.
Have you been to his web site?
Seen the books he has written?
Come on, why the attack?
He is doing good work. He needs our support, not our villification. What bad did he do? He is doing good!
How many of you are married to black men?
What problem do you have with Earl?
I wish his books were required reading for every black male American BEFORE they had sex. SO THERE.

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» RE: Mr. Earl Ofari Hutchinson Posted by: kittykat
» RE: Mr. Earl Ofari Hutchinson Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» Intellectuals Posted by: eastcoker
» RE: He is a black intellectual. Rare commodity folks. Posted by: Peacepole1@miraclestation2000.com
Serving the higher goals...
Posted by: Newtopia on Oct 1, 2005 11:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Regardless of what anyone may think of this woman, what specious moral judgements we may foist upon her from deep within our glass houses, I appreciate what I saw as her complete candor and unapologetic personality, which was capable of compassion, understanding, and spirituality in a situation in which I am certain most would crumble, and then be equally fallable, profoundly human, flawed, and not afraid to share all these with us in the hopes that we may learn something, draw back the veil on the parts of our lives we hide from each other, and lay out the human condition in all its resplendent and confounding wonder. I applaud her strength, and so what if she profited from it. Unlike Jennifer Wilbanks, Ashley Smith didn't do anything wrong, thus, she does not deserve our sanctimonious condemnation or punishment. What she did was diffuse what could have been another horrible event, and avoid being raped and murdered herself. Bravo!

-Charles Shaw - "A Failed Drug War" (Alternet, 9/28/05)
Chicago

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Serving the Higher Goals...Part II
Posted by: picket on Oct 1, 2005 12:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These people have been soldiers in the WAR on Drugs first on the Prohibition side but now because they have seen first hand the damage to humanity , a change of HEART.

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition [LEAP]
http://www./leap.cc/
Peter Gorman's article about LEAP is EXCELLENT....it can be found in Fort Worth Weekly [9-28-05]"Vets Against the [Drug] War"
http://www.fwweekly.com/contact.asp?section=News&type=Feature

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Addiction is a disease folks, a disease
Posted by: La Femme Nikita on Oct 1, 2005 4:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where is your compassion? Why the hostility? Any addict deserves our compassion whether George Bush or the drunk of the corner. Our humanity is determined by the compassion we can show another suffering human being.
I am astounded by the hardness of heart the American Left, the International Left, exhibits to fellow suffering human beings.
And do not stone me for speaking the truth. I am an addict as well. I am no longer pointing the finger. I am looking in the mirror.

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Interesting Responses
Posted by: magistre on Oct 1, 2005 7:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is interesting to see the differrent responses to this article: Who is "offended", who agrees, who out-and-out disagrees.
The biggest problem with "the Drug War" has always been that it has had a political motivation wrather than real concern about citizens. And the true criminals in this world are the Behemoths that make a profit on "both sides of the fence".

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Racism? But of course.
Posted by: esactun on Oct 3, 2005 12:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ah yes, the drug war is inherently racist. It began in the 30s as a way to "get the Mexicans," after all. It has never been about public health safety (witness, after all, the continuing legality of tobacco and alcohol).

And the demonization of anyone who ever uses any drug is just closed-minded idiocy, a useless leftover of Puritanism. For any caffeine-tweaked person to gripe about someone else using psychoactives is pure hypocrisy. Period. If we'd stop, as a nation, from doing the joyless busybody thing of poking our noses into others' business because oh my god, they're having FUN, maybe we, as a nation, would be a little less likely to fire off temper tantrums locally and abroad (as we constantly do!).

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