Is The War on Drugs "All About the Money"?
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By Päul Jay interviewing Stephen Downing and Terry Nelson
The Real News
Monday, Nov 19, 2012
Bio
Stephen Downing is a retired deputy chief of police for the Los Angeles
Police Department. As Commander of the Bureau of Special Investigations
at one point, the Administrative Narcotics Division was one of the
divisions within his scope of authority.
Terry Nelson's law-enforcement career spanned three decades. It included
service in the US Border Patrol, the US Customs Service, and the
Department of Homeland Security, taking him beyond the US borders into
Mexico, Central America, and South America. In various capacities, he
acquired first-hand knowledge of the war on drugs through his direct
involvement with counter-narcotics missions. He labored with
distinction, even receiving special Congressional recognition for his
work. Terry retired in 2005 as a GS-14 air/marine group supervisor. He
is a veteran of the U.S. Coast Guard, having served as a communications
specialist in Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines. He served nine
years in the U.S. Border Patrol including a stint as instructor at the
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center, three years in marine
operations in the Florida Keys, one year as a customs inspector at DFW
Airport, seven years as an air interdiction officer/criminal
investigator, two years as staff officer to the director of foreign
operations, and five years on the staff for the Field Director,
Surveillance Support Branch East. During this period the SSBE team
participated in the seizure of over 230,000 pounds of cocaine and
received the United States Interdiction Committee award for
interdictions.
PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN:
Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in Baltimore. And we're
continuing our discussions with members of LEAP, Law Enforcement Against
Prohibition. These are police officers who believe that the prohibition
against drugs is failing and the war on drugs should be stopped and
drugs should be legalized.
Now joining us to talk about
this, first of all, is Stephen Downing. Stephen's a retired deputy
chief of police for the Los Angeles Police Department. He was commander
of the Bureau of Special Investigations. One of those divisions was the
Administrative Narcotics Division. Thanks for joining us.Also
joining us is Terry Nelson. Terry's law enforcement career spanned
three decades. It included service in the U.S. Border Patrol, U.S.
Customs Service, and the Department of Homeland Security, taking him
beyond the U.S. borders into Mexico, Central America, and South America.
In various capacities he acquired a first-hand knowledge of the war on
drugs through his direct involvement with counter-narcotics missions.
Thanks very much for joining us.
TERRY NELSON, CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION SUPERVISOR, DEPT. HOMELAND SECURITY (RET.): Thank you for having me.
JAY:
So start with your own story. You're a Texan. You told me off-camera
you're a Republican. You grew up with these values (I would have
thought) that the war on drugs is a necessity, and you were involved in
fighting it. What is your thinking in the beginning of your career? And
how does that — your experience change that thinking?
NELSON:
Well, as a young officer, you think you can make a difference, of
course, and you spend years trying, and then all of a sudden you realize
the futility of what you're doing 'cause you're not making any
progress.I never really turned against the war on drugs
until I got into command structure and was working in Central and South
America and saw the total futility of — like, Plan Colombia was
$5.2 billion we spent trying to train the Colombian police and spraying
herbicides on the coca crop. At the end of five years of that program,
the coca production went up 25 percent in Colombia. So either we were
spraying fertilizer on it instead of herbicide or the farmers became
much better. And that's what happened. The more successful we were in
destroying the crops, the more successful the farmers were, and they
tripled the yield of the coca plant in about three years. So they made
up all the difference and actually produced 25 percent more cocaine than
they had at the beginning of the drug war. You see this and you know
you're not going to arrest your way out of the drug war. Arrest and
incarceration will never work. But education, we believe, will work.
JAY:
Okay. So that coin dropped for you, but you're working with other
officers. And in the command structure, do you talk about these things?
And what kind of pushback do you get?
NELSON: Well,
you talk about it somewhat, but you have to be careful, because everyone
wants to get promoted. That's the whole purpose of going in, to work
your way up the chain, where you can have more influence on what's going
on.I spoke out at an interdiction committee meeting one
time with — I called in a triple-PhD from Washington, D.C., that came down
just to tell us how to do the — he was laying out economic models and
said, if we can just destroy this much property, this much coke, we can
win this drug war. And I stood up and said, am I the only SOB in this
room that thinks we're doing this wrong and we should change our
strategy? And everybody applauded until I was called up in front of the
room and he stuck his finger in my chest and said, Agent Nelson, you
don't make policy, you carry it out, so you salute smartly and you go
back and sit down [incompr.] Okay. So when I got out of the service, I
decided I was going to help change that policy, because I could do it
then.
JAY: Stephen, how about you? You're in tough
territory, downtown L.A. Drugs must be one of the overwhelming things
you have to deal with. You must have bought into this idea that it was
necessary.
STEPHEN DOWNING, DEPUTY CHIEF, LAPD (RET.):
Well, as a young 22-year-old coming in from a rural community, going
into the academy, you listen to what they tell you and you believe it.
And so you buy into—at that time you were still buying into the residual
of Harry Anslinger, who said that blacks and browns use marijuana and
it makes them rape white women. And so a lot of the myth-making was
still alive. And you believe it. You go out on the street.And
in those days, just possession of a tiny amount of marijuana was a
felony. Well, a felony arrest was a big deal for a young police officer.
And so you did your job. And in those days, especially in those days,
quota systems were rampant. The measurement of good police work was not
an absence of crime; it was what did your recap look like at the end of
the day. But as you grow and you go through the ranks and you study and
you become a manager, you realize that there are more effective methods
for supervising police operations. And so by the time I was
a commander, it was about the same time that President Nixon announced
the war on drugs, and it was also the same time that I had just
uncovered at the divisional level the growth of two small gangs. They
were called the Bloods and the Crips. And they had a membership of less
than 100. So our charge — when Nixon announced the war on drugs, I took
over the narcotic effort, narcotic enforcement effort. Our strategy,
which was the national strategy — cut the head off the snake, reduce the
flow of drugs into the country, and reduce drug abuse and drug
addiction. Well, as we started, a big deal when we call the press for
our dog-and-pony shows: one or two kilos, a few thousand dollars, a few
handguns. Next month, it's a little more than that. A little more. A
little more. So today you look at it — and there is really no
metric — none — that measures success — all of the metrics say this is a
failure. Those two small gangs in the 40 years of this drug war have
grown to 33,000 gangs across the nation with a membership of
1.5 million. When we started, the cartels were barely heard of. They
were somewhere in South America, Latin America. Two years ago, the DOJ
said the cartels control drug trafficking with the help of the gangs in
250 American cities. This year the DOJ said the drug cartels control
drug trafficking in 1,000 American cities. So we haven't
made a dent in these three strategy approaches. Addiction, drug abuse,
it goes up and down. The flow of drugs is now warehouses full. The guns
are tens of thousands of war-level weapons. And the money, even being
laundered by domestic banks, they get a slap on the hand, there's
millions of dollars on pallets. And cutting the head off
the snake, I came to discover as a police executive who likes to do a
good job and likes to meet his goals and effectively execute the
strategy, that was a big thing to me, because I finally decided there's
no snake, it's starfish. And when you cut a starfish in half, you get
two starfish. When you cut it four ways, you get four. And the only way
to kill a starfish is to remove its nutrient. And in the case of the
cartels and the gangs, the nutrient is money.They can't
function without money. They can't buy guns, money can't be laundered,
and they'll be out of business. And so prohibition creates their
opportunity for money. And if we take that black market away, we're
going to dry 'em up. And that's what I discovered as a police executive.
And that's why I believe that the only way to get out from under this — and
since I've left the department in the '80s, they just poured more money
in, unprecedented money. They militarized our police. The federal
government bought off our police, in effect, by providing military
equipment, by providing grants. This asset-seizure program,
it's evil. It's totally evil. They say they created it to get the
kingpins, but the average seizure's $15,000, and if a guy wants to get
his $15,000 car back, he can't hire a lawyer for that kind of money. So
all of these things that go into the harm of people, the discussions
about prisons — California in 1980 had a total prison population of
23,000. Between 1980 and now, we've built 23 prisons, we've hired
thousands of prison guards, we've fired thousands of teachers. Today our
prison population is 163,000. Twenty-five thousand of those are
nonviolent drug offenders, at $65,000 a piece a year to keep them in
jail. That's $1.52 million. And this year, we told our
23-campus university system: no more new students. Our community college
student — three weeks ago, demonstrations, 500,000 kids can't get
classes. So we're trading the education of America for a drug war that's
just stacking our prisons with cordwood, destroying families,
destroying neighborhoods, unraveling our whole social structure.
JAY:
So when colleagues of yours, people you know in law enforcement hear
arguments like this and arguments that you give, I don't understand how
they cannot be persuaded. What is this sort of moral imperative that
seems to be deep in American political culture that you got to fight
this war on drugs 'cause somehow it represents the struggle between good
and evil or something?
NELSON: Well, our drug czar
recently came out and said that drug abuse is not a moral failure. So he
actually came out and said that. And he also said, we're not going to
arrest our way out of the drug war. The issue is—.
JAY: Who said that?
NELSON: Kerlikowski, the drug czar. The
issue is it's institutionalized. Prison unions fight us all the time.
Police unions fight us because they don't want it legalized, because
then they're going to lose membership. As he mentioned earlier, the
police make a tremendous amount of money from the federal government,
not counting — if the police arrest someone at night, a couple of kids for
a few joints, they take them in and arrest them, put them in jail, they
go back the next day for a hearing, they get three hours overtime a
piece. It's a money-making machine for them. They don't want to quit it. The
military-industrial complex does not want it to end, because if you
sell a Sikorsky helicopter to Colombia for $16 million, that's nothing.
It's going to cost $100 million a year to put the maintenance contract
in place to keep them flying. So it's all about the money.
In law enforcement, it's all about the Benjamins. You follow the money
trail, you find the problem. And everybody's making money off of the
current drug war at the expense of our children's futures, because when
you get arrested for a drug offense, I don't care if they don't put you
in jail; you've got an arrest record. And when you go to get a job, you
check the box, they see you've had an arrest, they look and you had a
drug arrest, you're not going to get hired. You're going to be
marginalized the rest of your life. And that's going to mean you're not
going to pay your fair share of the taxes that you would have earned if
you'd have been able to get a decent job. And instead of
being — contributing to your society, you actually are a drain on our
society. And I don't blame the people, other than the fact
that they broke the law. They're in a position they can't get out of. I
mean, once you've got the arrest record, that monkey's on your back the
rest of your life. Our saying in LEAP [1] is you can get over an addiction;
you will never get over a conviction, 'cause it follows you throughout
your life. So it's not just a short-term thing. It ruins
the people for the next 30, 40 years, breaks up families. One-point-nine
million kids go to bed every night 'cause one of their parents are in
prison. Forty-some-odd percent of the people that go to prison this year
will have had a family member in prison in front of them. And
25 percent of the children or the kids that will go to prison this year
come out of a foster home or an institution. Well, that
tells you right there this is a hamster wheel. We're destroying the very
people that drug policy claims to want to protect, which is our
children. We're breaking up families. They're raised in foster home.
They've become — one parent goes to jail, the other parent has to get a
second job. There's no one to monitor the kids. The evil wheel keeps
turning. They're on the street. They're going to get in trouble. We all
know that. Kids are going to be kids. We've got to keep our kids safe
until they reach adulthood.
JAY: So some people
think that if you legalize, it leads virtually to anarchy. If it's
legal, everyone's going to go out and do drugs or way more people are
going to run off and do drugs, and the place is going to go crazy, and
we've got to clamp down on it. I mean, how do you argue against that?
DOWNING:
We legalized alcohol after a horrible 13-year experience where we
discovered we really made some very bad decisions, and that didn't
happen. We returned at that time. We passed a
constitutional amendment to put it into effect, and we passed a
constitutional amendment to get rid of alcohol prohibition, and we
returned the responsibility to the states, which is provided by our
constitution, demanded by our constitution. And all of the states, gee,
they worked things out, they controlled and regulated and set up their
systems, and they served as models for each other, and they would adopt
things. So over time we had regulated and controlled alcohol. And
during the same time, the organized crime syndicates that were born as a
result of alcohol prohibition, they died. We took their nutrients away,
like I say, and they died out. Now, we're always going to have some
criminal organizations, but when we announce a war on drugs, zoom — right
back they came. But this time, the bribery is institutionalized. In
Capone's day, they took the brown bag full of money and handed it to the
politicians or the policemen. These days, the money comes through our
system and bribes our institutions and our police, especially because
they've militarized our police and they've diverted them away from what I
call the social contract our police officers have with their
communities, and that's to protect them from crimes against person and
crimes against property. A perfect example in Los Angeles
two years ago — you might have read about it. The paper uncovered the fact
that the police laboratory was backlogged 3,000 rape kids, a three-year
backlog, meaning that women who have been raped were waiting for their
cases to be resolved because detectives handling their cases did not
have laboratory results. So it was a big [haz@rA], and they scrambled
around and they found $10 million and said, we're going to catch this
up. Well, what nobody really said is: how come they're
backlogged? And the reason they're backlogged is because when a person
is arrested with narcotics, that's a body in custody that's going to
show up in court, and they can't show up in court until that narcotic
has been analyzed. And so all this dope arrests, 43 million arrests
since 1971 in this country, those are analyzed in our laboratories. And
every time somebody's arrested, the others are pushed back. So
they cleaned that one up. And this year, now they've got — they're behind
by 4,000 fingerprint examinations. Fingerprint examinations are coming
off of burglaries, they're coming off of assaults, they're coming off of
robberies, stores. These are the crimes the police are supposed to be
working with their communities to solve. But at the same time they're
making all these narcotic arrests, they're angering people in the
communities because they're jacking the kids up against the walls or
sitting them on the sidewalks, they're draping them across the hoods of
their cars. And 90 percent of those frisks that are going on are all
about drugs. They're not about the criminal problems. And so pretty soon
you don't have a community communicating with you, you don't have a
community cooperating with you, because this drug war has destroyed that
cooperation and it's destroyed respect for the professional law
enforcement.
JAY: Just quickly, what would you like to see?
NELSON:
I would like to see total legalization of all drugs, which will cure
about 80 percent of our crime and violence issues. Won't do anything for
our drug problem, because that's a separate issue, and I believe that's
a medical and a social issue that's best handled through education and
treatment instead of arrest and incarceration.
JAY: Thanks very much.
NELSON: Thank you for having us.
JAY: Thank you very much.And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.
End
[1] Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) is a non-profit,
international, educational organization comprising former and current
police officers, government agents and other law enforcement agents who
oppose the current War on Drugs.
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