For years, many of the nation's leading black
lawmakers, lawyers and social scientists complained that the nation's
war on drugs was both ineffective and unfair. They blamed policies
arising from that war for the disproportionate number of blacks in
prison. But for years, little changed. Last week, a dozen black
professional groups announced the creation of the National
African-American Drug Policy Coalition, hoping to spark reform with a
two-pronged approach: In a handful of cities, including Baltimore, they
plan to advise judges to offer treatment rather than prison sentences
for drug crimes and to push education and prevention in communities.
Nationally, they aim to begin a debate that will propel lawmakers to
change mandatory minimum-sentencing laws that the coalition complains
unfairly hurt blacks and other minorities. Among the group's leaders is
Kurt L. Schmoke, a former three-term Baltimore mayor who, in 1988,
called drug addiction a public health problem and advocated
decriminalizing drugs. His stance sparked a national debate on drug
policy. Mr. Schmoke, once a prosecutor and now the dean of Howard
University Law School, will be co-chairman of the coalition. Mr.
Schmoke acknowledged that his stance on drug decriminalization did not
draw widespread support, but he distanced that position from this
latest effort. [more ]
Black group seeks drug treatment over prison [more ]
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