Navigation |
The war on marijuana: The transformation of the war on drugs in the 1990sAs the "war on drugs" enters the latter half of its third decade since being forged into the American lexicon by President Ronald Reagan, the public has grown more skeptical of the current strategy and has proven to be receptive to a broader consideration of alternatives to incarceration. This has been the case most notably with marijuana offenses, where the policy discussion has shifted in some localities to one of decriminalization or de-prioritizing law enforcement resources dedicated to pursuing possession offenses. Despite the increased profile surrounding marijuana policy in recent years, there remains a significant degree of misunderstanding regarding the current strategy, both in terms of how resources are being allocated and to what eventual gain. Methods: Previous studies have analyzed drug offenses as a general category, but there has yet to be a single study that has focused specifically on marijuana offenders at all stages of the system. This report analyzes multiple sources of data for the period 1990–2002 from each of the critical points in the criminal justice system, from arrest through court processing and into the correctional system, to create an overall portrait of this country's strategy in dealing with marijuana use. Results: The study found that since 1990, the primary focus of the war on drugs has shifted to low-level marijuana offenses. During the study period, 82% of the increase in drug arrests nationally (450,000) was for marijuana offenses, and virtually all of that increase was in possession offenses. Of the nearly 700,000 arrests in 2002, 88% were for possession. Only 1 in 18 of these arrests results in a felony conviction, with the rest either being dismissed or adjudicated as a misdemeanor, meaning that a substantial amount of resources, roughly $4 billion per year for marijuana alone, is being dedicated to minor offenses. Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that law enforcement resources are not being effectively allocated to offenses which are most costly to society. The financial and personnel investment in marijuana offenses, at all points in the criminal justice system, diverts funds away from other crime types, thereby representing a questionable policy choice. The War on Marijuana: The Transformation of the War on Drugs in the 1990s Federal law enforcement is targeted effectively at convicting major drug traffickers and punishing them with longer lockups in prison. 1 Background Despite decades of discussion and intense media coverage, there remains considerable confusion regarding how the criminal justice system treats marijuana offenders. This misunderstanding has catalyzed a contentious debate that has been characterized by disagreements about the appropriate legal status of marijuana, the suitable level of punishment, and the most effective distribution of institutional resources to address marijuana use. This has been coupled with a fundamental difference of opinion about the true dangers that marijuana use poses to American society. In light of international developments in which a number of countries have reduced punishment for marijuana use, as well as the growth in the domestic decriminalization movement culminating in local ballot initiatives and proposals to amend state law, the struggle over the appropriate criminal justice response to marijuana has become a key policy concern. Law enforcement and marijuana As seen in Figure 1, from 1990 to 2002, drug arrests nationally increased by 41%, from 1,089,500 to 1,538,800. During this time, the total number of marijuana arrests more than doubled from 327,000 to 697,000, an increase of 113%. All non-marijuana drug arrests increased by only 10%. The percentage of arrests for all offenses comprised of marijuana more than doubled from 2.3% in 1990 to 5.1% in 2002. Figure 1 Drug Arrest Trends – 1990 to 2002 Drug Arrest Trends – 1990 to 2002. This significant expansion of the drug war was fueled almost entirely by a focus on marijuana. Of the 450,000 increase in arrests for drugs, 82.4% was solely from marijuana arrests, and 78.7% from marijuana possession arrests. Figure 3 Growth in Arrests – 1990 to 2002 Growth in Arrests – 1990 to 2002. From a policy perspective, for this growth to be tenable, one must assume that marijuana use and marijuana market trends ran counter to all national crime trends, including patterns in overall drug arrests. As this is rather unlikely, this growth is probably better understood as the result of selective enforcement decisions. There is no indication from national drug survey data that a dramatic decrease in the use of other drugs led to law enforcement agencies shifting resources to marijuana 4. Indeed, there was a slight increase in the use of all illicit drugs by adult users between 1992 and 2001 (5.9% to 6.6%) 5. Over that same period, emergency room admissions for heroin continued to increase 6. Thus, there are no explicit indications of dramatic shifts in drug use that might explain the law enforcement trend toward marijuana enforcement in the 1990s. Figure 4 Trends in Drug Enforcement – 1982 to 2002* Trends in Drug Enforcement – 1982 to 2002*. * = Chart adapted from data in Pastore, AL and Maguire, K (Eds.): Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics 2001. United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Washington, DC: USGPO, 2002. (Table 4.29). Additional data obtained from Crime in the United States, 2001 (Table 4.1) and Crime in the United States, 2002 (Table 4.1). Washington, DC: Federal Bureau of Investigation. However, over the course of the 1990s a tangible shift toward arrest patterns of the early 1980s began to reemerge. Law enforcement agencies arrested fewer people for cocaine and heroin offenses and began to arrest more people for marijuana possession and sale. By 1996, marijuana had once again surpassed heroin and cocaine as the primary drug of arrest, a gap which has widened since then. Early pursuit of the "war on drugs" targeted heroin and cocaine (drugs deemed to be hard, costly, or dangerous), but the current manifestation of the drug war, from the law enforcement perspective, is targeted disproportionately at marijuana use. Impact on marijuana use What impact has the practice of increased arrest for marijuana offenses had on rates of use, ease of purchase, and price? Higher trafficking arrests theoretically should reduce supply and increase marijuana costs, and an increase in possession arrests should, if general deterrence theory applies, reduce use through heightened probability of apprehension. However, since 1992, real price has fallen by 16% while potency has increased by 53% 7. From 1990 to 2002, daily use of marijuana by high school seniors nearly tripled from 2.2% to 6%. Notably, the current 6% level is the same as the level in 1975 8. One study suggests that the rapid increase in low-level arrests, many of which result in dismissals or misdemeanor convictions, reinforces a perception that a person can "get away with it" 9. Consequently, the frequent use of marijuana arrests provides little of the deterrent effect necessary to put pressure on the market exchange. Figure 5 Trends in Marijuana Pricing and Law Enforcement – 1990 to 2000 Trends in Marijuana Pricing and Law Enforcement – 1990 to 2000. Despite a 113% increase in marijuana arrests, almost exclusively for possession, marijuana costs have decreased, and purity increased as have use and perceived availability. If increased law enforcement and an expanded use of arrests were successful in restricting the supply of marijuana, then an increase in its price would be expected. Instead, marijuana prices fell continuously during the 1990s even as marijuana arrests reached unprecedented levels. This trend suggests that the growth in marijuana arrests in the 1990s has had no measurable impact on price, access, or availability. The cost to law enforcement The growth of marijuana arrests results in substantial costs for law enforcement. Since 1991, the domestic law enforcement component of the federal drug control budget has increased from $4.6 billion (or 42% of the federal drug control budget) to $9.5 billion (or 51% of the federal drug control budget) in 2002 17. This increase of $4.9 billion (107%) has occurred during a period when most of the growth in drug arrests has been for marijuana. Law enforcement resource allocation In addition to cost, a significant consequence of these tactics includes reduced law enforcement attention to other criminal behavior. Law enforcement resources come from a finite pool of funding in the general revenue fund. It is the responsibility of the legislature to determine how these resources will be allocated (law enforcement, corrections, education, roads, etc.). If the role of law enforcement is to be expanded, there are three options available to accomplish this: 1) increase the size of the common pool (raise taxes); 2) alter the distribution within the common pool (draw monies away from a different program and direct additional funding towards law enforcement); or 3) alter the approach of law enforcement patterns (practice selective enforcement of offenses). Marijuana enforcement at the local level The geographical variation in marijuana arrest patterns at the local level illustrates the critical role of discretion in defining a law enforcement agency's policy. Table 1 provides the number of arrests in 1990 and 2002 in the nation's ten largest counties as well as ten other large counties chosen for their geographic distribution, taken from the Uniform Crime Report 28. Table 1 Marijuana Arrests-Large U.S. Counties – 1990 and 2002**** County 1990 Sale 2002 Sale % Growth 1990 Poss. 2002 Poss. % Growth 1990 Total 2002 Total % Growth Los Angeles (CA) 6,708 2,868 -57 5,638 12,929 129 12,346 15,797 28 Cook (IL)* 8,974 N/A N/A 1,597 N/A N/A 10,571 N/A N/A Harris (TX) 68 38 -44 1,593 7,174 349 1,661 7,212 334 Maricopa (AZ) 563 462 -18 3,529 6,194 76 4, s092 6,656 63 Orange (CA) 636 579 -9 3,128 6,466 107 3,764 7,045 87 San Diego (CA) 1,588 756 -52 3,162 4,950 57 4,750 5,706 20 Miami-Dade (FL)* 1,279 N/A N/A 3,926 N/A N/A 5,205 N/A N/A Dallas (TX) 174 260 49 2,483 2,992 20 2,657 3,252 22 Wayne (MI) 182 223 23 1,009 2,357 134 1,191 2,580 117 King (WA) 94 187 99 639 3,608 465 733 3,795 418 Philadelphia (PA) 468 2,449 423 358 3,774 954 826 6,223 653 Middlesex (MA) 93 233 151 676 1,274 88 769 1,507 96 Cuyahoga (OH) 161 141 -12 732 1,032 41 893 1,173 31 Clark (NV) 9 560 6,122 98 3,472 3,443 107 4,032 3,668 Hennepin (MN) 25 467 1768 739 1,184 60 764 1,651 116 St. Louis (MO) 106 126 19 617 1,625 163 723 1,751 142 Fairfax (VA) 53 18 -66 383 258 -33 436 276 -37 Milwaukee (WI) 363 840 131 1,542 2,228 44 1,905 3,068 61 Shelby (TN) 34 584 1,618 91 1,790 1,867 125 2,374 1,799 Fulton (GA) 314 776 147 2,750 3,757 37 3,064 4,533 48 **** – Cook County, Illinois and Miami-Dade County, Florida did not provide marijuana arrest statistics to the Uniform Crime Report in 2002. Several key findings can be identified from these figures: Marijuana at the city level Examining city level arrest patterns is an instructive approach to provide context to national level trends. In the case of New York City, the 1990s represented a profound shift in policing strategy that resulted in an exponential growth in marijuana arrests. Although the experience in New York City may not be representative of developments across the country, it is an example of the ways in which the decisions of local officials played a role in the national increase in marijuana arrests. Figure 7 Marijuana Arrests in New York City – 1990 to 2002*** Marijuana Arrests in New York City – 1990 to 2002***. *** = Data from the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services, Computerized Criminal History System. Nationally, the proportion of marijuana arrests from New York City also grew exponentially. In 1990, 1.6% of all marijuana arrests nationally occurred in New York City; that figure more than quadrupled to 7.2% by 2002. The proportion of possession arrests from New York City grew ten-fold, from 0.7% to 7.4% of national arrests. This translates into more than 12% of the growth in national marijuana arrests between 1990 and 2002. While New York City represents approximately 3% of the nation's population and 2.1% of the nation's total arrests, more than 7% of all marijuana arrests in the entire country in 2002 occurred in New York City. These figures indicate a citywide policy that, in the process of executing a zero-tolerance policing model, has demonstrably shifted towards the targeting of marijuana users for arrest. Alternative enforcement strategies: domestic and international Although not all large American cities were experiencing as significant an upward turn in marijuana arrests as in New York City, the country was moving in that direction on a national scale. Domestically the rapid growth in marijuana arrests has led to a number of situations in which local officials have succumbed to the overwhelming increase in workload and have responded by demanding a change in practice. In 2000, local district attorneys in Texas declined to accept low-level drug prosecutions from federal agencies because they could not keep up with the number of arrests 36. One district attorney noted, "We wanted to do our share of fighting the war on drugs. But now it's too much" 37. Assessing the increase in marijuana arrests During the period after the beginning of the modern "drug war," a measurable shift in drug enforcement strategy could be identified. As seen previously in Figure 4, at the beginning of the 1980s, nearly three-quarters of all drug arrests were for marijuana; by the end of the decade that percentage had dropped to one-third. But by the early 1990s, drug enforcement relative to other arrests began to diminish. Rasmussen and Benson observe that between 1989 and 1990, the ratio of drug arrests to Index I crime arrests dropped by 24% 50. This led the authors to conclude that the "drug war" was winding down relative to general law enforcement trends, or at least shifting the way that it was being pursued. Marijuana and the court system Given the dramatic growth in marijuana arrests, it is instructive to examine how these cases have been handled by the court system. The primary source for national level sentencing data is the National Judicial Reporting Program, which issues a biennial survey of felony sentences in state courts 57. We collected NJRP data from 1990 and 2000, analyzing the processing of marijuana offenders in the state court system 58. Perhaps surprisingly considering the growth in the arrest rate, state court systems did not experience any rapid increase in marijuana offenders being sentenced for a felony offense. The proportion of all persons sentenced for a marijuana felony in state courts in 2000 was 3.6%, which is 39% higher than the proportion in 1990 (2.6%), but far below the 113% growth in arrests during this period. The key findings of the court analysis are the following: • System dismisses large number of arrestees, likely misdemeanors The state sentencing figures in 2000 indicate a similar pattern as in 1990, suggesting that pre-trial dismissals and the fact that most arrests were for low-level misdemeanors dramatically mediated the shift in law enforcement treatment of marijuana over the decade. For example, in 2000 there were 734,000 marijuana arrests and approximately 41,000 felony convictions in state and federal courts 59. Thus, only 1 of every 18 arrests results in some type of felony sentence. • Of those convicted of a felony, one-half to two-thirds sentenced to incarceration In 2000, persons convicted of felony marijuana offenses were likely to be incarcerated. Half (51%) of the convictions for possession led to a prison or jail term, as did two-thirds (63%) of the trafficking convictions. Overall, one-third of all felony marijuana convictions resulted in a prison term of at least one year. This rate was the same for both marijuana trafficking and possession, raising questions regarding the charging phase of the proceedings that will be discussed later. As seen in Table 2, the distribution of persons sentenced to prison for trafficking and possession is similar, with the only dramatic departure in the use of probation and fines for persons sentenced for a marijuana trafficking felony. Table 2 Felony State Sentences for Marijuana Convictions – 1990 and 2000 PRISON JAIL PROBATION 1990 2000 1990 2000 1990 2000 Possession 30% 32% 22% 19% 48% 49% Trafficking 31% 33% 42% 30% 27% 37% Conventional wisdom suggests that individuals sentenced to prison for possession are repeat offenders with significant criminal histories. Although this may be true of many sentences, some states mandate incarceration even for some types of first-time marijuana possession. In Alabama, a 2004 report by the state's sentencing commission found that 328 people were sentenced to prison for marijuana possession, and only one-third were repeat offenders 60. • Average sentence length upwards of two years Recent data on sentence length indicates that persons sentenced for a marijuana felony are likely to face sentences in the range of the national average for aggravated assault. In 2000, the average sentence for a person convicted of aggravated assault in a state court and sentenced to incarceration (prison or jail) was 37 months (median = 16 months), while the average sentence for persons sentenced to probation for a felony was 40 months (median = 36 months) 61. An analysis of those figures for persons sentenced for marijuana felonies indicate a similar sentencing range. The average sentence for persons convicted of a marijuana felony in state court in 2000 was 28 months (median = 12 months) for incarceration and 40 months (median = 36 months) for probation 62. Marijuana in a city court system: a case study There have been serious policy implications for criminal justice resources as a result of this shift in resources towards marijuana arrests. In New York City the increase in arrests due to the Giuliani-Bratton model of zero tolerance policing inundated the court system with marijuana cases. The number of arrests for marijuana increased 882% between 1990 and 2002, with an increase of 739% since Giuliani was elected in 1994, including a 1,877% increase in possession arrests 65. This contributed to a backup of the court system to such a degree that by 1999 the number of overall cases dismissed because the deadline for a "speedy trial" had passed was up 20% from 1993 66. Figure 9 Marijuana Offense Dispositions by Type – New York City, 1994 Marijuana Offense Dispositions by Type – New York City, 1994. Figure 10 Marijuana Offense Dispositions by Type – New York City, 2002 Marijuana Offense Dispositions by Type – New York City, 2002. Meanwhile, the pattern in dispositions for sales offenses remained relatively flat. Lower court dispositions grew by 5% while the number of upper court dispositions was too low to arrive at any accurate statistical conclusions. The impact of zero tolerance policing on the judicial system is immediately evident upon examining New York City court data: a more than six-fold increase in marijuana dispositions, with a 15-fold increase in possession dispositions. The majority of this growth was from cases which the prosecution decided not to proceed with charging, indicated by a 23-fold increase in marijuana cases dismissed in lower court. Marijuana and the correctional system The endpoint in the criminal justice system is corrections, where persons sentenced to supervision are either incarcerated in prison or jail, or in the community on probation or parole. Based on current prison population counts, we estimate that there are 27,900 persons in state and federal prison serving a sentence for which a marijuana violation is the controlling (or most serious) offense 67. This translates to a national estimated loss of more than $600 million per year 68. Twenty-three percent of marijuana offenders are incarcerated for a possession offense, 15% for possession with intent to distribute, and 59% for trafficking. Of the total, 40% are incarcerated for the first time, 48% are recidivists with no current or prior violent offense history, and 12% are recidivists with a past violent offense in their criminal history. Table 5 Marijuana Offenders in State and Federal Prison Total Marijuana Offenders in Prison 27,900 (100%) Total First-Time Marijuana Offenders in Prison 11,200 (40%) No weapon 10,400 (37%) No weapon, No importation 8,500 (30%) No weapon, No importation, No manufacturing 8,700 (30%) No weapon, No importation, No manufacturing, No laundering 8,300 (30%) No weapon, No importation, No manufacturing, No laundering, No distribution 6,600 (24%) In addition to persons serving a sentence in state or federal prison for a marijuana offense, there are a greater number of people on probation or parole or in jail. Although data for these populations is not available at the same level of detail as for persons in prison, we were able to create estimates of the number of people on probation or sentenced to jail for a marijuana offense using data from the National Judicial Reporting Program. Based on sentencing patterns in 2000, we estimate in 2003 that 36,000 people were on probation for a marijuana offense and an additional 4,600 were in jail serving a sentence for marijuana. These jail numbers do not include pre-trial detainees awaiting court proceedings. Thus, with half of the nearly 700,000 persons in jail awaiting trial, we estimate that the number of those persons who have been charged with a marijuana offense will equal or exceed the 4,600 people that have been sentenced. Discussion and recommendations It is apparent that despite a rapidly evolving national dialogue around marijuana use and a renewed discussion of alternatives to arrest and incarceration, during the 1990s the law enforcement community pursued marijuana offenses with a renewed vigor. Arrests for possession came to dominate nearly all of the growth in drug arrests during the period studied. Assertions that "nobody" goes to prison for marijuana are misguided and over-simplify the policy issue. Modest numbers of persons serving time in prison for a marijuana offense does not necessarily mean that the country is effectively calibrating its resources to address marijuana use. Law enforcement Prioritize arrest policies As has become policy in jurisdictions such as Seattle and Oakland, law enforcement agencies should categorize enforcement of marijuana possession as a low priority so as to conserve police resources for more serious offenses. Eliminate marijuana enforcement as a means of "broken windows" policing Marijuana arrests in some cities have been justified on the premise that arresting people for marijuana possession disrupts other, potentially more serious, behaviors. Such strategies result in substantially increased numbers of low-level marijuana arrests, with little evidence that they are actually effective in suppressing other criminal behaviors. Further, they contribute to the mistrust of law enforcement, particularly in communities of color that have been disproportionately targeted by such practices. Courts Exercise prosecutorial discretion to divert cases from the court system Few marijuana possession arrests result in any significant jail or prison time, yet they are cumulatively quite costly to the court system through the engagement of prosecutors, defense counsel, judges, and probation officers. Prosecutors should use their discretion in appropriate cases to drop charges and/or utilize community resources at the earliest possible stage of court proceedings in order to effect outcomes that represent a reasonable allocation of resources. Exercise prosecutorial discretion to reduce the number of felony convictions In most states felony drug convictions carry a set of collateral consequences in addition to whatever punishment is directly imposed. These may include a ban on receipt of welfare benefits, prohibition on living in public housing, loss of student loans, and loss of the right to vote. These punishments place additional burdens on ex-offenders attempting to reenter the community. Therefore, to the extent that the interests of justice can be served through a misdemeanor conviction rather than a felony, prosecutors should use their charging discretion to pursue such outcomes. Policy Encourage debate on marijuana policy National debate on drug issues has too often been characterized by "soundbites" that distort the policy issues under consideration. In the case of marijuana, proposals for decriminalization represent an alternative approach to current policy. Consideration of such options should be addressed in the context of the findings of this report, including the substantial criminal justice and social costs involved in the large-scale prosecution of marijuana offenders. National debate on marijuana policy, and drug policy generally, should be focused on the most effective ways of addressing substance abuse and the most efficient allocation of law enforcement resources. Federal government should respect local decisions For the period of the war on drugs, federal funding – currently $19 billion a year – has been allocated in a 2:1 ratio of enforcement to treatment/prevention 71. These priorities have resulted in a bloated prison population, with high proportions of low-level offenders. The Federal government should defer to local governments to develop their own approaches to marijuana use and respect the choices of state, county, and city policymakers. Federal funding should not be tied to a locality's decision to address marijuana use in only one fashion, namely law enforcement; rather, it should also encourage and adequately fund alternative strategies. A number of cities have raised concerns about the emphatic prosecution of marijuana as putting undue stress upon law enforcement resources, culminating in calls for and implementations of policy changes. The federal government should recognize these developments, and respect the choices of communities and local government agencies. Figure 2 Marijuana as a Proportion of Growth in Drug Arrests – 1990 to 2002 Marijuana as a Proportion of Growth in Drug Arrests – 1990 to 2002. Figure 6 Federal Drug Control Budget – 1991 to 2002** Federal Drug Control Budget – 1991 to 2002**. ** = Chart adapted from Pastore and Maguire, Table 1.12. Figure 8 Growth in Arrests in New York City – 1990 to 2002 Growth in Arrests in New York City – 1990 to 2002. Table 3 Average Felony Sentence (months) in State Court – 2000 All Offenses Aggravated Assault Marijuana Marijuana Possession Marijuana Trafficking Prison/Jail 36 (16)* 37 (16) 28 (12) 31 (16) 27 (9) Probation 38 (36) 40 (36) 40 (36) 42 (36) 39 (36) *Median in parentheses Table 4 Criminal History of Marijuana Offenders First-Timers Recidivist/Non-Violent Recidivist/Violent 40% 48% 12% Drug Cases, Sentences Up Sharply Since 1984 Cooper Washington Post 12462241 The Christian Science Monitor Breakfast Walters The Christian Science Monitor Index I crimes, generally considered the most serious crimes, are comprised of murder and non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Results from the 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: National Findings (Office of Applied Studies, NHSDA Series H-22, DHHS Publication No. SMA 03-3836) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration 2001 National Survey on Drug Use and Health Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Heroin – Changes in How It Is Used, 1992–2002 Marijuana and Youth. Working Paper No. 7703 Pacula Grossman Chaloupka O'Malley Johnston Farrelly Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research Monitoring the Future: National Survey Results on Drug Use, 1975–2003. Volume I: Secondary School Students Johnston O'Malley Bachman Schulenberg (NIH Publication No. 04-5507). Bethesda, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse. Table 5-4 Analyzing Illicit Drug Markets When Dealers Act With Limited Rationality Caulkins MacCoun The Law and Economics of Irrational Behavior Johnston Table 9-6 Individual Behaviors and Substance Use: The Role of Price Grossman Working Paper No. 10948 The Price of Illicit Drugs: 1981 through the Second Quarter of 2000 Office of National Drug Control Policy Table 9 NYPD View: New Procedures Credited with Crime Drop Ward American City and County Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Overview of Findings from the 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. (Office of Applied Studies, HHDSA Series H-21, DHHS Publication No. SMA 03-3774). Rockville, MD. Table 1.31A Assessing the Crack-Down on Marijuana in Maryland. [unpublished manuscript] Reuter Hirschfield Davies 2003 Racial Disproportionality of U.S. Prison Population Revisited Blumstein University of Colorado Law Review Pastore and Maguire, Table 1.12 The Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Legalization in Massachusetts The formula to calculate these estimates is adapted from the Miron JA [unpublished manuscript]; Miron creates cost estimates by analyzing the overall budget for each category (policing, courts, and corrections) and the proportion of arrests, convictions, and incarceration that is composed of marijuana offenses Rasmussen Benson The Economic Anatomy of a Drug War: Criminal Justice in the Commons Ibid 36 Police, Fire Departments See Shortages Across USA Hall USA Today Deterrence and Public Policy: Trade-Offs in the Allocation of Police Resources Benson Rasmussen Kim International Review of Law and Economics 10.1016/S0144-8188(97)00059-8 The Impact of Drug Enforcement on Crime: An Investigation of the Opportunity Cost of Police Resources Benson Leburn Rasmussen Journal of Drug Issues Drug Enforcement and Crime: Recent Evidence from New York State Shepard Blackley Social Science Quarterly, forthcoming. The authors note that an increase in drug possession arrests does not have a significant impact on assaults Ibid Rasmussen Benson 135 Entrepreneurial Police and Drug Enforcement Policy Mast Benson Rasmussen Public Choice 10.1023/A:1005183918319 New York City counties were excluded because we analyze the city data in the following section The symbolic targets being the ''squeegee men'' who aggressively pursued washing car windows at city street corners, but homeless people, panhandlers, street merchants, and marijuana smokers were also targeted Policing Disorder: Can We Reduce Serious Crime by Punishing Petty Offenses Spitzer cited in Harcourt Boston Review Office of the Attorney General, New York State: The New York City Police Department's ''Stop and Frisk'' Practices: A Report to the People of the State of New York from the Office of the Attorney General One Good Apple Pooley Time, as quoted in Karmen, A: New York Murder Mystery: The True Story Behind the Crime Crash of the 1990s Office of the Attorney General, New York State Ibid 93 Ruth Reitz The Challenge of Crime: Rethinking Our Response District Attorneys in Texas Say They Can't Prosecute Drug Cases Assigned by Federal Agents; They Get the Cases of Those Caught at Border with Smaller Amounts; Number of Arrests Has Soared Associated Press St. Louis Post-Dispatch Ibid City of Syracuse, Department of Audit Report on the Syracuse Police Department Activity for the Year Ended June 30, 2002 Ibid A Change in Marijuana Prosecution Eyed: Chcago Considers Bid to Issue Fines in Certain Cases Ferkenhoff Boston Globe A state-by-state list of initiatives that were on local and state ballots for the 2004 election is available online from Alternet. Marijuana Reform to Tap Grassroots Armentano http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/19441/ Ontario Backs Off Pot Arrests Brown Buffalo News Ibid Britain's Cannabis 'Safe Haven': Police in London's Gritty Brixton Neighbourhood are Losing the War on Drugs, so the Police Chief is Experimenting with not Enforcing Marijuana Laws Manasek Ottawa Citizen, News Britain to Stop Arresting Most Private Users of Marijuana Hoge The New York Times Section A Ibid Peter Hart Research Associates, Inc Drugs and Crime Across America: Police Chiefs Speak Out. A National Survey Among Chiefs of Police Ibid Ibid Rasmussen Benson 146 For an example of how the reduction in crime has altered policing patterns, see: Policing a City Where Streets Are Less Mean Wilson The New York Times Reuter Ibid 13 Ibid 2 Op. cit., Office of the Attorney General, New York State Reflecting on the Subject: A Critique of the Social Influence Conception of Deterrence, the Broken Windows Theory, and Order-Maintenance Policing New York Style Harcourt Michigan Law Review NATIONAL JUDICIAL REPORTING PROGRAM, 1990: [UNITED STATES] [Computer File]. Compiled by U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 2nd ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research [producer and distributor], 2000; and U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics. NATIONAL JUDICIAL REPORTING PROGRAM, 2000: [UNITED STATES] [Computer File]. Compiled by U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 2nd ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research [producer and distributor] U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics 2003 The most recent year available is 2000 [UNITED STATES] [Computer File]. Compiled by U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 2nd ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research [producer and distributor], 2003. Federal data from United States Sentencing Commission State-level data extracted from U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics. NATIONAL JUDICIAL REPORTING PROGRAM 2000 Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics, Table 33 The Alabama Sentencing Commission 2004 Annual Report: Recommendations for Reform of Alabama's Criminal Justice System Durose Langan Felony Sentences in State Courts, 2000 The figures calculated for this study use the same indicator variables as the Bureau of Justice Statistics study in an effort to permit comparison. The mean and median refer to the maximum sentence length in which the offense under discussion is the most serious This pattern of longer average sentences for possession cases is mirrored in the federal system for all drugs, not simply marijuana See Note 20 for discussion of methodology Data from the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services, Computerized Criminal History System Crackdown on Minor Offenses Swamps New York City Courts Rohde The New York Times ; Section A Harrison Beck This estimate is based on current population counts from Prisoners in 2003. Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics. NCJ 205335; 2004. The proportion of marijuana offenders was calculated using data from: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, and the U.S. Dept. of Justice, Federal Bureau of Prisons. SURVEY OF INMATES IN STATE AND FEDERAL CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES, 1997. [Computer File]. Compiled by U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research [producer and distributor] This estimate calculated using an average annual per inmate cost of $22, 000 This cohort is based on criteria used in Kingpins or Mules: An Analysis of Drug Offenders Incarcerated in Federal and State Prisons Sevigny Caulkins Criminology & Public Policy. Low-level drug offenders are defined as having "no current or prior violence in their records, no involvement in sophisticated criminal activity and no prior commitment." An individual engaged in sophisticated criminal activity is "a principal figure or prime motivator in the criminal organization or activity, including an individual who acted alone or directed the illicit activities of a criminal organization." See Dept. of Justice, An Analysis of Non-Violent Drug Offenders with Minimal Criminal Histories, 1994. (p. 2, 6) 'Broken Windows' or Incivilities Thesis Taylor Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement Enforcement includes domestic law enforcement, as discussed on pages 9–10, as well as international interdiction and supply reduction This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Help legalize marijuanaWays you can help legalize marijuana: |