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A Drug Addiction Treatment Center Can Keep Your Loved One Out of Prison
If you're worried about someone you know who's taking drugs
getting into criminal activity, you have every reason to be. The number of
people in prison for drug-related offenses highlights just how many people
are actually taking drugs and getting involved in crime – often
simply to support their own habit. The prison population is such a heavy
financial burden, the laws are starting to loosen up. And, thanks to drug
courts, some offenders can now go into a drug addiction
treatment center instead of prison.
Lightening up on the
laws is definitely called for. A recent article in the magazine Mother
Jones chronicled some of the legal changes in the last 20 years and the
effect they've had on the prison population.
In 1986, for
example, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act made the sentence for selling or
possessing crack cocaine 100 times stricter than for powdered cocaine. The
prison population doubled over the next ten years.
Two years
later, the Omnibus Anti-Drug Abuse Act mandated that anyone even loosely
connected with the sale or possession of certain quantities of crack would
also get a five-year sentence. In other words, if you lived with someone
who had five grams of crack on the premises, even if it had nothing to do
with you, you could go to prison for five years. In the six years following
that law, the number of people in prison for drug offenses quadrupled. And
offenders still didn't have the option of a drug addiction
treatment center. That didn't start for another ten or twelve
years.
In 1994, the three-strikes law was enacted in California
making the sentence for a third felony conviction 25 years to life.
According to Mother Jones, one such offender was a homeless man who tried
to take food from a church. Within a year or so, the three-strikes law was
in 24 states.
These laws, and there are many more, are a large
part of the reason one in ten Americans is now in prison.
How
many of those people would be better off in a drug addiction treatment
center? And if these are just the people who got caught, how many more
people are out there who also need a drug addiction treatment center and
are likely to wind up in prison instead?
Some prisoners are now
being released early. Some are getting the rehab treatment they need. So
things are changing. But if changes in drug laws can create this kind of
effect, it's clear that we need to spend a lot more money on drug
addiction treatment centers if we want to spend less on prisons, the
justice system and law enforcement.
Investing in high quality,
successful drug addiction treatment centers could have a huge impact on our
faltering economy. It would also reduce drug addiction and crime –
and we spend billions on that in addition to the legal and prison system
costs - and we'd save a lot of lives in the process instead of taking
drug addicts and turning them into drug addicts who are also hardened
criminals.
Can someone you know who's taking drugs become a
criminal? Absolutely. Get them into a drug addiction treatment center
before that happens. They need drug rehab, not prison.

