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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: WEB: Drug War Briefs: Strike Hard
Title:US: WEB: Drug War Briefs: Strike Hard
Published On:2001-07-03
Source:AlterNet (US Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 15:07:56
DRUG WAR BRIEFS: STRIKE HARD

"We can fill the jails every day but that doesn't mean law enforcement is
effective." - Ron Pitts, deputy director of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics

June 25 - The Southeast Missourian reports: A half-century past its prime
as one of the nation's top lead-mining towns, the rural community of Bonne
Terre envisioned newfound prosperity when it was chosen as home for the
state's largest and costliest prison.

Instead, the city is in debt, new businesses are near broke and euphoria
has turned to disappointment. Six years after the grand announcement, the
$168 million prison still has no inmates -- and no scheduled opening date.

The prison will remain closed because the cash-strapped Missouri government
cannot afford the $12 million needed to equip it or the nearly $45 million
required annually to run it.

In January 2000, Jayne Bess opened a 40-room Super 8 Motel just a little
down the road from the prison, counting on inmate visitors and prison
suppliers to help fill the rooms. "A lot of business people had high hopes
... we're very disappointed, we're very let down," Bess said.

June 26 - China marks a U.N. international anti-drug day by holding rallies
where piles of narcotics are burned, and 60 people are executed for drug
offenses. Chinese authorities have executed hundreds of people since April
in a crime crackdown labeled "Strike Hard" that allows for speeded up
trials and broader use of the death penalty.

Thousands of people attend a rally at a stadium in Kunming, capital of
southwestern Yunnan province, where 20 suspected drug traffickers are
sentenced to death, then executed at a separate location, with a bullet to
the back of the head.

June 27 - Newsday, in an article titled "Census: War on Drugs Hits Blacks,"
reports that black men make up less than 3 percent of Connecticut's
population but account for 47 percent of inmates in prisons, jails and
halfway houses, 2000 census figures show.

Overall in Connecticut, one in 11 black men between the ages of 18 and 64
is behind bars. Nationwide, the Justice Department reported that 12 percent
of all black men between the ages of 20 and 34 were locked up last year.

"I don't think anyone intended it to be this way, but if you were trying to
design a system to incarcerate as many African-American and Latino men as
possible, I don't think you could have designed a better system," said
state Rep. Michael Lawlor, co-chairman of the Connecticut Legislature's
Judiciary Committee.

June 27 - Jeff and Tracy Jarvis, both 39, of Bend, OR, take out a full-page
$2555 ad in the Willamette Week, proclaiming "We're Jeff and Tracy. We're
your good neighbors. We smoke pot." The simple ad, complete with a photo of
the self-employed middle-class white couple, continues with text
encouraging tolerance for peaceful marijuana smokers, while highlighting
their struggle to find a media outlet that would let them air their views.

The couple were turned down by Portland's rock radio stations KUFO, KNRK,
KGON, Seattle's KISW, and Bend's KXIX. The Sunday Oregonian also found
their ad "unsuitable for publication." Only Portland's alternative
newspaper, the Willamette Week, would run the ad.

June 30 - The El Paso Times reports: Here's something to ponder as the
United States prepares to celebrate Independence Day on July 4. Four in 10
Americans believe the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution actually
goes too far in the rights that it guarantees, according to a recent survey.

The poll, conducted by the First Amendment Center and paid for by the
Freedom Forum, also indicates that seven in 10 Americans said it's
important for the government to "hold the media in check."

July 1 - The Washington Post reports: Two men in Southwest Washington, DC
are the first in the District to be arrested under a new law regarding
felony possession of marijuana, police said.

Jason Johnson, 37, and Dana Roach, 39, are to be arraigned on charges of
felony possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute, police said.
Under the new law, possession of more than a half-pound of marijuana is a
felony punishable by up to five years in prison.
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