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Change the Focus on Drugs
By Eric E. Sterling, Letter to the Editor at The Christian Science Monitor, September 23, 2002

More than 20 years ago, when I was counsel to the House Judiciary Committee, we began investigating the many ways that cocaine was smuggled into the country, including the go-fast boats described in your Sept. 18 article, "Super-speedboats piloting Colombia's cocaine trade."

Drug enforcement is supposed to drive the price of prohibited drugs up, but over the past 20 years, the wholesale and retail price of cocaine and heroin in the US has fallen almost steadily.

Ironically, the price of cigarettes has been driven up by increased taxation, encouraging millions of smokers to quit; and honest antitobacco advertising is reducing teenage smoking.

Drug prohibition can never significantly reduce the availability of drugs. Legal regulation and controls will give the US and Colombian governments the modern tools to better control the cocaine trade, the abuse of cocaine, and the flow of money that finances the terrorist armies undermining Colombia's society and economy.

Isn't it time that we demand a realistic strategy to control drugs, rather than a feel-good crusade that doesn't work?

Eric E. Sterling
President of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
Silver Spring, Md.



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