Gotchyer Drug War Roundup
The latest goings-on in that other war:
• A member of the Kuwaiti royal family has been sentenced to death for drug trafficking.
• The Atlanta Journal Constitution delves into the culture of the city's narcotics policing, and finds a system rife with perverse incentives. The paper finds that the raid that led to the shooting death of Kathryn Johnston promised a kilo of cocaine—a one in 1,000 bust. The paper found that pressure to make arrests and the lure of the professional esteem that comes with a big bust encourage police to take shortcuts and manipulate the facts to secure a search warrant. None of this is new or unique to Atlanta, of course.
• GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney has hired Mel Sembler as a top money man for his campaign. Sembler, you may remember, is a fierce drug warrior, and in the 1980s and 90s ran Straight, Inc., the string of "tough love" teen rehab centers frequently accused of child abuse.
• Outstanding piece attacking the drug war in the NY Times over the weekend from guest columnist Orlando Patterson.
• A new report comes to the striking conclusion that—surprise!—Canada's war on drugs is an "utter failure."
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