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Sunday, April 11, 2004 |
The Drug Testing Industry - fertile ground for corruption?
Check out this investigative report by Gwen Filosa in today's Times Picayune.
For years before his retirement as Orleans Parish district attorney, Harry Connick beat the drum for a Massachusetts company [Psychemedics] that uses hair samples to test people for drug use. He spoke out publicly in favor of testing students' hair and on occasion escorted its officers to meetings with officials and opinion-shapers in the media. ...
In December, Connick was made a Psychemedics board member at an annual stipend of $20,000. Last month the pot was sweetened further when Psychemedics gave Connick stock options for 5,150 shares...
Several private New Orleans schools, such as De La Salle High School, have been testing students for drugs for several years. De La Salle was one of the first schools that Connick helped acquire grant money for drug testing by Psychemedics.
But Orleans Parish school officials scrapped a program that started in two schools in 2002 after many parents expressed a distrust of the tests' accuracy. Jefferson Parish stepped up to take the grant money Connick had put together for drug testing. The Jefferson program is managed by Connick's nephew, Jefferson Parish District Attorney Paul Connick.
The article also noted that when he was named to the board, Connick "-- never known to by shy with the media -- kept the news to himself."
This points out a fact that often gets neglected in this whole testing issue: Drug Testing has become a huge business. There are thousands of companies, plus drug testing associations and advocacy groups, campaign contributions, and corruption.
1990 drug testing was estimated to be a $300 million industry (Zimmer and Jacobs "The business of drug testing: technological innovation and social control."). In 2001, Sandard and Poors estimated the industry at $5.9 billion, and it's been growing exponentially since then.
The recent push by the Drug Czar for drug testing in schools means untold new profits for this industry -- all paid for by taxpayers at the expense of education programs. I can't wait to see how much he earns when he leaves the White House.
The ACLU has also questioned some of the workplace research on increased productivity and lowered absenteeism touted by drug-testing enthusiasts as being scientifically tainted by funding from the drug-testing industry. "My impression, quite frankly, is that it has been the government and the testing industry that have driven this thing, more than the employers," said Lewis Maltby, director fo the ACLU's national task force on civil liberties in the workplace.
The article in New Orleans is about one possibly corrupt former district attorney. But that's just the tip of the iceberg in this industry.
4:46:07 PM | drug policy | Links | permalink |
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From the mouths of...
Even this youngster gets it:
I think drugs should be legal because of all the people that use drugs. The war on drugs takes a lot of money from the government that could be used for other purposes, such as education. Cops spend time trying to bust drug users instead of real crimes like rapes, murders and child abductions.
Since drugs are illegal, smugglers must smuggle the drugs into our country and that would cause violence. But if drugs were legal, there wouldn't be a need to smuggle drugs in and have conflict about the drugs.
Government could tax the drugs if they were legal. If companies make drugs, it will make the drugs safer because of better and cleaner equipment and supplies. There would still be an age limit if drugs were legal.
- Tony Wang, eighth-grader, Pershing Middle School
1:29:02 PM | drug policy | Links | permalink |
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Deterrence
TalkLeft has a post on handling drug dealers in Vietnam.
Our lawmakers seem to think if they just pass some harsher laws, they'll be able to deter drug dealers. And yet, in Vietnam, despite 18 executions already this year, it didn't deter this 48-year-old woman from transporting 3/4 of a pound of heroin, even though she knew she'd be tied to a stake and shot by a firing squad.
You want to deter criminal drug dealers? Eliminate their profits by ending the drug war.
1:27:56 PM | drug policy | Links | permalink |
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More from so-called Representative Souder
LastOneSpeaks discusses more of the Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy and Human Resources hearings on medicinal marijuana (see my report on Kampia's testimony) and gives the link to the detailed transcript of oral hearings.
You get a real sense of the intent of the hearings when you read the opening statement:
SOUDER: Subcommittee will now come to order. Good afternoon, and thank you all for coming. This hearing will address a highly controversial topic: the use of marijuana for so-called medical purposes. [emphasis added]
1:26:08 PM | drug policy | Links | permalink |
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