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Preventing Drug Use by Giving Dealers a Second Chance
February 4, 2009

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News Summary

Few drug dealers get rich working the street corners, and many can be turned from a life of crime if given an opportunity to do so, according to researcher David Kennedy.

Newsweek reported Feb. 9 that Kennedy has become an influential voice in the crime-prevention community because his approach to fighting drugs has had proven results. He has persuaded police departments to work with communities rather than acting like an occupying army. Most significantly, he endorses giving dealers a second chance by confronting them with evidence of their crimes but not prosecuting, a tactic that has helped engender community support and cut drug use and crime significantly in communities where it has been tried.

In High Point, N.C, for example, police won community trust by spreading the word that they would give young dealers a chance to reform but crack down hard if they didn't take advantage. Within four years, most of the drug dealers were off the streets, and violent crime had fallen 57 percent. Kennedy's tactics also have been employed successfully in Atlanta, Seattle, Nashville, and other cities.

Part of what Kennedy discovered is that a surprisingly small number of people are responsible for violence in communities, making for a manageable policing problem if the community is engaged.

"We've been in this cycle in which law enforcement pushed harder and harder and harder, which drives the community further and further away," Kennedy said. "That creates additional space for the relatively few bad guys to operate, which makes law enforcement push harder and makes the community step further back. We're in this spiral of decline, and the great revelation of the High Point work was that we can consciously step out of that spiral and, in fact, reverse it." 

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Ruth P. on 05 Feb 09 08:29 AM EST
My grandson is now in the Peden Program, which is sponsored by the Texas Department of Corrections after he realized that he could not "cure" himself. He has advanced through the program and should finish within the six month period. However, should he need additional help, he will stay for an additional six months. The program is from 6 - 12 months. He elected this program because he knew he had a problem with drugs. Most inmates elect probation over treatment. Please keep him in your prayers.

Posted by Leslie Basden on 05 Feb 09 10:23 AM EST
Wow, what a breath of fresh air to see another approach to dealers than prison, prison, prison. Dealers are absolutely obsessed with the lifestyle and NEED something other than temporary separation from the object of their obsession.

Posted by SterlingC on 05 Feb 09 11:01 AM EST
I am always encouraged when I read about the success of law-enforcement, especially when it is about drug use and violence. I am an advocate for treatment vs. incarceration. I would like to challenge Mr. Kennedy to do a folow-up survey in High Point, now five years later. I am a resident and am not seeing it now. Nevertheless, some relief is better than none.

Posted by Gloria M. on 05 Feb 09 11:09 AM EST
This sounds great. Wish someone could convince New Mexico to get on this program. My grandson was recently sentenced there for 108 years with all but 15 suspended. This was his first criminal arrest ever, no weapons, no violence, no gang activity. When they brought a movie camera and broke through his door they found him with only around one hundred dollars which is all the money he had and 15 grams of meth. However, not what they reported. He lived in a rented house in the lower part of town and had nothing of great value. However, he was reported to make thousands a week. He begged for treatment and we begged for treatment for him. His appointed lawyer said he had been picked to be the poster person for cleaning up drugs in the city. It does seem some have found these people at the bottom can not fight back so an easy target for some to further their careers. Someone, please convince New Mexico to really try to solve the problem.

Posted by Jim Sharp on 05 Feb 09 11:57 AM EST
Wow! A rational approach to our drug problem instead of demonizing people caught up in the drug trade or simply writing them off based on ideology or dogma. Let's let data rather than dogma guide us out the quagmire we find ourselves in.

Posted by Rob H. on 05 Feb 09 07:56 PM EST
But did it work? How many people who took the "second chance" stay out of trouble? I want to like this idea, but also don't want to give drug dealers a free pass for their first offense, if there's no change in behavior. As long as someone caught dealing TWICE faces charges for both offenses, I'm good with this solution. But remember, folks, this is about drug dealers..not addicts. And without the threat of prosecution, this won't work.

Posted by Hey...Hey... on 09 Feb 09 01:26 PM EST
I want to like this story but it is so incomplete. The "Second Chance" is comprised of simply saying, "Don't do this again?". What? Where is the alternative job offer? The people I have worked with, trying to help them, are very quick to say that "any" other option to earn a real living would be welcomed but who is going to hire an "ex-dealer, ex-con" with a record? Even a couple of trips to the pen hasn't made incarceration a valid deterent for them... so what are they to do to earn a living in that situation? I wish I had an answer. We are not talking about finding secure, paying jobs for just a couple of guys here, but many hundreds if not thousands, just in our city.

Posted by x-dealer/addict on 21 Feb 09 07:36 PM EST
I am an x-meth dealer who dealt soly to support my addiction and I spent 5 years in prison/parole. I now work at a treatment center with adolescents. We are not all bad people, some of us are just on the wrong road. What I learned doing what I did, has helped save many kids from making the same mistakes I made

Posted by Jon H. on 23 Feb 09 11:18 AM EST
X-dealer/addict, thank you for giving back! I too am an ex-dealer (of pot) and now work in a court supervised treatment program. For me, dealing was something that had to be addressed in rehab. It was quick, and easy money and I sure as hell wasn't making that much money for min. wage at the local fast food place. I now work 2 part time jobs, and still don't make as much money as I did 7 years ago when I was dealing, but I now know that the honest way of earning money is the best way! I think this idea is a great one! I'm sure that the judge will look at the "repeat offender" and give them a max. sentence if they don't make the best out of their second chance.

Posted by David doughty on 31 Jul 09 11:39 AM EDT
thats a great idea

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