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The drug war, and the hard-nosed zealots who wage it, have reached
new lows in Massachusetts.
The war on drugs reached the pinnacle of cruelty when 18-year-old Mitchell
Lawrence was sentenced to two years in jail for selling a teaspoonful of marijuana
to an undercover police officer for $20.
On June 30, 2004, detective Felix Aguirre, employed by the Drug Task Force,
was assigned the duty of going undercover to buy drugs from kids who hung out
in a parking lot in Berkshire County in Massachusetts. Merchants had complained
to police about the kids. Mitchell Lawrence was there with his pipe and a few
buds of marijuana. He had no idea the parking lot was less than 1,000 feet from
a preschool located in the basement of a church, nor did he know this parking
lot was the site of a police sting operation.
Aguirre approached Mitchell and asked him if he had any weed. Mitchell pulled
out a small bag of marijuana. The cop offered him $20. Mitchell hesitated; Aguirre
insisted. Mitchell, who had seen Aguirre hanging out with other kids, motioned
the cop to follow him up the street where he intended to smoke with him. Aguirre
waved the $20 in his face. Mitchell, who was broke at the time, took the money,
the first time he had ever accepted money in exchange for marijuana.
In the months that followed, Aguirre approached Mitchell again for marijuana.
This time, however, Mitchell refused. Weeks later, a crew of undercover cops
stormed Mitchell's home and placed him under arrest. Mitchell was found guilty
of distribution of marijuana, committing a drug violation within a drug-free
school zone and possession.
On March 22, 2006, Mitchell Lawrence was sentenced to two years in prison.
While this outrageous case happened in a sleepy burg in Massachusetts, the
case of Mitchell Lawrence is one of countless tales of drug war madness that
takes place on America's streets daily.
Mitchell Lawrence's story was eerily familiar to me. In 1985, I was the subject
of a police sting operation after passing an envelope containing four ounces
of cocaine to undercover officers in Mount Vernon, New York. I was set up by
someone who offered me $500 to transport the package. The individual who introduced
me to the cop was an informant facing life in prison. He was offered a deal
-- the more people he helped ensnare, the less time he would serve. I received
a sentence of 15 years to life under New York's draconian Rockefeller Drug Laws.
Mitchell Lawrence's disproportionate sentence was handed down one day before
the release of a national report by the Justice Policy Institute (JPI) titled,
"Disparity by Design: How Drug-free Zone Laws Impact Racial Disparity and
Fail to Protect Youth," which includes research from Massachusetts.
The JPI study, commissioned by the Drug Policy Alliance, found that drug-free
zone laws do not serve their intended purpose of protecting youth from drug
activity. The Massachusetts data on drug enforcement in three cities found that
less than one percent of the drug-free zone cases actually involved sales to
youth. Additionally, Massachusetts researchers found that nonwhites were more
likely to be charged with an offense that carries drug-free zone enhancement
than whites engaged in similar conduct. Blacks and Hispanics account for just
20 percent of Massachusetts residents, but 80 percent of drug-free zone cases.
"School zone laws have remained unchanged in Massachusetts because the
legislature has been promised that prosecutors use discretion," said Whitney
A. Taylor, executive director of the Drug Policy Forum of Massachusetts. "Unfortunately,
the life of a young man has been sacrificed, proving that discretion is not
being used, and that the law must be changed."
Mitchell Lawrence was not the only person arrested in an undercover drug operation
in the summer of 2004. There were a total of 18 others, including five young
people who are still awaiting trial for alleged sales that took place at the
same Great Barrington parking lot.
District Attorney David F. Capeless is the man behind Berkshire County enforcement
and entrapment. Capeless is a hard-nosed drug war zealot, who insists that these
laws are effective in combating drug use -- even if it means ruining a young
man's life in the process.
Mitchell Lawrence was set to graduate from high school this spring. Instead,
he will watch his fellow classmates graduate from his prison cell.
The common thread between my case, Mitchell's case and drug-free school zones
nationally is the abuse of power from the prosecutors through the application
of mandatory minimums. These laws handcuff judges and force them to impose harsh
sentences.
Mitchell Lawrence's conviction inspired a group of concerned Berkshire County
residents to seek Capeless' ouster in the upcoming district attorney race. Defense
attorney Judith Knight answered the call to fill this role. Knight, a former
assistant district attorney for Middlesex County, said Mitchell Lawrence's conviction
was "the tipping point" for her decision to run against Capeless in
the upcoming Democratic primary election in September.
"A tough prosecutor is tough on crime and also has the ability to demonstrate
compassion and insight when the case calls for it," Knight says. She hopes
to follow in the footsteps of David Soares, who ran for district attorney and
defeated Paul Clyne in Albany, New York, in 2004. Soares ran a race primarily
on the platform of Rockefeller Drug Law reform. He easily defeated the sitting
district attorney, who refused to change his views on the draconian drug law
legislation of New York.
It is heartening that communities like Berkshire County are fighting back and
attempting to hand reckless district attorneys and other politicians the pink
slip. Choosing to destroy lives and indiscriminately apply laws does more harm
than good, ultimately, and it doesn't make our streets any safer.
Anthony Papa is the author of "15
To Life: How I Painted My Way To Freedom" (Feral House).