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Allhands: 5-year minimum prison sentence for selling fentanyl would only make things worse

z_98903.php created March 03, 2018
  The "War on Drugs" has been a dismal failure since it was created 100 years ago with the passage of the "1914 Harrison Narcotics Tax Act"

In this editorial Joanna Allhands seems to agree with met that the newest Arizona war on fentanyl users will also be a dismal failure.

If you ask me all drugs need to be re-legalized.

Drug abuse should be a problem between you and your doctor. Not you and a cop who wants to shake you down for money or put you in prison.


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Allhands: 5-year minimum prison sentence for selling fentanyl would only make things worse

Joanna Allhands, opinion columnist Published 10:50 a.m. MT Feb. 26, 2018 | Updated 10:53 a.m. MT Feb. 26, 2018

My husband's best friend was addicted to fentanyl. He died of a drug overdose in 2014.

You'd think I'd like to see tougher prison sentences for anyone who illegally sells or manufactures such a dangerous drug.

But House Bill 2241 won't make an appreciable dent in the opioid epidemic. It does not distinguish between the grizzled kingpins who peddle death and the low-end dealers who ended up selling fentanyl, carfentanil and heroin to support their habit.

Everyone caught selling for the first time would go to prison for a minimum of five years. No exceptions.

And the reality is most of them won't get the help they need while they're there.

Only 2 percent get treatment in prison A recent Arizona Department of Corrections report found that while 77 percent of inmates need substance-abuse treatment, only 2 percent are actually getting it.

HB 2241 includes no cash to boost treatment for inmates. So, after five years, those who went in addicted will emerge from prison with the same problems – and a record that would make it even more difficult for them to turn their lives around.

In other words, we'd only be increasing the chances of a person returning to prison, at great cost to all of us.

Why would we do that?

Let's be clear: I'm not saying that all first-time drug dealers should get a get-out-of-jail-free card. But leave that discretion to judges who can weigh the particulars of their cases.

A blanket sentence, no matter what, just fills our prisons without actually helping those that are there.

Reach Allhands at joanna.allhands@arizonarepublic.com.

 


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