You might not want to believe it, but the law enforcement agencies in the United States do not actually care about the health or social ills attributed to the use of illicit drugs. The fact is, America and her War On Drugs has been an absolute failure. Moreover, it is quite certain that the failure has been intentional, contrived, and orchestrated right down to the requirement for a drug assessment Minneapolis Minnesota.
If anyone has been forced to sit through impersonal drug and alcohol classes for a DUI, then they are aware that in the eyes of the State, ANY drug or alcohol use is abuse. There was a time when a prescription could keep one in good stead with the law. However, with the widespread prescribing of opiate drugs speeding toward the black market, even a person holding a legitimate prescription can be harassed the same as any addict.
Methadone patients have become a group targeted by law enforcement. Not only do State officials take children into foster care because parents are on the methadone program, but if any accusation gets made that they sold or even just shared their pills, they can be charged with felonies based on nothing more than hearsay or a coerced admission. Even with a prescription, assessors are still paid to report that the accused needs treatment.
Once a problem has been established, whether real or imagined, the accused is required to pursue whatever treatment plan is proposed. Again, this is done largely at their own expense, separate from any fine or probationary fee. It is not uncommon for these assessments to demand a person report themselves to a treatment center for up to two years.
The treatment centers are hundreds of miles from where they live. Often they will house the individual and provide them with employment, but the center controls their money. They pay fines and fees to meet their probationary requirements, but they also keep a goodly portion for themselves, and leave little to no saved by the end of this treatment that allows them limited liberties and almost no privacy.
A town who has been told they need to clean up the neighborhood has only to trump up charges on the poorer members of their community and ship them out of state while they permit repossession courts and tax liens take care of the rest. Even after the treatment, that person now has a forced interest to stay where they are to keep their low-wage job assignment.
There is a need for such treatment in some cases, but people are being sold down this river for charges that are no more than traffic tickets. Even pedestrians find themselves being stalled and shaken down by officers bent on feeding this system. Only the most extreme addicts require this level of supervision, and it should only be done with their consent.
It is not difficult to identify these communities where this is happening. There are suddenly four or more police departments in the small district, and the officers literally hunt down anyone driving a car that is more than 10 years old. They then proceed to search basically every vehicle, and clearly aim to make some form of an arrest at every stop if they can possibly get away with it.
If anyone has been forced to sit through impersonal drug and alcohol classes for a DUI, then they are aware that in the eyes of the State, ANY drug or alcohol use is abuse. There was a time when a prescription could keep one in good stead with the law. However, with the widespread prescribing of opiate drugs speeding toward the black market, even a person holding a legitimate prescription can be harassed the same as any addict.
Methadone patients have become a group targeted by law enforcement. Not only do State officials take children into foster care because parents are on the methadone program, but if any accusation gets made that they sold or even just shared their pills, they can be charged with felonies based on nothing more than hearsay or a coerced admission. Even with a prescription, assessors are still paid to report that the accused needs treatment.
Once a problem has been established, whether real or imagined, the accused is required to pursue whatever treatment plan is proposed. Again, this is done largely at their own expense, separate from any fine or probationary fee. It is not uncommon for these assessments to demand a person report themselves to a treatment center for up to two years.
The treatment centers are hundreds of miles from where they live. Often they will house the individual and provide them with employment, but the center controls their money. They pay fines and fees to meet their probationary requirements, but they also keep a goodly portion for themselves, and leave little to no saved by the end of this treatment that allows them limited liberties and almost no privacy.
A town who has been told they need to clean up the neighborhood has only to trump up charges on the poorer members of their community and ship them out of state while they permit repossession courts and tax liens take care of the rest. Even after the treatment, that person now has a forced interest to stay where they are to keep their low-wage job assignment.
There is a need for such treatment in some cases, but people are being sold down this river for charges that are no more than traffic tickets. Even pedestrians find themselves being stalled and shaken down by officers bent on feeding this system. Only the most extreme addicts require this level of supervision, and it should only be done with their consent.
It is not difficult to identify these communities where this is happening. There are suddenly four or more police departments in the small district, and the officers literally hunt down anyone driving a car that is more than 10 years old. They then proceed to search basically every vehicle, and clearly aim to make some form of an arrest at every stop if they can possibly get away with it.
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