Drug War Clock
It is Thu Sep 9 2010
Money Spent
on the War On Drugs this Year
Federal
State
Total
The U.S. federal government spent over $19 billion dollars in 2003 on the War on Drugs, at a rate of about $600 per second. The budget has since been increased by over a billion dollars.
Source:
Office of National Drug Control Policy
State and local governments spent at least another 30 billion.
Source: National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University: "
Shoveling Up: The Impact of Substance Abuse on State Budgets
," January, 2001.
Source: Jeffrey A. Miron, Department of Economics, Harvard University: "
The Budgetary Implications of Drug Prohibition
," December 2008.
People
Arrested for Drug Law Offenses
this Year
Arrests for drug law violations this year are expected to exceed the 1,841,182 arrests of 2007. Law enforcement made more arrests for drug abuse violations (an estimated 1.8 million arrests, or 13.0 percent of the total number of arrests) than for any other offense in 2007.
Someone is arrested for violating a drug law every 17 seconds.
Source:
Uniform Crime Reports, Federal Bureau of Investigation
People
Arrested for Cannabis
Law Offenses this Year
Police arrested an estimated 872,720 persons for cannabis violations in 2007, the highest annual total ever recorded in the United States, according to statistics compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Of those charged with cannabis violations, approximately 89 percent, 775,137 Americans were charged with possession only. An American is now arrested for violating cannabis laws every 38 seconds.
Source:
Uniform Crime Reports, Federal Bureau of Investigation
People
Incarcerated
for Drug Law Offenses this Year
Since December 31, 1995, the U.S. prison population has grown an average of 43,266 inmates per year. About 25 per cent are sentenced for drug law violations.
Source:
U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Preventable
HIV Infections
this Year
Nearly 4,000 new HIV infections can be prevented before the year 2011 if the federal ban on needle exchange funding is lifted this year.
About 10 new cases could be prevented every day.
Source:
Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California, San Francisco
Related Links
Add the Drug War Clock to Your Website!
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Drug War Facts
Incarcerated America
Throwing Away the Key or the Taxpayers' Money?
(PDF)
The Budgetary Implications of Drug Prohibition
(PDF)
Revising the Federal Drug Control Budget Report
(PDF)
What Does The Drug War Cost?
The November Coalition
The Sentencing Project
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