Category Archives: Drugs

Lessons in Faking It

Three University of Oregon basketball players, who crowded into a bathroom with a drunken young woman and treated her like a glory hole, thought she was being a good sport. “It seemed like she was cool with it …,” Dominic Artis is quoted as saying in a Eugene Police Department report, referring to the UO freshman […]

The Messes We Leave Behind

Suicide is a tough sell, even in Oregon, which has a death-with-dignity law. Everybody wants to save a life. “We will help you cross this bridge,” says the signs on the Vista Avenue Viaduct in Portland. A phone number to a suicide prevention hotline is posted. Portland has 11 bridges crossing the Willamette River, and […]

Freedom is the New Prison

Fortunately for Piper Kerman, Eric Holder was not Attorney General in 2004 when she was sentenced to federal prison for a “drug-related crime.” Had she been spared prison, she would not be a media celebrity now and author of a best-selling memoir. A “drug-related crime” and 13 months in prison were good for Kerman. It […]

America’s Marathon on Race

They were young, male and they bore a terrible trauma on their souls. Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev? The Central Park Five? In 21st Century America any disaffected male minority can lay claim to ancestral suffering to explain bad behavior. Here in Oregon, the state Senate recently passed a bill requiring that any new legislation include […]

Breaking Weak on Drugs

Whenever my younger brother is asked if he has ever smoked, his standard reply is, “I smoked a pack a day until I turned 18.” Our parents were addicted to nicotine, a habit my brother and I were forced to endure. I learned something early on from my parents’ addiction: If you never start a […]

‘Won’t Back Down’ Wimps Out

Years ago when I was a newspaper reporter in San Bernardino, Calif., I covered a story at one of the city’s high schools and needed to use the girls lavatory. Inside the restroom, I found that the stall doors to all of the toilets had been removed. There was no privacy. What happened, I asked […]

Rodney King’s ‘Junkyard of Dreams’

The last time I saw Rodney King was in a small courtroom in Fontana, Calif., east of L.A. It was seven years after the riot that correctly bears his name. He was wearing shoes that looked like Bruno Magli and a suit made of fine cloth, the kind that drapes just so. He still had […]

AG’s Race Goes Up in Smoke

If politics makes for strange bedfellows, Ellen Rosenblum’s husband might be wondering who she’s curling up with, now that she’s running for Oregon Attorney General. Or perhaps Richard Meeker doesn’t care. As publisher of Willamette Week newspaper he’ll gladly take money from advertisers selling the hottest girls (“Give in to your wildest fantasies!”) or pushing […]

Surrendering to Drugs

Just say no to drug enforcement. That’s what the Oregon legislature is contemplating if it wipes out regional drug task forces. Why don’t lawmakers admit that the war on drugs is over; the dealers and their drugs won. The timing’s good, what with all the attention that Whitney Houston’s death is receiving. The co-chairs of […]

Hold the Applause

Failure can hide in what passes for “success” stories. Like the story Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schrunk told recently about a graduate of Drug Court. Speaking to the Portland City Club, Schrunk described how a man holding a baby, and accompanied by an attractive woman and an older couple, approached him at a Drug […]