Monday, July 30, 2007

Canton Bar Problem

Canton cracks down on unruly bar crowd
Bars, residents hire off-duty police to curb unruly crowds

By Julie Turkewitz Sun Reporter

Residents and bar-goers on Boston Street will see new faces - and more police uniforms - in Canton this week. Two off-duty police officers will begin patrolling the nearby Northshore at Canton townhouse community Wednesday, and instead of the usual bouncers or security guards, Good Love Bar, a Boston Street hangout, has already hired two of its own off-duty officers. Huckas, a sports bar and hookah lounge, has also agreed to hire uniformed officers, according to officials.

After years of complaints about rowdiness spilling out onto Boston Street, the two bars agreed to pay for officers as a concession to residents. The endeavor, however, is expensive, costing bars hundreds of dollars a week and raising questions about who should be responsible for the actions of partyers pouring into the street.

"We get 3,000 people coming on the weekends, all drunk, who don't live here," said Leigh Ratiner, the former Northshore president who helped lead an effort to step up Boston Street security. "People with guns, people who pee on your geraniums, people who scream in the street."

The idea is that off-duty officers will more effectively deter unruly and violent behavior than typical bouncers. The officers retain police authority, carry guns and wear uniforms.

"It's different from having your traditional rent-a-cops," said Councilman James B. Kraft, whose Southeast district includes Canton.

Verbal sparring between the bars and neighborhood has been going on since at least 2001, according to city documents. The area around Good Love Bar and Huckas is saturated by bars and homes. On Boston Street, there are at least seven establishments with liquor licenses in approximately one block, and the 46th Legislative District has close to 60 percent of all city liquor licenses, said Ratiner, who is also the chairman of the Baltimore City Liquor Advisory Committee.

Residents' complaints are plenty: beer bottles through car windows, blocked streets, fights, screaming and drunken driving. In the past five years, Ratiner said he has received about 6,000 e-mails from Northshore residents distressed by bar patrons' behavior. A friend recently videotaped a man leave a bar, climb into a black sport utility vehicle, run into a female pedestrian and keep driving. "I have that on film," Ratiner said. "And that kind of thing just keeps happening."

Northshore residents and bar owners will foot the bill for the officers. Northshore will pay about $70,000 a year for its off-duty duo, who will work three nights a week. For the city, which is facing a police shortage, this is a way to increase security without having to use government funds. But for bars - which pay high rents and often change hands every few months - the added cost can hurt.

Jason Sanchez, who has owned Good Love Bar for 11 years, has had a pair of off-duty officers at his bar three nights a week for more than a month. He pays them $150 a night, far more than he ever paid a bouncer. The $450-a-week expense has had a crippling effect on his finances, he said, especially after he made the decision in February to close the bar four nights a week to appease complaining neighbors."It's costing me a fortune," he said. "It's a tough situation right now for all the business owners on Boston Street."

Chief liquor inspector Samuel T. Daniels Jr. said laws are unclear on how much responsibility bars have for surrounding areas. City law says bars are responsible for loitering patrons up to 100 feet from their property line, but when it comes to actions besides loitering, it's unclear how much legal responsibility bar owners bear. Daniels said it's rare for bars to hire off-duty officers.

The hiring of the officers raises questions about the appropriate way to handle unruly bar patrons. Patrick Russell, who owns Kooper's Tavern and two other establishments in Fells Point, said he thinks Boston Street is having the same rowdiness problems Fells Point had 10 years ago. In Fells Point, the solution was to attract a calmer clientele, he said, part of which meant banding together with residents and other businesses to push out Club 723, a megabar that lured a young party crowd with 25-cent beers and eventually lost its liquor license.

Ratiner and Kraft insist they aren't trying to drive Boston Street's bars - some of which have been in place since long before Northshore was built - out of business. They just want to scare off unruly patrons with stepped-up security. Ratiner is the head of the new Boston Street Association, a coalition of local businesses and neighborhood groups, and he said he hopes that soon the coalition can collectively pay for the officers, instead of bars and residences doing it on their own.

He also wants to work with the bars to help them find a more sedate crowd, he said.

"The strategy is to make it uncomfortable for lawbreakers to continue to use this neighborhood as a hangout," he said. "And they will eventually go somewhere else. And when they go somewhere else, we will help the bar owners try to find alternate patrons."

Friday, July 27, 2007

Katherine Savage, Alleged Rapist Case

Md. Judge Dismisses Sex-Abuse Charges
Clerk Is Unable To Find Suitable Translator In Time
By Ernesto LondoñoWashington Post Staff WriterSunday, July 22, 2007; Page C05

A 7-year-old girl said she had been raped and repeatedly molested over the course of a year.

Police in Montgomery County, acting on information from a relative, soon arrested a Liberian immigrant living in Gaithersburg. They marshaled witnesses and DNA evidence to prepare for trial.

What was missing -- for much of the nearly three years that followed -- was an interpreter fluent in the suspect's native language. A judge recently dropped the charges, not because she found that Mahamu Kanneh had been wrongly accused but because repeated delays in the case had, in her view, violated his right to a speedy trial.

"This is one of the most difficult decisions I've had to make in a long time," Katherine D. Savage said from the bench Tuesday, noting that she was mindful of "the gravity of this case and the community's concern about offenses of this type."

Loretta E. Knight, the Circuit Court clerk responsible for finding interpreters, said her office searched exhaustively for a speaker of Vai, a tribal language spoken in West Africa. They contacted the Liberian Embassy, she said, and courts in all but three states. Linguists estimate that 100,000 people speak Vai, mostly in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

In arguing to save the case, Assistant State's Attorney Maura Lynch said that dismissing the indictment "after all the efforts the state has made to accommodate the defendant would be fundamentally unfair."

Prosecutors, who cannot refile the charges against Kanneh, are considering whether to appeal Savage's ruling. Kanneh was granted asylum in the United States, according to State's Attorney John McCarthy. A conviction could have led to deportation proceedings.

His attorney, Theresa Chernosky, declined to comment. Delays were compounded by a dispute about whether Kanneh required an interpreter at all.

In Montgomery and elsewhere, the proliferation of languages resulting from immigration is presenting courts with a novel challenge, legal and linguistics experts say. Rarely, however, does a court have such difficulty finding an interpreter that a criminal case must be dropped.

Court interpreters and linguists say a national database of court interpreters would help quickly locate people fluent in uncommon languages. "The burden of increased requests for rare languages makes it a necessity," said Nataly Kelly, author of a book on interpreting.

Knight said the county spent nearly $1 million on interpreters last year, 10 times the amount it spent in 2000. "It's a constant struggle, and it is extremely expensive," she said.

Kanneh was arrested in August 2004 after witnesses told police that he raped and repeatedly sexually molested the girl, a relative.

In a charging document, Detective Omar Hasan wrote that the girl "attempted to physically stop the behavior from the defendant, but was unsuccessful." Hasan wrote that Kanneh threatened the young girl "with not being able to leave the apartment unless she engaged in sexual behavior with the defendant."

Kanneh spent one night in jail and was released on a $10,000 bond with the restriction that he have no contact with minors. He later waived his right to a speedy trial -- in Maryland, defendants have a right to be tried within 180 days following an indictment -- because the defense wanted time to conduct its own analysis of DNA evidence. That waiver was effective only until the next trial date, Chernosky argued in court.

The trial date was extended repeatedly as the state and the defense argued over whether Kanneh needed an interpreter and whether he understood the legal proceedings. The state noted that Kanneh attended high school and community college in Montgomery and spoke to detectives in English. The defense insisted that he needed an interpreter to fully understand the proceedings.

The matter was resolved after a court-appointed psychiatrist who evaluated Kanneh recommended that an interpreter be appointed. Judges who handled subsequent hearings heeded that advice.

The first interpreter stormed out of the courtroom in tears because she found the facts of the case disturbing. A second interpreter was rejected for faulty work. After calling the Liberian Embassy and exhausting other avenues, the clerk's office contacted the administrator of the state's court interpreter program in Annapolis. He located a third Vai interpreter, but at the last minute, that person had to tend to a family emergency.

In recent weeks, court officials had found a suitable interpreter who could have assisted in the trial, but it was too late.

Earlier this month, Chernosky filed a motion seeking to have the indictment dismissed, arguing that Kanneh's right to a speedy trial had been violated. "This delay is just too long," she argued in court. "The reasons for the delay are not the defendant's fault."

With help from the National Association of Judiciary Interpreters and Translators, The Washington Post identified three Vai interpreters Thursday, including one in Gaithersburg.

Lionbridge, a company that offers interpretation services, said it could provide Vai speakers on short notice. Knight said her office had been diligent. "It's these rare languages we're struggling with so much," she said.

In court, Savage attributed no blame for the delay. She called the prosecutor's efforts to help locate an interpreter "Herculean" and said the court system had learned from the case. "Time has become the enemy," the judge said.

Pay Your Way Out Of Jail

$25,000 = get out of jail card
Man pays off stabbing victim to avoid prison sentence
By SCOTT DAUGHERTY, Staff Writer

The case started with Keith Anthony Rantin Jr. trying to purchase a crab cake. Prosecutors said it ended with him buying his way out of prison.

Rantin pleaded guilty to first-degree assault yesterday in the county's Circuit Court in Annapolis, admitting he stabbed 37-year-old Jeffrey Rites on March 28, 2006 as the two men argued over who was next in line at the popular G&M Restaurant carryout in Linthicum.

But instead of sending him to jail, Circuit Court Judge Michele D. Jaklitsch gave him a 10-year suspended sentence on the condition he pay the victim $25,000. She also placed him on five years probation.

"Pure financial compensation is not justice," said Kristin Riggin, spokesman for the State's Attorney's Office, adding state sentencing guidelines called for Rantin to spend seven to 13 years behind bars.

She said it was not a part of a plea agreement and prosecutors argued against the suspended sentence because it was too lenient.

"It's not a good precedent," she said. "There is a balance to be found."

Kenneth Ravenell, Rantin's defense attorney, said prosecutors are just posturing for the media.

"They were involved in this right up until we were in the courtroom," he said, describing it as a compromise. "This was not a slam dunk for the state by any stretch. ... We think justice was done."

Judge Jaklitsch declined to comment this morning, but was quoted in The Baltimore Sun as saying: "I think that it is important for the victim to get his money rather than wait seven to 10 years when he gets out."

This was the second time Rantin, 32, of Reisterstown, appeared in court for the crab cake stabbing. When the case first went to court in March, a jury could not reach a verdict.

But Rantlin is not done with the criminal justice system. He was charged April 6 with attempted first-degree murder in Baltimore.

He is awaiting trial in that case.

During the first crab cake trial, the prosecutor and defense attorney agreed on the basic facts: Mr. Rites started to walk to the counter at the Linthicum restaurant, Rantin told him he was going out of turn and they shoved each other. During the fight, which employees tried to break up, Mr. Rites was stabbed.

But the lawyers disagreed about who started the fight and who had the knife first.

Assistant State's Attorney Michael Dunty said Rantin walked up behind Mr. Rites and said, "(Expletive), you ain't next."

He said Mr. Rantin then spit in Mr. Rites' face, causing Mr. Rites to shove him. He said Rantin then came up behind Mr. Rites and stabbed him in the back and hand.

Defense lawyer Kenneth Ravenell said Rantin wasn't angry at first, but rather told Mr. Rites, "I'm sorry, you're not next." He said Mr. Rites started the shoving, and Rantin simply came up behind him at the counter and shoved back.

Mr. Ravenell also said several witnesses heard Rantin say, "He's got a knife!" during the fight. After banging Rantin's arm on the counter until he dropped the knife, Mr. Rites went outside and passed out on the sidewalk. Rantin left and wasn't arrested for two days.

"This is pure random violence," Ms. Riggin said. "He should not be able to buy his way out of prison."

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Tacoma Park

City Council Strongly Backs Bid to Impeach Bush, Cheney
By Dan MorseWashington Post Staff WriterTuesday, July 24, 2007; Page B05

Over the years, Takoma Park has declared itself a nuclear-free zone, established an immigrant sanctuary law and written a 5,000-word manual for its trash and award-winning recycling programs.

Last night, its City Council voted to call for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Cheney.

"Takoma Park has passed many resolutions over the years, and I've been proud of most of them," council member Reuben Snipper told a crowd of about 100. "I personally am as appalled as many of you are at the actions of Bush and Cheney."

The council approved the resolution 5 to 0, with two members absent.

Earlier, during a public comment period, all 19 people who spoke on the measure expressed their support.

"I come before the council because America is under threat," said Jay Levy, a 32-year resident and a retired Montgomery County schoolteacher. He said Bush and Cheney are "shredding" the U.S. Constitution.

"This is the finest thing you'll ever do," resident Thomas Nephew told the council. After he finished, he walked to the side of the room, and his 9-year-old daughter ran up and hugged him.
Before the vote, council member Terry Seamens added two amendments, including one aimed at other Maryland politicians. It calls for the city of Takoma Park to write letters to the Montgomery County Council, the county executive, the Maryland legislature and the governor asking them to consider adopting similar resolutions.

At times during the meeting, the crowd cheered. Along a wall, someone held an American flag. Another had a banner that said simply "ENOUGH."

Wearing an impeachment T-shirt, Takoma Park resident Lisa Moscatiello stepped to the microphone and talked about an intrusive government that too many people seem to fear.

"The message that we've been getting from our president and our government is, 'We are watching you,' " she said, adding that she and others are trying to turn the tables. "We are saying, ' We are watching you.' "

It was Moscatiello, 41, who helped spearhead the resolution. Beginning in March, the singer and guitarist, along with a few others, met regularly at the Savory Cafe, a Takoma Park coffeehouse, to discuss ways to impeach the president and vice president.

She helped organize a meeting with state Sen. Jamie B. Raskin, a professor at American University who represents Montgomery County. The Democratic lawmaker told the group of about 40 people not to worry about convincing Congress, but instead to move large groups of people and Congress would follow, Moscatiello said.

Moscatiello, who has lived in Takoma Park since 1988, collected petition signatures outside the Takoma Metro station and at the town's farmers market, and she went door-to-door.

As she talked to people, one thing frustrated her: While some said they strongly disapproved of Bush's actions, they questioned Moscatiello's strategy. These people wanted to avoid doing anything that Republicans could take advantage of in 2008.

"This is not very politically sophisticated," a gray-haired man told her at the farmers market.
In Vermont, Moscatiello said to herself, people probably have an easier time making decisions based simply on what they think is right or wrong.

For all of Takoma Park's liberal bona fides, the city is somewhat late to the locally based impeachment-drive movement. As of yesterday, 81 towns, cities or counties had passed an impeachment resolution, according to the Web site impeachpac.org.

It's a list heavily represented by locales in Vermont. Also on the list: San Francisco, Detroit and Berkeley, Calif. Asked to look through the list, Moscatiello saw real progress.

There are entries "not among the usual suspects," she noted. "Chapel Hill [N.C.]. It's in the South. Whatley, Massachusetts, that's a rural town in the middle of Massachusetts, far from Cambridge. Telluride, Colorado, a lot of Republicans vacation there."

The Takoma Park resolution isn't timid. A small portion of it:

"WHEREAS, George W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney conspired with others to defraud the United States of America by intentionally misleading Congress and the public . . .
"Our senators and representatives in the United States Congress be, and they are hereby, requested to cause to be instituted in the Congress for the investigation . . . that they may be impeached and removed from office."

Saturday, July 21, 2007

City Manager Idea

How do we solve this problem? I'm going to stop short of saying this is the solution, but consider this idea:

-get rid of city administrator
-pay the city council more money and increase their responsibility/ability to serve
-have city council hire a city manager at its discretion (not by appointment by the mayor)
-have mayor be figurehead, preside over city council
-have city manager run logistics of city operations
-enjoy better city

By having less responsibility, the position of mayor inherently decreases in value--in other words, any person wishing to be mayor will demand less compensation---in other, other words, it is easier to pay the mayor what he/she is worth.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Slumlord?








Volume III, Number 2
June, 2007

Enforcement and Compliance Notes Mid-April 2007 to Mid-May 2007
Daniel C. and Classie G. Hoyle, Baltimore City – 2 affected properties – On April 23, MDE issued an Administrative Complaint, Order and Penalty equaling $13,000 to Daniel C. and Classie G. Hoyle for violation of Maryland’s Lead Laws by failing to register properties, and failure to bring the affected properties into compliance with risk reduction standards.

Daniel C. and Classie G. Hoyle, Baltimore City – 2 affected properties – On April 23, MDE issued an Administrative Complaint, Order and Penalty equaling $13,000 to Daniel C. and Classie G. Hoyle for violation of Maryland’s Lead Laws by failing to register properties, and failure to bring the affected properties into compliance with risk reduction standards. Status – Daniel C. and Classie G. Hoyle have 10 days to request a hearing on the Complaint and Order and 30 days to request a hearing on the Penalty. (Case Number 2006-30-10024)

3% Raises for Mayor, Aldermen?

3% Raises for Mayor, Aldermen?

Moyer makes pitch after offering cops 2%By NICOLE YOUNG, Staff Writer

After offering city police officers a 2 percent pay increase, Mayor Ellen O. Moyer is pushing for a 3 percent raise for herself and the city's aldermen.

Ms. Moyer said the living adjustment for elected officials stems from a report passed months ago by the previous City Council, and that the charter amendment authorizing the raise is simply a "follow-up and clarification."

"It's not something new. It's just been in our back pocket," she said. "It's the cost-of-living adjustment that needs to be reaffirmed."

The increase is based on cost-of-living adjustments from the federal level, said Tim Elliott, city finance director.

The move would increase the mayor's $70,000 annual salary to $72,100 beginning in July 2008 and increase each alderman's salary $380 to $12,980. In addition, each alderman's $1,500 expense account would increase by $45, Mr. Elliott said. In all, it would add $5,500 to the annual budget.

The mayor's salary was raised from $52,000 to $65,000 in 2001, and again to $70,000 in 2005. Before that, it hadn't been adjusted since 1992.

The increase was originally proposed in December and is scheduled for a public hearing during Monday's City Council meeting.

Negotiations failed earlier this month between the city and the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 400, which represents Annapolis police officers. The union asked for an 8 percent cost-of-living increase; the city offered 2 percent.

"We'd be willing to sign up for that 3 percent increase annually," said Detective John Lee, chief shop steward for Local 400. "We'll take that."

In a memo to city officials, Ms. Moyer described the final 2 percent proposal to police as "generous and fair," but union officials dismissed her claims, saying city officials are sacrificing the public's safety.

"There's a lot of other incentives that make that deal a whole lot better than just a 2 percent cost-of-living raise," said Ray Weaver, a city spokesman. "It has to be looked at as a whole compared to other jurisdictions, and overall it's a great offer. The actual dollars are a lot more than just that 2 percent."

Ms. Moyer also has pointed to police having good retirement and health benefits, in addition to a salary higher than other jurisdictions in the area, including the county, the state and Baltimore. She said the department receives the highest pension contribution in the region.

The proposed pay raise for elected officials follows a 2005 report by a panel headed by Alderman Richard Israel, D-Ward 1, before he was on the council.

Under the current system in the charter, an ad hoc commission of seven city residents reviews the salaries and expense reimbursements of the mayor and aldermen every four years.

Mr. Weaver, who doesn't qualify for this cost-of-living increase, said he believes the increase is reasonable for the number of hours the mayor and aldermen spend working on city business.

"There's not a weekend that goes by that they're not doing city business," Mr. Weaver said. "Every ribbon-cutting or a dog show, she's there, and I think that's a reasonable pay raise."

As for the aldermen, he said those doing their jobs as elected officials deserve the raise as well.
"People don't typically get into elected office for the money," he said.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

City Code, Recall Petition

Chapter 4.46 RECALL

4.46.010 Removal by recall.

4.46.020 Recall petition.

4.46.030 Referendum election.

4.46.040 Special election.

4.46.050 Inaction on recall resolution.

4.46.060 Effect of recall.

4.46.070 Expenses.



4.46.010 Removal by recall.

Any member of the City Council may be recalled and removed from office pursuant to City Charter Article II, Section 9 and according to the following procedures. (Ord. O-16-97 § 1 (part))



4.46.020 Recall petition.

A. In the case of a Mayoral recall, thirty per centum or more of all persons who were qualified to vote in City of Annapolis’ previous general election, or in the case of Aldermanic recall, then thirty per centum or more of all persons who were qualified to so vote in the ward represented by the Alderman who is the subject of the recall, may initiate the removal from office of an incumbent elected official by a recall petition presented to the City Council. The recall petition shall clearly state its purpose and shall meet the requirements of this section.

B. The recall petition shall:

1. Be on white paper, being no more than eight and one-half inches in width and fourteen inches in length, and having top, side and bottom margins of at least one and one-half inches;

2. Be one page in length, front only;

3. Be captioned and titled “recall petition, elected official” in sixteen point bold print;

4. Set forth in thirteen point bold print the following text:

“The undersigned voters of the City of Annapolis (for Aldermanic recall, insert ward number here), petition to a referendum of all voters of the City of Annapolis (for Aldermanic recall, insert ward number here) the recall and removal from office of the following elected official: (name of official and office held here). This petition is made in accordance with Annapolis City Code, Chapter 4.46.”;

5. Contain the name and office of the official proposed to be recalled, but otherwise refer to no other elected official;

6. Contain reasons for the proposed recall;

7. Provide for voters’ signatures below the referenced text as follows: no more than twenty-five signatures per page; every signature on the petition shall also include the person’s printed name, address and the ward in which the person is registered as a voter; and

8. Contain on every page, an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury, to the effect that the signatures are, to the affiant’s knowledge, information and belief, genuine and bona fide, and that each person is a registered voter of the City as set forth in the petition, and that the affiant personally saw each person sign the page.

C. Upon receiving a recall petition, the City Council shall verify that each person who signed the petition is qualified to vote in city general election as set forth in subsection 4.46.020(A), and shall consider the petition as of no effect if it is signed by fewer than thirty per centum of the persons who are qualified to sign the petition as described in that subsection.

D. If the petition complies with the requirements of this section and is signed by the required number of voters, the City Council shall by resolution passed as in its normal legislative procedure not later than thirty days after the petition shall have been presented to it, declare that the requirements of this section have been satisfied and that accordingly a referendum election will be held at which the question of whether the official who is the subject of the petition should be recalled and removed from office shall be submitted to the voters of the entire city in the case of a Mayoral recall and the voters of the applicable ward in the case of an Aldermanic recall. The resolution shall further specify the day, hours and polling location(s) for the referendum election which shall be within a period of not less than forty days nor more than sixty days after the adoption of the resolution. The resolution shall specify the exact question which is to be placed on the ballot or voting machines when the recall question is submitted to the voters. (Ord. O-16-97 § 1 (part))

Friday, July 6, 2007

Sales Tax

Miller: Sales tax hike likely : Also says state should look at raising gas tax
By LIAM FARRELL Staff Writer

Consumers could soon be paying more at cash registers across the county and state.
With Maryland facing a $1.5 billion deficit, one of the state's most powerful politicians said this week that the sales tax is likely to go up.

In an interview Tuesday, Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr., D-Calvert, said the General Assembly also needs to look at raising the gasoline tax to fund an estimated $600 million backlog of transportation projects.But hiking the 5 percent sales tax to compare with Maryland's neighbors will have the broadest benefit, he said.The sales tax is estimated to bring in $3.6 billion in fiscal 2008, according to the state. A 1 percent sales tax increase would raise an extra $750 million.

"Everybody pays it," Mr. Miller said. "It's one that has the widest support."Mr. Miller isn't alone in his assessment.Although not offering as bold a prediction as the Senate president, House Speaker Michael E. Busch, D-Annapolis, acknowledged a higher sales tax will be a part of next session."It is going to receive a lot of consideration," he said.

"We are one of the lowest and narrowest sales tax bases."But any sales tax hike would be part of a broader "menu" that would first look to cut state spending, reduce aid to local government, and then fill the remaining gap with new revenue, Mr. Busch said.

Lawmakers have a duty to not unduly burden middle and lower class families with high taxes, he said."We're here to do what's going to be in the best long-term interests of the citizens," Mr. Busch said. "We're here to try to come up with a comprehensive plan."

Although Delaware does not have a sales tax and Virginia has the same rate as Maryland, sales taxes are all higher in Washington, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and New Jersey, ranging from 5.75 percent to 7 percent.

If Maryland's sales tax is raised up to 6 percent like Pennsylvania's, a $59.99 pair of women's shoes from Nordstrom would cost $63.59 at the register, an increase of 60 cents from the current $62.99. A $1,499.99 plasma HDTV from Best Buy would take an extra $15, from the current $1,574.99 to $1,589.99.

Maryland's sales tax only applies to 39 out of 168 potential services identified by the Federation of Tax Administrators, an organization of state tax representatives.Labor left untaxed includes business services such as computer work, personal services such as dry cleaning, and professional services such as auto repair and garden maintenance.

New Jersey taxes 55 of the 168 services, West Virginia taxes 110, and Washington covers 70. Virginia is lower than Maryland with only 18.Even though Maryland ranks only 44th nationally in sales tax revenue per capita, the total state and local tax burden places residents at 23rd overall. Out of those same states, Maryland is only lower than New Jersey and West Virginia, according to the Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan group dedicated to tax education.When coupled with federal taxes, Maryland is bumped up to 15th nationally and is only eclipsed by New Jersey, which places third.

Progressive?Last session, a bill sponsored by Del. Jim Gilchrest, D-Montgomery, would have taxed services ranging from auto repair shops and parking facilities to tanning salons and escort services.The legislation projected that state revenues could increase by more than $300 million in fiscal year 2008 and go up to more than $760 million by fiscal 2012.

More than 100 representatives of businesses, who represented everything from real estate to pest extermination, gathered in Annapolis to protest the legislation. They said taxing those services would drive people to do more business in neighboring states and put increasing pressure on residents with fixed incomes.The bill died in the House Ways and Means Committee.

Next year will probably be no different in terms of protest, said Dee Hodges, the president of the Maryland Taxpayers Association, a group that advocates against tax raises.Maryland's overall tax burden makes it "anti-small business (and) anti-consumer," Ms. Hodges said.The true solution is cutting spending - not raising taxes, she said."The big problem is what was created by previous legislatures: the spending," Ms. Hodges said. "That's where they (have) got to look."

Although the Maryland Retailers Association is open to discussing an increase in the number of taxed services, hiking the percentage is a "regressive" move that hits the state's poorest residents the hardest, said Tom Saquella, association president.Unlike the income tax, the sales tax is levied without regard to an individual's ability to pay it and all residents are affected equally, Mr. Saquella said.The sales tax also is becoming more irrelevant as 60 percent of Marylanders' dollars are spent on services not covered by Maryland's sales tax, he said.

For example, the latest revenue report from state Comptroller Peter Franchot said sales tax revenue declined by $6.5 million, or 2.4 percent, in May, the second decline in the past three months."The juice is not worth the squeeze anymore," Mr. Saquella said. "It's not a long-term solution."Keeping a sales tax increase as part of spending cuts could make a hike more politically palatable, Mr. Busch said.For example, the last time the state increased the sales tax by one percent in 2004 it was coupled with a reduction in the property tax rate, he said.

Mr. Busch supported the measure as an equitable way to help the state fund its priorities."It is a question of how you can fairly move forward," he said.Regardless of potential backlash, Mr. Miller said, lawmakers must have the political will to tell people what they need to hear, not what they want to hear.

The main driver of the deficit - the $1.3 billion Thornton Education Plan that was passed in 2002 and created historic levels of school funding without a matching revenue source - will not disappear, he said."Test scores have gone up, teachers pensions have improved, class size has gone down, but we haven't found an agreeable way to pay for it," Mr. Miller said. "In government you have to be pragmatists."

The Governor's Office is keeping its options open."The governor would like to see a tax system that is fair and inclusive," said Rick Abbruzzese, a spokesman. "Everything is on the table."

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Prohibition

Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

Section 1. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited.


Section 2. The Congress and the several States shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.


Section 3. This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of the several States, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the States by the Congress.

The Senate passed the amendment on December 18, 1917. The amendment was ratified on January 16, 1919, having been approved by 36 states. It went into effect one year later on January 16, 1920. (Some state legislatures had already enacted statewide prohibition prior to the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment.)


When Congress submitted this amendment to the states for ratification, it was the first time that a proposed amendment had a provision that placed a deadline on ratification. The validity of the amendment was challenged on that basis in Dillon v. Gloss. The Supreme Court ruled on the case in 1921, upholding the constitutionality of such deadlines.


Because of many Americans' dismay at the emergence of Prohibition, there was a considerable growth in organized crime in the United States in response to public demand for illegal alcohol. Considered a very unpopular law, the amendment was subsequently repealed by the Twenty-First Amendment on December 5, 1933. It remains the only constitutional amendment to be repealed in its entirety.

Congress proposed the Eighteenth Amendment on December 18, 1917.[1] The following states ratified the amendment:
Mississippi (January 8, 1918)
Virginia (January 11, 1918)
Kentucky (January 14, 1918)
North Dakota (January 25, 1918)
South Carolina (January 29, 1918)
Maryland (February 13, 1918)
Montana (February 19, 1918)
Texas (March 4, 1918)
Delaware (March 18, 1918)
South Dakota (March 20, 1918)
Massachusetts (April 2, 1918)
Arizona (May 24, 1918)
Georgia (June 26, 1918)
Louisiana (August 3, 1918)
Florida (December 3, 1918)
Michigan (January 2, 1919)
Ohio (January 7, 1919)
Oklahoma (January 7, 1919)
Idaho (January 8, 1919)
Maine (January 8, 1919)
West Virginia (January 9, 1919)
California (January 13, 1919)
Tennessee (January 13, 1919)
Washington (January 13, 1919)
Arkansas (January 14, 1919)
Kansas (January 14, 1919)
Alabama (January 15, 1919)
Colorado (January 15, 1919)
Iowa (January 15, 1919)
New Hampshire (January 15, 1919)
Oregon (January 15, 1919)
Nebraska (January 16, 1919)
North Carolina (January 16, 1919)
Utah (January 16, 1919)
Missouri (January 16, 1919)
Wyoming (January 16, 1919)

Ratification was completed on January 16, 1919. The amendment was subsequently ratified by the following states:
Minnesota (January 17, 1919)
Wisconsin (January 17, 1919)
New Mexico (January 20, 1919)
Nevada (January 21, 1919)
New York (January 29, 1919)
Vermont (January 29, 1919)
Pennsylvania (February 25, 1919)
Connecticut (May 6, 1919)
New Jersey (March 9, 1922)

The amendment was rejected by the following state:
Rhode Island

Executive Summary
National prohibition of alcohol (1920-33)--the "noble experiment"--was undertaken to reduce crime and corruption, solve social problems, reduce the tax burden created by prisons and poorhouses, and improve health and hygiene in America. The results of that experiment clearly indicate that it was a miserable failure on all counts. The evidence affirms sound economic theory, which predicts that prohibition of mutually beneficial exchanges is doomed to failure.

The lessons of Prohibition remain important today. They apply not only to the debate over the war on drugs but also to the mounting efforts to drastically reduce access to alcohol and tobacco and to such issues as censorship and bans on insider trading, abortion, and gambling.[1]

Although consumption of alcohol fell at the beginning of Prohibition, it subsequently increased. Alcohol became more dangerous to consume; crime increased and became "organized"; the court and prison systems were stretched to the breaking point; and corruption of public officials was rampant. No measurable gains were made in productivity or reduced absenteeism.

Prohibition removed a significant source of tax revenue and greatly increased government spending. It led many drinkers to switch to opium, marijuana, patent medicines, cocaine, and other dangerous substances that they would have been unlikely to encounter in the absence of Prohibition. Those results are documented from a variety of sources, most of which, ironically, are the work of supporters of Prohibition--most economists and social scientists supported it. Their findings make the case against Prohibition that much stronger.[2]

The Iron Law of Prohibition
According to its proponents, all the proposed benefits of Prohibition depended on, or were a function of, reducing the quantity of alcohol consumed. At first glance, the evidence seems to suggest that the quantity consumed did indeed decrease. That would be no surprise to an economist: making a product more difficult to supply will increase its price, and the quantity consumed will be less than it would have been otherwise.

Evidence of decreased consumption is provided by two important American economists, Irving Fisher and Clark Warburton.[3] It should be noted that annual per capita consumption and the percentage of annual per capita income spent on alcohol had been steadily falling before Prohibition and that annual spending on alcohol during Prohibition was greater than it had been before Prohibition.[4]

The decrease in quantity consumed needs at least four qualifications--qualifications that undermine any value that a prohibitionist might claim for reduced consumption. First, the decrease was not very significant. Warburton found that the quantity of alcohol purchased may have fallen 20 percent between the prewar years 1911-14 and 1927-30. Prohibition fell far short of eliminating the consumption of alcohol.[5]

Second, consumption of alcohol actually rose steadily after an initial drop. Annual per capita consumption had been declining since 1910, reached an all-time low during the depression of 1921, and then began to increase in 1922. Consumption would probably have surpassed pre-Prohibition levels even if Prohibition had not been repealed in 1933.[6] Illicit production and distribution continued to expand throughout Prohibition despite ever-increasing resources devoted to enforcement.[7] That pattern of consumption, shown in Figure 1, is to be expected after an entire industry is banned: new entrepreneurs in the underground economy improve techniques and expand output, while consumers begin to realize the folly of the ban.

Third, the resources devoted to enforcement of Prohibition increased along with consumption. Heightened enforcement did not curtail consumption. The annual budget of the Bureau of Prohibition went from $4.4 million to $13.4 milion during the 1920s, while Coast Guard spending on Prohibition averaged over $13 million per year.[8] To those amounts should be added the expenditures of state and local governments.

The fourth qualification may actually be the most important: a decrease in the quantity of alcohol consumed did not make Prohibition a success. Even if we agree that society would be better off if less alcohol were consumed, it does not follow that lessening consumption through Prohibition made society better off. We must consider the overall social consequences of Prohibition, not just reduced alcohol consumption. Prohibition had pervasive (and perverse) ef fects on every aspect of alcohol production, distribution, and consumption. Changing the rules from those of the free market to those of Prohibition broke the link that prohibitionists had assumed between consumption and social evil. The rule changes also caused unintended consequences to enter the equation.

The most notable of those consequences has been labeled the "Iron Law of Prohibition" by Richard Cowan.[9] That law states that the more intense the law enforcement, the more potent the prohibited substance becomes. When drugs or alcoholic beverages are prohibited, they will become more potent, will have greater variability in potency, will be adulterated with unknown or dangerous substances, and will not be produced and consumed under normal market constraints. [10] The Iron Law undermines the prohibitionist case and reduces or outweighs the benefits ascribed to a decrease in consumption.

Statistics indicate that for a long time Americans spent a falling share of income on alcoholic beverages. They also purchased higher quality brands and weaker types of alcoholic beverages. Before Prohibition, Americans spent roughly equal amounts on beer and spirits.[11] However, during Prohibition virtually all production, and therefore consumption, was of distilled spirits and fortified wines. Beer became relatively more expensive because of its bulk, and it might have disappeared altogether except for homemade beer and near beer, which could be converted into real beer.[12]

Figure 2 shows that the underground economy swiftly moved from the production of beer to the production of the more potent form of alcohol, spirits.[13] Prohibition made it more difficult to supply weaker, bulkier products, such as beer, than stronger, compact products, such as whiskey, because the largest cost of selling an illegal product is avoiding detection.[14] Therefore, while all alcohol prices rose, the price of whiskey rose more slowly than that of beer.
Fisher used retail alcohol prices to demonstrate that Prohibition was working by raising the price and decreasing the quantity produced. However, his price quotations also revealed that the Iron Law of Prohibition was at work. The price of beer increased by more than 700 percent, and that of brandies increased by 433 percent, but spirit prices in creased by only 270 percent, which led to an absolute in crease in the consumption of spirits over pre-Prohibition levels.[15]
A number of observers of Prohibition noted that the potency of alcoholic products rose. Not only did producers and consumers switch to stronger alcoholic beverages (from beer to whiskey), but producers supplied stronger forms of particular beverages, such as fortified wine. The typical beer, wine, or whiskey contained a higher percentage of alcohol by volume during Prohibition than it did before or after. Fisher, for example, referred to "White Mule Whiskey," a name that clearly indicates that the product had quite a kick. Most estimates place the potency of prohibition-era products at 150+ percent of the potency of products produced either before or after Prohibition.[16]

I am credibly informed that a very conservative reckoning would set the poisonous effects of bootleg beverages as compared with medicinal liquors at ten to one; that is, it requires only a tenth as much bootleg liquor as of pre-prohibition liquor to produce a given degree of drunkenness. The reason, of course, is that bootleg liquor is so concentrated and almost invariably contains other and more deadly poisons than mere ethyl alcohol.[17]
There were few if any production standards during Prohibition, and the potency and quality of products varied greatly, making it difficult to predict their effect. The production of moonshine during Prohibition was undertaken by an army of amateurs and often resulted in products that could harm or kill the consumer. Those products were also likely to contain dangerous adulterants, a government requirement for industrial alcohol.

According to Thomas Coffey, "the death rate from poisoned liquor was appallingly high throughout the country. In 1925 the national toll was 4,154 as compared to 1,064 in 1920. And the increasing number of deaths created a public relations problem for . . . the drys because they weren't exactly accidental."[18] Will Rogers remarked that "governments used to murder by the bullet only. Now it's by the quart."

Patterns of consumption changed during Prohibition. It could be argued that Prohibition increased the demand for alcohol among three groups. It heightened the attractiveness of alcohol to the young by making it a glamour product associated with excitement and intrigue. The high prices and profits during Prohibition enticed sellers to try to market their products to nondrinkers--undoubtedly, with some success. Finally, many old-stock Americans and recent immigrants were unwilling to be told that they could not drink. According to Lee, "Men were drinking defiantly, with a sense of high purpose, a kind of dedicated drinking that you don't see much of today."[19]

Prohibition may actually have increased drinking and intemperance by increasing the availability of alcohol. One New Jersey businessman claimed that there were 10 times more places one could get a drink during Prohibition than there had been before.[20] It is not surprising that, given their hidden locations and small size, speakeasies outnumbered saloons. Lee found that there were twice as many speak easies in Rochester, New York, as saloons closed by Prohibition. That was more or less true throughout the country.

Another setback for prohibitionists was their loss of control over the location of drinking establishments. Until Prohibition, prohibitionists had used local ordinances, taxes, licensing laws and regulations, and local-option laws to prevent or discourage the sale of alcohol in the center city, near churches and schools, on Sundays and election days, and in their neighborhoods. Prohibition eliminated those political tools and led to the establishment of speak easies in business districts, middle-class neighborhoods, and other locations that were formerly dry, or gave the ap pearance of being dry.

Prohibition also led many people to drink more "legitimate" alcohol, such as patent medicines (which contained high concentrations of alcohol), medicinal alcohol, and sacramental alcohol.[21] The amount of alcoholic liquors sold by physicians and hospitals doubled between 1923 and 1931. The amount of medicinal alcohol (95 percent pure alcohol) sold increased by 400 percent during the same time.[22] Those increases occurred despite rigorous new regulations.
Prohibitionists wanted and expected people to switch their spending from alcohol to dairy products, modern appliances, life insurance, savings, and education. That simply did not happen. Not only did spending on alcohol increase, so did spending on substitutes for alcohol. In addition to patent medicines, consumers switched to narcotics, hashish, tobacco, and marijuana. Those products were potentially more dangerous and addictive than alcohol, and procuring them often brought users into contact with a more dangerous, criminal element.[23]

The harmful results of the Iron Law of Prohibition more than offset any benefits of decreasing consumption, which had been anticipated but did not occur.

Prohibition Was Not a Healthy Move
One of the few bright spots for which the prohibitionists can present some supporting evidence is the decline in "alcohol-related deaths" during Prohibition. On closer examination, however, that success is an illusion. Prohibition did not improve health and hygiene in America as anticipated.

Cirrhosis of the liver has been found to pose a significant health risk, particularly in women who consume more than four drinks per day.[24] However, deaths due to cirrhois and alcoholism are a small portion of the total number of deaths each year, and alcohol can be considered only a contributing cause of most of those deaths.[25] Many people who do not drink develop cirrhosis, and the vast majority of heavy drinkers never develop it.[26] Dr. Snell of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, reported in 1931 that "we know now that cirrhosis occurs in only 4 per cent of alcoholic individuals."[27] Even in the worst pre-Prohibition year, recorded deaths due to alcoholism and cirrhosis of the liver amounted to less than 1.5 percent of total deaths.
An examination of death rates does reveal a dramatic drop in deaths due to alcoholism and cirrhosis, but the drop occurred during World War I, before enforcement of Prohibition.[28] The death rate from alcoholism bottomed out just before the enforcement of Prohibition and then returned to pre-World War I levels.[29] That was probably the result of increased consumption during Prohibition and the consumption of more potent and poisonous alcoholic beverages. The death rate from alcoholism and cirrhosis also declined rather dramatically in Denmark, Ireland, and Great Britain during World War I, but rates in those countries continued to fall during the 1920s (in the absence of prohibition) when rates in the United States were either rising or stable.[30]

Prohibitionists such as Irving Fisher lamented that the drunkards must be forgotten in order to concentrate the benefits of Prohibition on the young. Prevent the young from drinking and let the older alcoholic generations die out. However, if that had happened, we could expect the average age of people dying from alcoholism and cirrhosis to have increased. But the average age of people dying from alcoholism fell by six months between 1916 and 1923, a period of otherwise general improvement in the health of young people.[31]

There appear to have been no health benefits from Prohibition.[32] On the contrary, the harmlessness and even health benefits of consumption of a moderate amount of alco- hol have been long established. As early as 1927 Clarence Darrow and Victor Yarros could cite several studies showing that moderate drinking does not shorten life or seriously affect health and that in general it may be beneficial.[33] According to the eminent Harvard psychologist Hugo Månster berg, "there exists no scientifically sound fact which demonstrates evil effects from a temperate use of alcohol by normal adult men."[34]

Studies continue to find the same results and that problems with alcohol are associated with excess--a problem with most goods.[35] Gene Ford cites 17 recent studies that provide evidence of the benefits to the heart and cardiovas cular system of moderate drinking.[36] The evidence appears so strong that the American Heart Association has conceded that "modest alcohol consumption has been associated with beneficial effects," and that "an increased HDL-cholesterol [the good kind] level appears to be a dividend of moderate consumption of alcohol."[37]

Not all prohibitionists were blind to the potential benefits of alcohol. However, many were technocrats or Progressives, and if some benefit of alcohol were admitted they would have been forced to conclude that the government should act to encourage moderate consumption of alcohol. One technocrat-economist, Thomas Carver, was familiar with the "possibility" that moderate drinking could be beneficial,[38] but according to Fisher, he was "a courageous scholar" and discarded that possibility to pursue the undeniable benefits of Prohibition.

Prohibition Was Criminal
At the beginning of Prohibition, the Reverend Billy Sunday stirred audiences with this optimistic prediction:
The reign of tears is over. The slums will soon be a memory. We will turn our prisons into factories and our jails into storehouses and corncribs. Men will walk upright now, women will smile and children will laugh. Hell will be forever for rent.[39]

Sunday's expectations of Prohibition were never realized. He and other champions of Prohibition expected it to reduce crime and solve a host of social problems by eliminating the Demon Rum. Early temperance reformers claimed that alcohol was responsible for everything from disease to broken homes. High on their list of evils were the crime and poverty associated with intemperance. They felt that the burden of taxes could be reduced if prisons and poorhouses could be emptied by abstinence. That perspective was largely based on interviews of inmates of prisons and poorhouses who claimed that their crimes and poverty were the result of alcohol.[40] Social "scientists" later used those correlations as propaganda "to persuade many people to turn to saloon suppression and prohibition."[41]

America had experienced a gradual decline in the rate of serious crimes over much of the 19th and early 20th centuries. That trend was unintentionally reversed by the efforts of the Prohibition movement. The homicide rate in large cities increased from 5.6 per 100,000 population during the first decade of the century to 8.4 during the second decade when the Harrison Narcotics Act, a wave of state alcohol prohibitions, and World War I alcohol restrictions were enacted. The homicide rate increased to 10 per 100,000 population during the 1920s, a 78 percent increase over the pre-Prohibition period.

The Volstead Act, passed to enforce the Eighteenth Amendment, had an immediate impact on crime. According to a study of 30 major U.S. cities, the number of crimes increased 24 percent between 1920 and 1921. The study revealed that during that period more money was spent on po- lice (11.4+ percent) and more people were arrested for violating Prohibition laws (102+ percent). But increased law enforcement efforts did not appear to reduce drinking: arrests for drunkenness and disorderly conduct increased 41 percent, and arrests of drunken drivers increased 81 percent. Among crimes with victims, thefts and burglaries increased 9 percent, while homicides and incidents of assault and battery increased 13 percent.[42] More crimes were committed because prohibition destroys legal jobs, creates black-market violence, diverts resources from enforcement of other laws, and greatly increases the prices people have to pay for the prohibited goods.

Instead of emptying the prisons as its supporters had hoped it would, Prohibition quickly filled the prisons to capacity. Those convicted of additional crimes with victims (burglaries, robberies, and murders), which were due to Prohibition and the black market, were incarcerated largely in city and county jails and state prisons. According to Towne, "The Sing Sing prison deported no less than sixty prisoners to Auburn in May 1922 because of overcrowding." Figure 3 shows the tremendous increase in the prison population at Sing Sing in the early years of Prohibition.[43]

Before Prohibition and the Harrison Narcotics Act (1914), there had been 4,000 federal convicts, fewer than 3,000 of whom were housed in federal prisons. By 1932 the number of federal convicts had increased 561 percent, to 26,589, and the federal prison population had increased 366 percent.[44] Much of the increase was due to violations of the Volstead Act and other Prohibition laws. The number of people convicted of Prohibition violations increased 1,000 percent between 1925 and 1930, and fully half of all prisoners received in 1930 had been convicted of such violations. Two-thirds of all prisoners received in 1930 had been convicted of alcohol and drug offenses, and that figure rises to 75 percent of violators if other commercial prohibitions are included.[45]

The explosion in the prison population greatly increased spending on prisons and led to severe overcrowding. Total federal expenditures on penal institutions increased more than 1,000 percent between 1915 and 1932. Despite those expenditures and new prison space, prisons were severely overcrowded. In 1929 the normal capacity of Atlanta Penitentiary and Leavenworth Prison was approximately 1,500 each, but their actual population exceeded 3,700 each.[46]

To some the crime wave of the 1920s remained a mere "state of mind" due mostly to media hype. For example, Dr. Fabian Franklin noted that according to one measure, crime had decreased 37.7 percent between 1910 and 1923. However, the apparent contradiction between the media hype and Franklin's declining crime statistic is resolved by the realiza- tion that violent and serious crime had increased (hence the media hype), while less serious crime had decreased. For example, theft of property increased 13.2 percent, homicide increased 16.1 percent, and robbery rose 83.3 percent between 1910 and 1923, while minor crimes (which were large in number) such as vagrancy, malicious mischief, and public swearing decreased over 50 percent.[47] Even Franklin had to admit that the increased homicides may have been related to the "illegal traffic."

The number of violations of Prohibition laws and violent crimes against persons and property continued to in- crease throughout Prohibition. Figure 4 shows an undeniable relationship between Prohibition and an increase in the homicide rate. The homicide rate increased from 6 per 100,000 population in the pre-Prohibition period to nearly 10 per 100,000 in 1933. That rising trend was reversed by the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, and the rate continued to decline throughout the 1930s and early 1940s.[48]

Not only did the number of serious crimes increase, but crime became organized. Criminal groups organize around the steady source of income provided by laws against victimless crimes such as consuming alcohol or drugs, gambling, and prostitution. In the process of providing goods and services, those criminal organizations resort to real crimes in defense of sales territories, brand names, and labor contracts. That is true of extensive crime syndicates (the Mafia) as well as street gangs, a criminal element that first surfaced during Prohibition.[49]
The most telling sign of the relationship between serious crime and Prohibition was the dramatic reversal in the rates for robbery, burglary, murder, and assault when Prohibition was repealed in 1933. That dramatic reversal has Marxist and business-cycle crime theorists puzzled to this day. For example, sociologist John Pandiani noted that "a major wave of crime appears to have begun as early as the mid 1920s [and] increased continually until 1933 . . . when it mysteriously reversed itself."[50] Theodore Ferdinand also found a "mysterious" decline that began in 1933 and lasted throughout the 1930s.[51] How could they miss the significance of the fact that the crime rate dropped in 1933?

Prohibition Caused Corruption
It was hoped that Prohibition would eliminate corrupting influences in society; instead, Prohibition itself be- came a major source of corruption. Everyone from major politicians to the cop on the beat took bribes from bootleggers, moonshiners, crime bosses, and owners of speakeasies. The Bureau of Prohibition was particularly susceptible and had to be reorganized to reduce corruption. According to Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Lincoln C. Andrews, "conspiracies are nation wide in extent, in great numbers, organized, well-financed, and cleverly conducted."[52] De- spite additional resources and reorganization, corruption continued within the bureau. Commissioner of Prohibition Henry Anderson concluded that "the fruitless efforts at enforcement are creating public disregard not only for this law but for all laws. Public corruption through the purchase of official protection for this illegal traffic is widespread and notorious. The courts are cluttered with prohibition cases to an extent which seriously affects the entire administration of justice."[53]

Prohibition not only created the Bureau of Prohibition, it gave rise to a dramatic increase in the size and power of other government agencies as well. Between 1920 and 1930 employment at the Customs Service increased 45 percent, and the service's annual budget increased 123 percent. Personnel of the Coast Guard increased 188 percent during the 1920s, and its budget increased more than 500 percent between 1915 and 1932. Those increases were primarily due to the Coast Guard's and the Customs Service's role in enforcing Prohibition.[54]

Conclusion: Lessons for Today
Prohibition, which failed to improve health and virtue in America, can afford some invaluable lessons. First, it can provide some perspective on the current crisis in drug prohibition--a 75-year effort that is increasingly viewed as a failure.
Repeal of Prohibition dramatically reduced crime, including organized crime, and corruption. Jobs were created, and new voluntary efforts, such as Alcoholics Anonymous, which was begun in 1934, succeeded in helping alcoholics. Those lessons can be applied to the current crisis in drug prohibition and the problems of drug abuse. Second, the lessons of Prohibition should be used to curb the urge to prohibit. Neoprohibition of alcohol and prohibition of tobacco would result in more crime, corruption, and dangerous products and increased government control over the average citizen's life. Finally, Prohibition provides a general lesson that society can no more be successfully engineered in the United States than in the Soviet Union.

Prohibition was supposed to be an economic and moral bonanza. Prisons and poorhouses were to be emptied, taxes cut, and social problems eliminated. Productivity was to skyrocket and absenteeism disappear. The economy was to enter a never-ending boom. That utopian outlook was shattered by the stock market crash of 1929. Prohibition did not improve productivity or reduce absenteeism.[55] In contrast, private regulation of employees' drinking improved productivity, reduced absenteeism, and reduced industrial accidents wherever it was tried before, during, and after Prohibition.[56]

In summary, Prohibition did not achieve its goals. Instead, it added to the problems it was intended to solve and supplanted other ways of addressing problems. The only beneficiaries of Prohibition were bootleggers, crime bosses, and the forces of big government. Carroll Wooddy concluded that the "Eighteenth Amendment . . . contributed substantially to the growth of government and of government costs in this period [1915-32]."[57]

In the aftermath of Prohibition, economist Ludwig von Mises wrote, "Once the principle is admitted that it is the duty of government to protect the individual against his own foolishness, no serious objections can be advanced against further encroachments."[58] The repeal of all prohibition of voluntary exchange is as important to the restoration of liberty now as its enactment was to the cause of big government in the Progressive Era.
Downtown merchants worry about crime jump
By NICOLE YOUNG, Staff Writer

It all started with a brick through a window.

Within minutes, windows and doors are smashed open and thousands of dollars of computer equipment goes missing - some of it in broad daylight and on busy roadways.

Generally not considered a high crime area, the tourist-driven and historic downtown has seen crime slowly infiltrate its comfortable, affluent district.

A handful of offices and commercial buildings have been hit in the last month, every time with the same target: computers. The method of getting to those computers has been the same each time as well - a brick through a glass window or door.

Offices at 100 Cathedral St., 108 Cathedral St., 20 West St., and 115 West St. were all hit within two weeks. The 100 Cathedral address was targeted several times.

At this point, police have not been able to connect the crimes, but Officer Hal Dalton, city police spokesman, called the similarities between the burglaries "pretty striking." They were also a bit out of the ordinary, some being performed as early as 8:40 p.m., with daylight remaining and in the midst of plenty of foot and street traffic.

"Usually, you think of commercial burglaries between midnight and 4 to 5 a.m.," Officer Dalton said. "Most of these were a lot earlier in the evening and to me that increases the risk of being caught. That part of town is not exactly isolated - there's restaurants and bars nearby."
He said the police weren't sure if drugs were the motive behind the recent spate of burglaries. Drug addicts will typically sell computers and monitors that cost hundreds of dollars for as low as $20 to feed their habit, he said.

"Statistically, if you look citywide, it's not that big of a trend," Officer Dalton said. "But generally, most all of these kinds of crimes are drug driven. Anything of value, people will sell real cut rate."

Wednesday night, at about 9:40 p.m., officers responded to a call at 100 Cathedral St. for a report of a burglary in progress, the same building where a computer was stolen last week.
Police arrested Gary Donell Morgan, 42, of Annapolis and charged him with first-degree burglary. Officer Dalton said police believe Mr. Morgan is also involved in at least one similar burglary. Two computers taken from the building were recovered, Officer Dalton said.

Garden Architects at 115 West St. only had their Dell laptop computer one day before it was stolen from the showroom the evening of June 20 - and it's not the first incident they've had, either.

Robbie Fitzgerald, the shop's owner, said the company has had minor issues with the property before. Their awning has been ripped up, planters knocked over and broken, some mystery liquids have been smeared on the door, but no one had ever broken in until a brick smashed through a pane of glass.

"Although it is well-lit, it is still not extremely well-traveled," she said of their location. "It's disturbing to know that someone came into the space, but it was very, very obvious the thing they were after."

And other businesses have been on the lookout as well.

The Annapolis Business Association has been sending out e-mail blasts with crime prevention tips and Larry Vincent, owner of Lawrence Clothier on Main Street, submitted a petition to the aldermen and Mayor Ellen O. Moyer with more than 400 signatures asking for help with the growing crime problem downtown.

"We've done everything and their answer was to appoint a committee," he said. "The (city's) attitude is part of the problem - they are dismissive. We told them a year ago they had problems."

Mr. Vincent said both the police chief and the mayor have done little more than talk.
"We don't need another mindless committee, but actual leadership and actual responsibility for this problem."

But city officials said the rise in crime hasn't gone unnoticed.

Alderman David H. Cordle, R-Ward 5, and chairman of the Public Safety Committee, has organized a forum from 6-9 p.m. tonight at City Hall addressing these and other issues facing the city.

Annapolis Police also have a commercial crime specialist who visits each of the crime scenes and provides information and tips for how to better secure the buildings.

Unlike some other business owners, Ms. Fitzgerald praised the work of the police and said their response time was good and their downtown presence was making a difference.

"The patrol cars on the streets really make a difference," she said. "The more they can be on the street, the less there is the potential for crime."

Moving her business to West Street about four years ago, she said she sees a different kinds of people walking the streets today and a much safer neighborhood.

"There are more people with kids out willing to walk the streets. It's a safer place," she said. "The individuals involved in illicit businesses, I don't see them as much and that's good. It is changing and there is a strengthening of the businesses community within the area. I think it will only get better - I'm patient."