NCJ Number
170660
Date Published
1997
Length
11 pages
Annotation
The author believes the criminalization of poor women for ingesting drugs during pregnancy will be remembered as one of the most misguided and constitutionally questionable tactics employed by government as part of the war on drugs.
Abstract
During the late 1980s when the specter of crack babies haunted political rhetoric, more than 200 criminal prosecutions were initiated against women in almost 20 States. Overzealous prosecutors came up with various pseudolegal theories on which to base their cases. Less dramatic than criminal prosecutions but far more prevalent are civil proceedings against new mothers who use drugs. Hundreds of women have lost custody of their newborns based on a single positive drug test at birth. Although illicit drug use crosses all income levels and races, black women and poor women have been disproportionately targeted for prosecution. Racial and class biases in prosecutions can be attributed to two factors: (1) public clinics and hospitals primarily serving low- income minority women comply with reporting regulations to a far greater extent than private hospitals and doctors serving middle and upper classes; and (2) doctors are influenced by a drug user profile based on racial stereotypes and are therefore much more likely to test the urine of poor black women than of middle class white women. Adequate prenatal care and drug treatment are often not available to poor pregnant women, and the practice of prosecuting women for using drugs during pregnancy raises a host of significant legal and ethical issues. It is becoming increasingly clear that crack babies are actually poverty babies; homelessness, despair, lack of medical care, poor nutrition, abusive childhoods, and abusive relationships are poverty-related factors that threaten the future of babies born to crack-using mothers. 33 notes