Wednesday, June 14, 2017

The Truth About Getting A Drug Assessment Minneapolis Minnesota

By Richard Gibson


Anyone doubting that law enforcement is at war with the people needs to wake up. The American War on Drugs was never intended to solve anything. It is simply a tool to criminalize average people from the moment blue lights come on behind them, to the moment they are faced with the reality of a drug assessment Minneapolis Minnesota.

One who has endured DUI school knows the State will proclaim that any use of drugs or alcohol is substance abuse. Even carrying an honest prescription cannot protect you from a DUI charge if you are a member of the middle to lower income class. Helped by the black market of opiate drugs, the law has been given a way to impose their agenda upon even law-abiding individuals.

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.

Treatment comes as long-term programs requiring the accused to move to another state. They can be forced to get off prescriptions although many of them use strong opiates for chronic pain conditions that remain untreated during their withdrawal supervised by four or five other adults who share the room. True medical oversight is usually a part-time aspect of treatment, and the residents now risk detox on their own.

Forcing people to abandon their homes while also extending jail stays often ensures that the home they owned or rented is lost along with any belongings they cherished. Centers house and provide residents with employment at local establishments, but the money is allocated to fines as well as payment owed for treatment they did not deserve. After their long night of restricted access to personal finances they can leave the center but have gained nothing more than their job assignment.

Treatment has basically orchestrated a program to evict groups or neighborhoods that get profiled economically. People living check to check will nearly always lose everything due to their arrest, especially when they cannot get bonded out before losing the job they had. When they have nothing left to go back for after treatment, the program has achieved the goal.

Hard addicts should have access to this level of care so they can practice sobriety by relocating as a means to radically change their life and pursue personal commitments. Unfortunately, the majority of those being subjected to these programs are weekend warrior pot smokers, New Years drunk drivers, and elderly or middle-aged people on prescription opiates. They get caught in a web of laws designed to promote the a system feeding on those most vulnerable.

Towns under attack are easy to identify. An area with 100,000 residents served by four+ law enforcement departments in zones less than 100 miles around is probably in a silent war to raise government revenue. Officers aggressively flood neighborhoods and harass anyone who drives, walks, or bikes. All designed to fuel an agenda geared towards probation recovery as well as arrests.




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