Human Interest DPMC VIDEOS Thread

The Adventures of Dr. Crackhead

Filmmaker Jennifer Di Cresce follows Peter Ferentzy, PhD., a controversial author and addictions expert though a tangle of career ambitions, love and dysfunction. When evidence of Peter's own crack addiction begins to surface, Jennifer contends with the compromised aims of his "harm reduction" advocacy.
 
[video=youtube_share;8af0QPhJ22s]http://youtu.be/8af0QPhJ22s?list=UUn8zNIfYAQNdrFRrr8oibKw[/video]
 
I found this video.

[video]http://news.msn.com/us/video?videoid=39e7416a-685b-452f-87ac-f1a3164e1052[/video]

People are surprised that a suburb or city near Boston is full of pharm opiates, and heroin, that people travel there to buy the drugs, and that addicts are switching to heroin since it's a lot less expensive and more potent. 8(
 
Drugs seized from ex-police chief's home
Published On: Oct 02 2014 07:25:31


NSFW:
square_sticker_3_x_3.jpg
 
[video=vimeo;95458907]http://vimeo.com/95458907[/video]​

The International Network of People who Use Drugs (INPUD) and Sawbuck Productions are happy to present "We ARE The People," a documentary advocacy film on the state of drug user activism and union organizing in the United States. The film also offers insight into the process behind the formation of the United States Alliance of Drug User Unions (USADUU), a national federation of drug user unions across the U.S. For now please enjoy the film, but keep coming back as over the coming weeks we will be posting more for you, including the filmmakers' account of the filmmaking process, an article from Eliot Albers of INPUD talking about why they initiated the project, an update on each of the unions featured in the film, and much more.
http://druguseractivism.org/
 
Seriously those "in-land" border checkpoints are only one reason they are there - for drug and cash(see 'asset forfeiture') seizures , and at the very last for no other reason then to fuck with, harass, arrest and plain annoy people. AND THEY ARE NOT EVEN NEAR THE BORDER, i heard/read that a lot are around 100 - 150 miles away from border.. That is ridiculous..


The war on dope that's bankrupting Texas

Busted in Texas: Wasteful strategies in the war on drugs are about to break the US-Mexico border




Video description:
The US spends billions on its border war. Now its chaotic drug policy is also costing a fortune, as border checkpoints snare not immigrants, but young Americans caught with small quantities of Marijuana.

"I've got a piece of advice for you. If you don't wanna get busted leave your dope at home. We are gonna bust you", Arvin, the local sheriff at the Sierra Blanca immigration checkpoint, says firmly. The checkpoint is on I-10, a highway that runs from California to Florida - a road that never even goes into Mexico. Not surprisingly, it doesn't catch many immigrants. Eight out of ten people stopped at the checkpoint are Americans. In the local police station they have 60,000lbs of seized dope, but most of it in small amounts. Processing these small busts is overwhelming local resources: their case load has gone up from 300 to 3,000 cases a year. "That little baggy of marijuana, you know how much that cost the state of Texas?" Judge Mike Doyle laughs. Now the federal government is cutting the funding that they receive to process busts at the checkpoint. So do they keep fighting a war on drugs that their own government doesn't seem keen on doing? "With all the budget cuts in Washington, it's about to get a lot worse", Arvin insists.
 
Last edited:

lol true.. but the don't let the video mis-lead you too much. Police agencies across America are MAKING tons of money off the drug war and grants from the gov't for the more drug arrests they do the bigger the grant from the federal gov't..
 
HBO: Addiction: The Film - Exerpts can be viewed at HBO website. Lots of good info.

[video]http://www.hbo.com/addiction/thefilm/centerpiece/611_film_opening.html[/video]
 
Last edited:
Searching for Burmese Jade, and Finding Misery
Video Feature: Jade’s Journey Marked by Drugs and Death

By DAN LEVIN
DEC. 1, 2014

MYITKYINA, Myanmar — At 16, the gem trader’s son set out for the jade mines to seek his fortune in the precious stone that China craves. But a month in, the teenager, Sang Aung Bau Hkum, was feeding his own addiction: heroin, the drug of choice among the men who work the bleak terrain of gouged earthen pits, shared needles and dwindling hope here in the jungles of northern Myanmar.

Three years later he finally found what he had come for — a jade rock “as green as a summer leaf.” He spent some of the $6,000 that a Chinese trader paid him on a motorcycle, a cellphone and gambling.

“The rest disappeared into my veins,” he said, tapping the crook in his left arm as dozens of other gaunt miners in varying states of withdrawal passed the time at a rudimentary rehabilitation clinic here. “The Chinese bosses know we’re addicted to heroin, but they don’t care. Their minds are filled with jade.”

Mr. Sang Aung Bau Hkum, now 24, is just one face of a trade — like blood diamonds in Africa — that is turning good fortune into misery.

Driven by an insatiable demand from the growing Chinese middle class, Myanmar’s jade industry is booming and should be showering the nation, one of the world’s poorest, with unprecedented prosperity. Instead, much of the wealth it generates remains in control of elite members of the military, the rebel leaders fighting them for greater autonomy and the Chinese financiers with whom both sides collude to smuggle billions of dollars’ worth of the gem into China, according to jade miners, mining companies and international human rights groups.

Such rampant corruption has not only robbed the government of billions in tax revenue for rebuilding after decades of military rule, it has also helped finance a bloody ethnic conflict and unleashed an epidemic of heroin use and H.I.V. infection among the Kachin minority who work the mines.

The drug and jade trades have become a toxic mix, with heroin — made from opium poppies that long ago turned Myanmar into a top producer of illicit drugs — keeping a pliant work force toiling in harsh conditions as the Burmese authorities and Chinese business people turn a blind eye.

At a time when Myanmar is experimenting with democratic governance after nearly 50 years of military dictatorship, its handling of the jade industry has become a test of the new civilian leaders and their commitment to supporting human rights and rooting out corruption, as well as an early check on whether they will reject the former junta’s kleptocratic dealings with China.

So far, experts say, they have failed.

Washington is worried enough about the link between jade and violence — and the effect on democratic change — that it kept in place a ban on the gem from Myanmar, also known as Burma, even after it suspended almost every other sanction against the country since the civilian government came to power in 2011. But critics say the sanctions are useless because China attaches no such conditions.

Continue reading the main story
“The multibillion-dollar jade business should be driving peaceful development in Kachin and Myanmar as a whole,” said Mike Davis from Global Witness, an anticorruption organization. “Instead it is empowering the same elite that brought the country to its knees and poses the biggest threat to peace and democratic reform.”

Continued and video http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/02/w...n-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0
 
Prescott Valley PD commander resigns; video shows alleged misconduct

PHOENIX (KSAZ) - A veteran police supervisor with the Prescott Valley Police Department resigned after he was caught allegedly stealing prescription drugs.

Hidden camera video shows Commander Arthur Askew standing over a box full of prescription drugs, he then grabs some and puts them in his pocket.

"IT was a shock to everybody," said Sgt. Scott Stebbins. Stebbins worked under the commander, and he says just before the end of the year the Chief got word that something unusual was happening in the evidence room where pills were stored. The chief then ordered a hidden camera investigation.

"Addiction knows no boundaries, and it can happen to anybody," said Stebbins.

According to a police report, Commander Askew told investigators that an unsuccessful back surgery left him in constant and chronic pain.

The Prescott Valley Police Department turned the case over to the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office. In a taped interview, Askew explains his actions.

Askew: "I hadn't slept in days, I was miserable. The pain was killing me, and I wasn't thinking and I screwed up... the only reason I did it was I thought it would help me sleep... it was a dumb, stupid, stupid mistake."

Police found pills in his office as well as a pistol, he claims, was given to him by a friend. When he was confronted by the department, he immediately resigned.
 
Top