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Comparison of Drug Control Strategies in San Diego, 1989
This study assesses the consequences for offenders of
various drug enforcement strategies employed by the San Diego Police
Department and profiles the factors that characterize street-level and
mid-level dealers, drug users, and the drug market. The drug
enforcement strategies examined include the use of search warrants,
body wires, police decoys, surveillance, officer buys and sells,
wiretaps, and sweeps. Measures of the consequences of arrests include
drug and property seizures, convictions, and sentences. The data were
drawn from police and court records of drug arrests made by three
special sections of the police department in San Diego, California.
Additionally, data were collected through personal interviews
conducted at the time of arrest with a subsample of persons arrested
for drug charges. The arrest tracking file, Part 1, contains
demographic information about the offenders, including criminal
history and gang membership, as well as data on each arrest through
final disposition, charges, and sentencing. The interview portion of
the study, Part 2, provides information about the demographics and
characteristics of drug users and dealers, criminal history and drug
use history, current arrest information, and offenders' opinions about
drug use, drug sales, police strategies, and the drug market.
Complete Metadata
| aiCategory | Not AI-ready |
|---|---|
| bureauCode |
[ "011:21" ] |
| dataQuality | false |
| identifier | 3513 |
| internalContactPoint |
{
"@type": "vcard:Contact",
"fn": "Jennifer Scherer",
"hasEmail": "mailto:Jennifer.Scherer@usdoj.gov"
}
|
| issued | 1993-10-02T00:00:00 |
| jcamSystem |
{
"acronym": "OJP_EXT",
"id": 8,
"name": "External system not available in CSAM"
}
|
| language |
[ "eng" ] |
| metadataModified | 9/2/2022 6:22:00 PM |
| programCode |
[ "011:060" ] |
| sourceIdentifier | https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09990 |