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Patterns of drug use and criminal activities among latino arrestees in California: Treatment and policy implications
Authors:Virginia Gil-Rivas  M. Douglas Anglin  Jeffrey J. Annon
Affiliation:(1) UCLA Drug Abuse Research Center, NIDA Hispanic Initiative on Drug Abuse and AIDS Research and Researcher Development, University of California-Los Angeles, 90024 Los Angeles, California
Abstract:This study examined the patterns of drug use and criminal activities among Latino arrestees. The findings indicate that while the prevalence of drug use at time of arrest, and in the prior 12 months were significantly lower for Latinos compared to Whites and Blacks, drug use still is of concern for this ethnic group. Almost 50% of Latinos reported drug use in the last year, and more importantly, they were more likely to report using dangerous drugs such as cocaine, heroin, and PCP than any other ethnic group. These findings are even more alarming considering that, for the most part, Latino drug users were treatment-naive, and that less than half perceived a need for drug treatment. Regarding criminal activities, Latinos were less likely to have a history of prior arrests and to have been arrested in the year prior to the interview than any other ethnic group. Interestingly, those immigrants who have resided in the U.S. for less than 1 year were significantly more likely to have been charged with drug-related crimes. U.S. born Latinos were more likely to have been arrested for property crimes, while Central American immigrants were more likely than any other Latino group to have been arrested for violent and domestic violence crimes. Treatment and policy implications of these findings are discussed.
Keywords:drug use  Latinos  crime
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