Rachel Hoffman: More Collateral Damage
Radley Balko | May 13, 2008, 8:11am
Earlier this year, police in Tallahassee, Florida raided the home of college student Rachel Hoffman, who friends say was a bit of a hippie-ish free spirit, and concede that she shared and sold small amounts of marijuana and MDMA within her social circle. Hoffman was at the time undergoing state-forced drug treatment after police found 20+ grams of marijuana in her car during a traffic stop. The raid turned up another five ounces of marijuana, plus six ecstasy pills and assorted pot-related paraphernalia.
From this, Tallahassee police apparently threatened Hoffman with prison time, then agreed to let her off easy if she'd become a police informant, and set up a deal with her supplier. They never informed Hoffman's attorney or the state prosecutor of the arrangement. They wired Hoffman, and asked her to arrange to purchase 1,500 ecstasy pills, cocaine, and a gun—a deal that would have run well over ten thousand dollars. Hoffman's friends and family have told me that all three purchases would also have been drastically out of character for her. Which means the dealers she was buying from were almost surely on to her.
Tallahassee police found Hoffman's body last week. The first thing they did was call a press conference in which they blamed Hoffman for her own death, stating that the arrangement she made with the police was consistent with department protocol, and that she agreed to meet with the dealers in a different location than the one previously agreed upon.
After public outrage, the city is now walking that back a bit, and has asked Florida's attorney general to look into the Tallahassee Police Department's procedures for dealing with drug informants.
Chalk it up as collateral damage, and add Hoffman's name to that of Isaac Singletary and Anthony Diotaiuto, three deaths of non-violent, non-threatening Floridians in just the last few years, thanks to the drug war.
NP | May 13, 2008, 2:45pm | #
smacky,
Much as I'd like to take the easy route of just saying "I pwned you" and letting this go, I'll explain why I made my previous comments, as you asked why I brought up these "completely non-related discussions."
When you first accused others of being irrational, I couldn't help but think of that separate thread where you let your emotions overrule your reason, so I brought that up. (I'm guessing even you now agree with me on this, since you didn't refute any of the points I made above.) And I did that because you didn't seem eager to give half the concern you showed for children to this young woman who became yet another tragic casualty of the drug war.
Now you said that she made herself "an instrument of the state" of her own accord, and you're right, she did just that. But that's not the main issue here. The issue is that
she was forced to become an instrument of the state by her circumstances. The girl was threatened with prison time and thus lost student benefits and scholarships and possible expulsion from school, not to mention a permanent record which very well would've spelled the end of her upward mobility. I think most of us would've took the path she did if we were in her position.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there's no evidence thus far suggesting that she lied and put innocent parties in danger only for her sake, unlike many other informants. (I know you'll disagree, but even if she did lie I'd still consider that a reasonable action based on her circumstances.) And contrary to your assertion, not all cops are "underhanded and dishonest." I see that even you agree narcs are bad, and the cops may very well believe that anyone who deals in narcs, professionally or not, is a threat to society and deserves to be prosecuted accordingly.
So if I were you, I'd take shots at the main source of this problem--the drug war and the use of informants--rather than at this (late) woman, whose life, along with many others, would've been saved had the government set their priorities straight. And I think that was other H&Rers' criticism of your comments as well.