http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/12/12/elderly.dealers.ap/index.html
Seems more like desperate measures for desperate people. It's still illegal. So how do you handle a situation like this? I can't see throwing an elderly person in jail for 10 years for selling a painkiller. What these people need is help.
The woman -- who spent two days in jail after her arrest last December -- is among a growing number of Kentucky senior citizens charged in a crackdown on a crime authorities say is rampant in Appalachia: Elderly people are reselling their painkillers and other medications to addicts.
Elderly people "may be looking for a way to bring in a little extra money," said Erin Artigiani, deputy director of the University of Maryland Center for Substance Abuse Research. "We haven't heard a lot about senior citizens being a source of those drugs. We know college students do this. It's not much of a stretch to think that seniors could do it, too."
I just don't know about this. I have a hard time believing an 80-year-old woman is just "carrying on a family tradition of drug dealing that has been part of their culture for a long time.""They justify it because they're having a hard time financially," he said. "Left to ourselves, we can justify anything, but they're really part of the problem."
However, Dan Smoot, a former state police drug detective who heads the task force, said the elderly people being charged are not necessarily struggling to put food on the table.
"Most of the elderly we arrest are merely continuing a family tradition," he said. "It has been part of their culture for a long time."
Seems more like desperate measures for desperate people. It's still illegal. So how do you handle a situation like this? I can't see throwing an elderly person in jail for 10 years for selling a painkiller. What these people need is help.