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Narcotics trafficking and the American mafia: The myth of internal prohibition
Authors:Philip Jenkins
Institution:(1) Administration of Justice, Pennsylvania State University, 901 Oswald Tower, 16802 University Park, PA, U.S.A.
Abstract:Numerous books assert that the Mafia long had a prohibition against engaging in narcotics trafficking, either for reasons of morality, or else because of the public stigma attached to drugs. In reality, there are many problems with the belief in voluntary abstention. The mythical nature of ldquointernal prohibitionrdquo, and the far different reality, will be illustrated from the case of Philadelphia, supposedly the base for one of the most powerful and traditional-minded of all the American Mafia groups, the ldquofamilyrdquo headed from 1959 to 1980 by don Angelo Bruno. We will attempt to explain the roots of the prohibition myth, both for writers and for the wider public that appears so endlessly enthusiastic about sagas of organized crime. Finally, the paper examines the implications of this myth for policy makers in successive ldquowars on crimerdquo.
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