Tony D'Souza - Kids, Minivans, and Drug-Dealing: How the Recession Pulls Ordinary Families Into the Weed Game
January 5, 2012
Gary Null

For some time, I'd been hearing stories from my sources in the interstate marijuana racket about law-abiding "civilians" turning to the game because of the recession, and so, armed with introductions, I hit the road to meet some of these unlikely criminals face to face. That's how, on a hot evening in June, I found myself in Dan's Northern California kitchen.

Dan isn't his real name. Nor are any of the names in this story, for obvious reasons. But his situation is a familiar, harsh reality for many Americans, as I learned while doing research for my recent novel on this subject. Dan is in his early 40s, a slim, soft-spoken former short-haul trucker who once owned all the toys: a used Mercedes, snowmobiles, Jet Skis. When they were both employed, he and his wife—a retail manager—easily cleared $100,000 a year. "We ate out breakfast, lunch, and dinner," Dan, now a minimum-wage laborer, tells me with folded arms. "That's the way life was for 17 years."

Read More: 

http://www.alternet.org/story/153586/kids%2C_minivans%2C_and_drug-dealing%3A_how_the_recession_pulls_ordinary_families_into_the_weed_game
Article originally appeared on The Gary Null Blog (http://www.garynullblog.com/).
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