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Category Archives: War On Drugs

Rachael Leigh Cook makes new egg-centric PSA about ‘War on Drugs’ – New York Daily News

Posted: April 27, 2017 at 2:44 am


New York Daily News
Rachael Leigh Cook makes new egg-centric PSA about 'War on Drugs'
New York Daily News
Rachael Leigh Cook revisited her visceral anti-heroin PSA from 1997 to address how the justice system deals with white people versus minorities when it comes to drug charges. "This is one of the millions of Americans who uses drugs and won't get ...
Remake of classic '90s ad explains: 'This is your brain on drug policy.'ThinkProgress
Remake of Classic 'Your Brain on Drugs' Ad Slams Disastrous Drug WarSalon
20 Years Later, 'This Is Your Brain On Drug Policy' Is The PSA You Need To SeeCivilized
Glamour -Collider.com -YouTube -YouTube
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Rachael Leigh Cook makes new egg-centric PSA about 'War on Drugs' - New York Daily News

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The war on drugs: PolitiFact NC looks into the number of police … – News & Observer

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News & Observer
The war on drugs: PolitiFact NC looks into the number of police ...
News & Observer
A viral image making the rounds last week (during the stoner holiday of 4/20) made a surprising implication: That ending the war on drugs could make life safer ...
Viral 4/20 image blazes through a misleading claim about the drug ...PolitiFact

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Spiritrials Reveals the Reach of the War on Drugs – The Portland Mercury

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Photo Courtesy of Boom Arts

Jeff Sessions wants to bring back the War on Drugs. If youve forgotten about the racist legacy of these get tough laws, I recommend you see Spiritrials, a play created and performed by Dahlak Brathwaite, running now through April 30 at Disjecta.

Not long before the United States elected its first Black president, a young Black man was pulled over in his car for the 10th time. In all nine previous stops, he had been doing nothing wrong, and after varying degrees of police harassment, was released without being charged. But this time, hed smoked some weed and had some magic mushrooms in his possession. How am I going to get out of this? he wondered. Hes a good guy. Hes been raised to be a credit to his racenot a statistic.

Dahlak Brathwaite Photo Courtesy of Boom Arts

Using his original hip-hop compositions (with live scoring by DJ Dion Decibels) and dramatic performance, Brathwaite takes us through his autobiographical story, pointing out where and how his run-in with the criminal justice system could have taken a different course: The cop did not need to search him on a routine traffic stop. But he does. Finding a very small amount of mushroomsan amount that in 48 other states could have resulted in merely a misdemeanorthe cop couldve let him go. But he doesnt. The DA could seek one of two avenues of prosecution for a first-time nonviolent drug offender: One would wipe his record clean, the other would forever label him a felon and addict. The DA chooses felon.

In Spiritrials, Brathwaite dramatizes his experiences in court and in a drug recovery center, embodying characters he meets there: Pastor, the old black clich Dahlak tells us he never wanted to be, and Samples, the gold chain-wearing addict who makes souvenirs of tattoos and stories. Through these humorous and poignant performances, as well as his own narrative, Brathwaite explores racism, code-switching, black cultural history, his own shame and guilt at being another statistic in the black community, and his sense that it was inevitable.

Ordered by the court to call himself an addict and find God, Brathwaites performance works through his shame and guilt with art instead. He uses rich wordplay, hip-hop, and levity to find himself again, and to show the ruinous and dehumanizing impact of the criminal justice system and how people of color are ensnared in it every step of the way. Its a powerful and persuasive account of the racism and injustice the War on Drugs has wrought.

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Spiritrials Reveals the Reach of the War on Drugs - The Portland Mercury

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New Mix: Shakey Graves, The War On Drugs, The Mountain Goats … – NPR

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Clockwise from upper left: Shakey Graves, Trio Mediaeval, The Mountain Goats, Mr. Mitch, The War On Drugs, Elliot Moss, GAS Courtesy of the artists hide caption

For this week's show, Bob Boilen and I throw open the studio door to welcome a parade of guests from the NPR Music team, each sharing their favorite April releases. This includes Jake Witz, one of our fabulous Spring interns, who has some relatively restrained music from U.K. grime artist Mr. Mitch. We're also joined by Rachel Horn, who brought us some funktacular beats from Orgone; Viking's Choice curator Lars Gotrich has surprising new cuts from The Mountain Goats and ambient artist GAS; and NPR classical guru Tom Huizenga of Deceptive Cadence shares a gorgeous Icelandic hymn from Trio Mediaeval.

Oh, Bob and I have our own picks, too his a spare and woozy acoustic cut from Shakey Graves; mine some electronic soul from Elliot Moss (think James Blake). Once Bob's out of the studio I've also got a bonus cut from The War On Drugs an epic, mood-shifting guitar jam. Robin Hilton

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New Mix: Shakey Graves, The War On Drugs, The Mountain Goats ... - NPR

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It’s time to kick our addiction to the war on drugs – Stat – STAT

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A

s New Jersey Governor Chris Christie takes the lead in crafting the Trump administrations response to the opioid crisis, he and his colleagues need to understand that we cant fix the problem until we kick our long-term addiction to the war on drugs and accept overdoses for what they are: a health issue.

Although the majority of Americans who consume illicit drugs do so without addiction, opioid overdose has become a deadly reality. Every day, 120 to 140 people in the US die from drug overdoses, more than from gunshot wounds or car accidents. About 90 of these are due to opioids.

A growing number of Americans believe that drug misuse is a health problem. Yet we continue to rely on law enforcement and the criminal justice system to deal with it, despite resounding evidence that punishment does not stop people from misusing drugs. Hefty penalties for the possession or sale of drugs have been on the books for decades. They have done little to reduce the use of illicit substances, but have instead led to out-of-control incarceration, deprived communities, and wasted public resources.

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Expecting the criminal justice system to solve a health crisis does more harm than good. For example, many jurisdictions are still reluctant to distribute naloxone a lifesaving antidote to opioid overdose to drug users and their families and friends. Instead, they limit its distribution to police officers and first responders. Police who carry naloxone can save lives, even though basic emergency medical technicians along with family members and friends of people who use drugs are more likely to be present and able to respond immediately to an overdose.

Chris Christie brings heartfelt approach to Trumps opioid commission, but some controversy too

Treating law enforcement as the primary responder to overdoses encourages punitive responses, like charging overdose survivors and bystanders with drug possession and other offenses. One town in Ohio has even started penalizing survivors with a misdemeanor charge of inciting panic punishable by up to 180 days in jail and a $1,000 fine after saving them with naloxone. These penalties discourage people from calling for help when someone around them is overdosing and will likely cause more deaths than they prevent.

The widespread adoption of drug courts praised by former US Attorney General Eric Holder as a way to strengthen public health and build stronger, safer communities is a similarly flawed solution. While some people have found help through drug courts, many of them rely on judges, not doctors, to make decisions about treatment. Drug courts often require total abstinence as a one-size-fits-all solution, sometimes ordering people off of medications like methadone or buprenorphine that are helping them reduce their reliance on heroin. Drug courts can also push people into the treatment system who arent dependent on drugs.

People for whom drug-court-ordered treatments dont work are then punished and pushed back into the criminal justice system, often with harsher prison sentences than they would have received in the first place.

Theres a better way. Its called harm reduction. This approach focuses on reducing the negative effects of drug use rather than on punishing people who use drugs in an often-futile attempt to make them stop. Harm reduction options like supervised injection facilities or drug consumption rooms have successfully prevented fatal overdoses and connected people to treatment in cities such as Vancouver, Sydney, Amsterdam, Barcelona, and Zurich; there are 74 official drug consumption facilities in Europe alone.

Expecting the criminal justice system to solve a health crisis does more harm than good.

Through its Open Arms program, So Paulo successfully provides housing, job training, drug treatment, and social services to people who use drugs without demanding abstinence. Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, and Denmark all permit doctors to legally prescribe medical heroin to longtime users who have failed other treatments. These are just a few examples of countless projects around the world that provide holistic harm reduction services.

Law enforcement can play an important role in harm reduction. In fact, police can respond more effectively when they put health first. In Seattle, the Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) program lets police officers divert users and low-level dealers to harm reduction services instead of sending them to court and jail. That approach is catching on in cities across the country, including Santa Fe, N.M.; Albany, N.Y.; Baltimore; and Atlanta. University of Washington researchers found that LEAD in Seattle decreased recidivism by nearly 60 percent, and saved millions of dollars. LEAD participants were also significantly more likely to obtain housing, employment, and legitimate income.

In Vancouver, Canada, police have urged drug users to use the citys supervised injection facility, Insite, to prevent overdoses. In countries as diverse as Kyrgyzstan, Kenya, and Moldova, police have developed operational guidelines to respect the human rights of people who use drugs and advance public health goals like HIV prevention.

Opioid users flock to a safe place where they are monitored and not judged

If we are serious about preventing overdoses and reducing the harm associated with substance misuse in the US, similar programs should be created here. We need solutions that meet people where they are, treat them as human beings, and provide evidence-based services to help them make necessary changes to lead healthier and safer lives.

That means providing tools and services directly to drug users and their families and friends, and supporting frontline responses by health and social service providers. We need harm reduction options based on evidence, public health, and a respect for human rights.

Above all, we need to kick our harmful and ineffective addiction to punishment so police, health providers, and people who use drugs can work together to save and transform lives.

Marc Krupanski is a program officer with the Public Health Program of the Open Society Foundations, which aims to advance health and human rights by promoting social inclusion, transparency, accountability, and participation in health policy and practice. The Open Society Foundationss Public Health Program supports projects and organizations that advance the health and human rights of people who use drugs in over 26 countries.

Follow Marc on Twitter @policingwatch Add Marc on Facebook

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It's time to kick our addiction to the war on drugs - Stat - STAT

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Amnesty International urges Philippines to end "War on Drugs" – The Nation

Posted: at 2:44 am

The activists, dressed in Filipinos national costume, gave out mangoes to participants, observers and police.

They said the fruit represented harmony and friendship between Thailand and the Philippines. They said they hoped to convey a friendly message that their calls to end the War on Drugs are in the best interest of the people in both countries and the region.

They said their concerns were based on their report If you are poor, you are killed: Extrajudicial executions in the Philippines War on Drugs, which was published on January 31.

Based on witness statements and corroborating documents including police reports and other information, Amnesty International concluded that the vast majority of the killings that we investigated appear to have been unlawful extrajudicial executions which were carried out by government order or with its complicity and acquiescence, Piyanut Kotsan, director of Amnesty International Thailand, said.

He said the AI report has shown that most of those killed are people from poor communities, making what is officially portrayed as the War on Drugs a war on the poor.

It has also had a devastating impact on children, who have been killed, harmed during police operations or experienced severe trauma as a result of losing a family member, according to the AI statement.

Piyanut said: The scales of alleged human rights violations are alarming. We are calling on the government of the Philippines to send a clear message to all law enforcement officials and the public in the Philippines that extrajudicial executions are unacceptable and strictly prohibited at all times.

We also urge them to prioritise prompt, impartial and effective investigations into all drug related killings, particularly by law enforcement officials. And they must press criminal charges in any cases where investigations uncover sufficient, admissible evidence of responsibility for offences involving human rights violations.

During the 30th Asean Summit, being held in Manila between April 2629, AI in many countries are also submitting their open letters to the government of Philippines to stop and investigate human rights violations in its war on drugs.

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Amnesty International urges Philippines to end "War on Drugs" - The Nation

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Father of former Miss World Philippines latest victim in Duterte’s war on drugs – Telegraph.co.uk

Posted: April 25, 2017 at 5:35 am

Ms Parungao, a TV presenter who was crowned Miss World Philippines in 2015, wrote a grief-ridden tribute to her father, who she credited with launching her modelling career as he used to ask for her photos when he was working in Taiwan.

As a child she followed him everywhere on his rare visits home and she once found him crying in the garden.

My first memory of my dadA man in his denim jeans and white t-shirt. Bubbly, full of life and love, hurting and sobbing, she wrote. As I sit watching him now sleeping still, I told him, Dad, you will never be hurt anymore.

According to a police report seen by the Philippine Star, her father grabbed the gun of his police escort who had uncuffed him when he complained of chest pains.

It fits a pattern of reports where thousands of drugs suspects have allegedly been killed fighting arrest in encounters with police, or while reaching for guns in custody.

Thousands more have been murdered in unsolved vigilante-style executions that have drawn international condemnation since Duterte was elected last summer, pledging to kill criminals in a crackdown on drugs crimes.

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Father of former Miss World Philippines latest victim in Duterte's war on drugs - Telegraph.co.uk

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Duterte’s War on Drugs Stumbles in Rehabilitation Effort – WSJ – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

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Duterte's War on Drugs Stumbles in Rehabilitation Effort - WSJ
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MANILAThe government of Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte is giving up on supersize drug rehabilitation centers, shifting the burden of treating addicts ...

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Duterte's War on Drugs Stumbles in Rehabilitation Effort - WSJ - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

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The War on Drugs Are Back to Business on Ethereal ‘Thinking Of A … – Baeble Music (blog)

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Among the many exclusives and goodies that were available on Record Store Day (aka Hipster Christmas) last weekend, fans of the Philly indie rockers The War On Drugs got a particularly exciting gift: A special RSD 12" featuring a brand-new original song, "Thinking of A Place." The track is everything we've come to love and expect from the Adam Granduciel-led group, whose unique mix of psychedelia and Americana won them much-deserved praise on 2014's Lost In The Dream.

Through TWOD has never been one to stick to the magic "3:30 or less" rule, the track is over 11 minutes long, which is always tricky to pull off because you almost need to justify the time length to the listener in order for them to stick around for the whole thing. While this usually means throwing in some kind of musical explosion in the song's final act, Granduciel pushes grand gestures to the side, instead letting it linger at a steady pace without building or losing momentum. The sprawling wall of sound, soaring guitar solos, and the warm, nostalgic production gives the song a quality that perfectly balances the line between vintage and modern. That spacy, reverb-drenched Americana sound has greatly influenced the indie rock world the past few years, and has even spilled over to mainstream pop on occasion, but no one still does it quite as accurately and confidently as TWOD.

The gentle synths and guitars linger and hum throughout the track, and the lack of clear pause or moment of silence gives the song a constant sense of movement, floating along as Granduciel fondly reminisces about times long past. It's not necessarily a song that slowly builds towards a conclusion, but that's never what TWOD intended to do. Like the best jam bands who have come before them, TWOD's music is about the journey, engulfing you in reverb and guitar fuzz as you wander through the meticulously placed layers of sound. In that regard, "Thinking Of A Place" is the ultimate driving song: It's a long, hypnotic, mid-tempo track that you can leave on in the background and let it wash over you. Give this track a listen whenever you're on an open, empty road, or when you simply want to get lost in your head, revisiting old times within the sonic haze.

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The War on Drugs Are Back to Business on Ethereal 'Thinking Of A ... - Baeble Music (blog)

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Where the war began – Rappler

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EXCLUSIVE: Families of the Philippine drug war's dead claim they know the man who shot their children and they're willing to speak his name

By Patricia Evangelista Photos by Carlo Gabuco

Rappler tracks the killings in Police Station 2-Moriones in Tondo, Manila, where the first drug fatality after Rodrigo Duterte's inauguration was shot in the early hours of July 1, 2016. Of the 2,555 drug suspects killed across the country in the first 7 months of the drug war, PS-2 Moriones claims at least 45. They were allegedly killed after police were forced into shootouts. At least 15 remain unidentified in police records.

Rappler conducted more than 40 interviews in the course of a 3-month investigation. Among them are the 7 who put their names and testimonies on the record, calling 4 of the alleged encounters summary executions and accusing the police of torture and harassment. This multimedia report presents police records and witness testimonies to profile the man residents call the demon of Delpan.

The people of the villages know the killer by name.

Rexs mother knows. She remembers the night he came looking for her son, when the killer shoved her so hard the baby she held nearly fell out of her arms.

Joshuas mother knows. She knows because he had a gun to her mouth. She knows who the killer is, knows enough that on the day her son was buried, she took a jeep and howled his name when it trundled past the police precinct.

You son of a bitch, she screamed. You killer, you killed my son.

Marios brother knows. His friends saw the killer drag Mario into the precinct and watched as he was beaten bloody. Mario's brother counted the bullet wounds himself. There were 7 in all.

Danilos aunt knows for sure. She says it was the killer who gave her his name.

The man who killed Joshua and Rex and Mario and Danilo was not in uniform. Neither were the armed men who were with him. But the mothers are certain the killer was a cop. The neighbors are certain the killer was a cop. Every witness to the 4 deaths is certain the killer was a cop.

There is no doubt on that one point. The cops also say the killer was a cop.

Part 1: 'I will kill you'

INTRODUCTION: Where the war began

On June 30, 2016, a few hours after he took his oath of office, the 16th President of the Republic of the Philippines appeared at the Delpan Sports Complex along Road 10 in Tondo, Manila to inform his new constituency that a war was at hand.

I am asking you, do not go [into drugs] because I will kill you, Rodrigo Duterte told the residents of Isla Puting Bato. It may not be tonight, it may not be tomorrow, but in 6 years, there will be one day that you will make a mistake and I will go after you.

Delpan sits at the bottom of Tondo, population 630,363, one of the capitals poorest areas where the shanties sit cheek to jowl with slaughterhouses and churches. Plastic tables covered with white tablecloths were scattered across the orange-painted gym. Duterte's people called the event a solidarity dinner.

President Rodrigo Duterte was late, held up by his first Cabinet meeting. When he arrived, the pineapple silk shirt was gone, traded for a striped polo shirt and a navy jacket with the sleeves rolled up. He said he ran for the presidency because he saw the Philippines drowning in drugs, criminality and poverty.

If someones child is an addict, he told the crowd, be the one to kill them, so it wont be so painful [to their parents].

Do it first, he said, because that person will die either way.

Those of you into drugs, Im done warning after the election, he said. Whatever happens to you, all of you listen, it could be your sibling, it could be your spouse, it could be your friend, your child, I am letting you know, there will be no blaming here. I told you to stop. Now, if anything happens to them, they wanted it. They wanted it.

The Presidents promise was kept. At 3 in the morning of July 1, hours after the Presidents speech, the earliest reported extrajudicial killing of the new regime occurred along IBP Road, near the corner of Road 10 and the Delpan Sports Complex.

The killing held the rough elements of what would be a pattern of deaths across the rest of the country in the next 7 months. Blotter number 1675 noted the body found of a male person alleged victim of summary execution. The unidentified victim, between 25-30 years old, about 53 tall, had been left with a sheet of cardboard over his body. It read, I am a Chinese Drug Lord.

The responding officers were members of the Delpan Police Community Precinct (Delpan PCP), one of 4 precincts under Manila Police Station-2 Moriones (PS-2).

At least 3 more drug-related killings committed by unidentified men would occur under PS-2s area of responsibility within the next two weeks. They were later reclassified as deaths under investigation.

And then the police killings began. By the time the war was suspended on its seventh month, a total of 2,555 were killed across the country in what the government now calls legitimate police operations.

Jimmy Walker

PART 2: 'I will kill you'

Jimmy Walker got his last name from his American grandfather and not much else. Just past 20, he is snaggletoothed and shy, all elbows and collarbones inside the loose white shirt, his strawberry blonde hair already showing dark roots.

He was close to his cousin Joshua Cumilang, the 18-year-old whose family nicknamed Wawa. Joshua sniffed solvent occasionally. Jimmy, who had bad lungs, never did. The boys were as good as brothers, even if Jimmy was often the butt of Joshuas jokes. Jimmy, bungi, Joshua called him. Jimmy the toothless. But it was Joshua who loaned Jimmy clothes, who fed Jimmy when Jimmy was so broke he couldnt afford a cup of rice.

The Cumilangs live in Isla Puting Bato, a sweaty maze of shanties tucked into the curve of the Manila North Harbor. Thick ropes of electrical wiring hang overhead, so low in some places that it is impossible to walk upright. The alleys are makeshift markets garlic by the bushel, cigarettes by the stick, powdered Oreo-flavored shakes sold beside roasted pig guts. The colors are bright a purple door here, a yellow awning there, graffiti scrawled big and broad over the few stretches of open wall.

One Friday afternoon, Jimmy, Joshua, and two other young men were sitting on a roadside ledge. The Cumilang shanty was behind them, down a set of stone steps. It was a month before Christmas. Joshua was counting the money he had saved for the holidays.

All of a sudden there were armed men. They were dressed in civilian clothing. Jimmy knew them from their rounds in the area. Its the ones who arent in uniform who kill here, he said.

One of them was the man Jimmy knew as Alvarez.

People would say, Stay away from that Alvarez, said Jimmy. Be careful, hes a killer.

That day, Jimmy said, Alvarez had a partner, a younger man whom Alvarez was training. Nobody was certain how they were related. They called him the other Alvarez.

The armed men started searching Joshua. They found the money in his sock, took it and pocketed it. They said the 4 young men had been using marijuana We werent, we really werent and made them stand with their hands on the tops of their heads. Two of the armed men herded Joshua down the steps to the short alley beside his house.

Joshuas mother Nenita came charging out of the Cumilang home, straight at the men who had seized her son. Sir, what are you doing sir, dont do anything sir, just jail him, please.

The younger Alvarez walked down the steps and aimed his gun at Joshua. Jimmy said his cousin looked terrified. He was begging, Ma, Ma, Ma.

It never occurred to me to stop them, Jimmy said. My mind blanked. I couldnt talk. My insides were trembling.

Alvarez aimed a gun at Nenita. She turned to run. The younger Alvarez let loose a shot. Nenita turned. She saw her son on the ground covered in blood. She tried to leap for Joshua. The younger Alvarez turned on her with a gun and chased her all the way to the street where she hid.

Alvarez took aim, said Jimmy, and shot Joshua again.

Neighbors rushed out of their homes after the gunshots. The street was crowded. The men who killed Joshua Cumilang walked over to a store just beside the Cumilang house. Witnesses said the men bought coffee and bottles of water with the money from the dead man.

Jimmy heard Alvarez on the phone. He said Alvarez was calling for backup.

The uniformed cops of the Delpan Police Community Precinct streamed in within minutes.

One of them stopped in front of Alvarez. Alvarez addressed the uniformed man as sir.

Sir, Wawa is gone, said Alvarez. Hes dead.

Good job, said the older man. Good job. Jimmy said the man raised both fists with the thumbs up.

The men made Jimmy carry Joshuas corpse into a pedicab. Nenita ran through another alley and jumped in. The two cops who were sitting with Joshua's corpse glared at her, but said nothing.

The pedicab stopped at an empty stretch of road. Nenita said a cop aimed a gun at her head. They pushed her out just before a boy darted past her to poke his head into the pedicab. One of the cops shifted his gun to the boy.

Nenita said the second cop held the other back.

Dont, he said. Thats a kid. You kill that one and theyll slap us with a case.

Part 3: 'They rape their mothers'

Delpan PCP Commander Rexson Layug

PART 3: 'Good job'

The trouble with drugs, Police Chief Inspector Rexson Layug told Rappler, is that they leave no man decent.

Layug is the commander of the Delpan Police Community Precinct (Delpan PCP), whose stark white building sits square under the Delpan Bridge. A 22-year veteran, he supervises the sprawling swath of shanties that includes Isla Puting Bato and a chunk of Parola, Tondo.

When theyre on drugs, sometimes, theyll even rape their grandmothers, he explained. Their grandmothers and their mothers. You can see it in the news. That's why they rape. Sometimes, they even kill their children, because they think theyre demons.

Layug was pleased with Project Double Barrel, the Presidents national operation against drugs. It was the Duterte administration that increased the number of policemen under Layug's command and allowed for more aggressive patrols.

Layug is a burly man, with a paunch and a lantern jaw. Since the beginning of the war on drugs, Layug has assigned an hourly beat to Isla Puting Bato, an area he described as one of his more chaotic territories.

It was one of those patrols that killed Joshua Cumilang, at least according to a report filed by the Manila Police District (MPD) Homicide Section on November 18. The spot report the account of the incident filed by police investigators described how an anti-criminality patrol walked into Purok 3 of Isla Puting Bato. The patrol noticed and chanced upon a group of men while examining a transparent plastic sachet in the act of extending over to another male companion. According to the report, the group scampered away when the policemen arrived.

In the story the police tell, one officer, a certain SPO1 Sherwin Mipa, followed the suspect who had the sachet. Joshua ran inside the basement of a small shanty. Mipa shouted for Joshua to stop. Joshua turned, already armed with a .38 caliber revolver." He fired twice, and missed.

The report said that Mipa, sensing that his life was [in] imminent danger [had] no other choice but to fire back, returned fire twice, thus hitting the suspect in the abdomen and shoulder.

The spot report also listed the collected evidence. They included a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber snub-nose revolver without a serial number, a P20 bill, and 5 plastic sachets of what appeared to be methamphetamine hydrochloride street name shabu, or crystal meth.

SPO3 Jonathan Bautista, the MPD Homicide investigator assigned to the case, said in an interview with Rappler that he had spoken to Nenita Cumilang. She told him her son did not fight back. She was, however, unwilling to file an affidavit at the MPD. Nenita later told Rappler the family couldnt file charges: Will they pay attention to me? Were little people nobody pays attention to. They salvage the big ones, dont they? So I did nothing.

Inasmuch as I could, I tried to convince her, Bautista said. I said, when I was asking her, For as long as you have any witnesses, the case will not close. There is still justice.

Bautista had written the spot report, but admitted there was some irregularity in the investigation process. Although he said he had spoken to SPO1 Mipa, the shooter on record, Bautista said all police officers involved in fatal incidents must each file either individual or joint affidavits to explain their version of events. He said none of the policemen on the scene, even Mipa, chose to submit reports to the Homicide Section. Bautista said he was forced to rely on spot reports written by the investigators of PCP Delpan and PS-2 Moriones.

To be honest, weve hit a blank wall, its like we're in limbo, he said. Considering that although theres this version of the story, the version of the police, I'm waiting for maybe someone with the courage to come out and say something like the allegations [Rappler] told us. Even if were cops, we wont stand back if the guilty need to be punished, definitely. We will file charges against them.

- Homicide Spot Report, 18 November 2016

In his interview with Rappler, Precinct Commander Layug claimed no cop under his watch had ever been injured during the drug war except for one who slipped and fell in the dark. In fact, he said, Delpan cops had never been shot at or been involved in any armed encounter with any resisting suspect during a patrol or drug operation since the beginning of the drug war.

His claim was a stark contradiction to the MPD's own police reports and media coverage. At least 11 fatal encounters with police occurred in Delpan alone, including the operation that killed Joshua Cumilang. An entry in the MPD Homicides police journal recorded the death of one Marvin Samonte, alleged drug pusher, killed on July 17, 2016. A news report detailed how Samonte was killed by members of the Delpan PCP in an apartment in Pier Dos, Tondo after allegedly resisting arrest.

The police team was led by Precinct Commander Layug.

Asked by Rappler if anyone in his unit had ever been involved in any shootouts with drug suspects during patrols, Layug said no.

No, no one has ever fought back.

Part 4: 'He looked for Mama'

Nelson Aparri

PART 4: 'They rape their mothers'

On the day after his son died, Nelson Aparri knelt just inside his front door with a rag and a bucket. He talked while he scrubbed. He said he was sorry. He said he couldnt even the score. He said maybe God would deal with the killers, because he couldn't himself. He bent over the floor, a lanky man in his late 50s, slopping water and tears over his sons blood.

It took a long time to clean.

It was Nelson who was closest to Rex. Rex was Papas boy. Even his mother Rowena agreed. It was only that night, just before the first shot was fired, that Rex Aparri screamed for his mother.

When he was about to die, Rowena said, he looked for me.

The house in Isla Puting Bato where 30-year-old Rex Aparri was killed sits along a short, skinny alley, so skinny that its possible to step out of one front door and into the door across. On September 13, 2016, at a little past 7 in the evening, word spread across the village that cops were coming. Nelson was afraid the family would be targeted, as Rex occasionally ran drugs. He had heard that every man inside a house during a raid ended up dead. He tried to drag Rex out with him.

Rex was stubborn. Not me, he said. Theyre not after me.

Rowena stayed. So did Rexs girlfriend Lori Ann and their 10-month-old son.

There were 5 armed men in all, none of them in uniform. Rowena was sitting on the front doors ledge. One of the men shoved her backward. She fell, Rex's son in her arms.

The man, she said, was the one Isla Puting Bato knew as Alvarez.

Alvarez told her they were looking for Rex. Two of the men stayed outside, shouting at neighbors to keep out of the way, threatening a teenager who had poked his head out of a window. Alvarez and another man climbed up the ladder to the second floor where Rex was tinkering with a radio. The fifth man stayed in the living room. He had Rowena and Lori Ann sit at a corner by the open door. He told them to put their mobile phones and wallets on top of the television. The women sat for half an hour, until the man guarding them walked to the bottom of the ladder with a folded packet in his hand what Rowena assumed was drugs. He called to the men upstairs.

Sir, you can have him brought down, sir, were killing him. Its positive.

Rowena began shouting Sir, he has nothing sir, how can it be positive?

Alverez and a second man brought Rex downstairs. He clung to the banister, weeping. Arrest me, please don't kill me, I have a son.

Rowena pushed the baby at Rex So he would have a shield then threw her arms around her son. It was a tangle of bodies, everyone pushing and shoving in a space the size of a bathroom. A mirror broke. One of the men hit Rowena with a gun, and kicked her out into the alley. She blacked out.

Lori Ann screamed. One of the armed men shoved her out, snatched the baby by the hair from Rex, then threw the wailing boy out to where Lori Ann knelt in the alley. She caught her son and knelt begging through the open door.

At the second shot she ran, and told Rowena that Alvarez had just shot Rex straight through the back of the head.

Nelson Aparri, standing in a nearby alley, heard the gunshots. He began to run home. Neighbors grabbed him by the arms.

No, they said, dont go. Theyll kill you too.

Nelson began to cry.

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Where the war began - Rappler

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