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The Brittney Griner swap: Was it worth it?

By Reginald J. Clyne, Esq.

Brittney Griner
WNBA Phoenix Mercury player Brittney Griner in a 2019 game against the Minnesota Lynx in Minneapolis. / Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Let’s start with an obvious fact. Brittney Griner was traveling with an illegal substance and got busted.

The United States arrests, detains and incarcerates thousands of people found with illegal drugs at its border, at its airports and on its streets. Very few Americans are disturbed by the arrest of those caught with an illegal substance and it’s also true that 41 states, as well the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, have legalized medical marijuana programs; 23 of those have decriminalized cannabis altogether.

But many other countries that prohibit the use of illegal substances like marijuana, cocaine and heroin have laws that are far more severe than those found in the U.S. for illegal possession of banned drugs.

I do not find anything wrong with countries banning drugs and having harsh sentences for possession. It’s the way to combat the ever-growing danger of illegal drugs. In 2019, 70,630 people died from drug-related deaths in the U.S. From 1968 to 2019, 1,015,000 Americans died from drug overdoses. Stopping these unnecessary deaths is a good idea to me.

Americans should not get a pass when they violate other countries’ laws by possessing, selling or using illegal drugs. We should not be considered any better than a person from Colombia transporting drugs into our country. If Americans violate a foreign countries’ law, they should suffer the consequences for their illegal behavior.

Griner was caught with hashish oil in her bag on a Russian airport video and confessed to possession. Getting convicted and going to the jail for possession is what you get when you travel with illegal drugs in most countries, and her celebrity status should not have given her a pass.

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How many young people get busted for possession of marijuana in the U.S. and nothing is said or done to get them out of jail? There is generally no outrage when a 16-year-old Black teen is arrested and incarcerated for marijuana possession, even in the Black community.

The U.S. rallied around Griner because Russia arrested her for drug possession and gave her a nine-year prison sentence in accordance with its laws. The country had only 6,300 drug overdose deaths in 2019, which increased to 7,400 in 2021 during the pandemic, according to its own released data.

In comparison, 93,000 people died by drug overdose in the U.S. in 2020 and we hit an all-time high of 107,622 deaths last year. Perhaps Russia’s tougher drug laws have allowed it to keep drug use and deaths significantly lower than in our country. Having lost a family member to a drug overdose, I would welcome anything that prevents another family from going through the trauma of losing a loved one to the ravages of addiction.

Now, we’ve swapped Griner for Viktor Bout, known as the “Merchant of Death,” a notorious Russian arms dealer. Was it a good trade? I will not jump on the Republican bandwagon and criticize President Joe Biden for achieving what many Americans wanted – the return of a basketball star who got caught up in tensions between Russian and the United States. It would have been nice if her fellow imprisoned American Paul Whelan was also released, but second-guessing a tough negotiation is Monday morning quarterbacking.

Reginald Clyne, Esq.
Reginald Clyne, Esq.

The Trump administration released more than 5,000 Taliban prisoners with no exchange. It and Republicans did nothing to bring back former Marines Whelan and Trevor Reed. Whether you agree with Biden’s trade of a man who supplied guns to Africa and the Middle East for a woman basketball player, he did achieve what the Republicans could not or did not – the return of both Griner and Reed.

To their families, any trade is a good deal, because their loved ones are home.

Reginald J. Clyne is a Miami trial lawyer who has practiced in some of the largest law firms in the United States. Clyne has been in practice since 1987 and tries cases in both state and federal court. He has lived in Africa, Brazil, Honduras and Nicaragua. [OFFSET]

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