Dr. Robert Byck was a Yale University cocaine expert who testified before Congress in 1979 to warn of an impending drug epidemic from smokable cocaine, seven years before the 1986 crack panic. His warnings were completely ignored.[^1]
### 1979 Warning
Byck testified before the House Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control in 1979, predicting "the worst epidemic of drug use this country had ever seen, something like the speed epidemic of the 1960s, except on a national scale, and that it was going to be the use of free-base cocaine." He begged Congress and NIDA to mount an educational campaign to avert the epidemic. "This advice went unheeded. We are not significantly more knowledgeable about cocaine smoking. No educational campaign was mounted. Today we are in the midst of the predicted epidemic," Byck told Congress in 1986.[^1]
### 1986 Congressional Testimony
Sitting in the audience at a 1986 congressional hearing on [[Crack Cocaine]], listening to government experts claim they had never heard of crack until recently, Byck rose to challenge the official narrative. He renewed his plea for research funding, but was rebuffed. "I hope my testimony today will have a greater effect than my warnings in 1979," Byck said bitterly. Committee chairman Senator William Roth of Delaware scoffed: "Every problem that comes before us, everybody says that money is the answer. I think you have to use it pretty intelligently and we don't have it in large supply."[^1]
### The 100-to-1 Law
Byck later criticized the 100-to-1 sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine as "absolutely senseless." He explained that Senator Lawton Chiles of Florida had asked him whether crack was 50 times more addicting, and Byck had agreed - and that "50 is the number that got doubled by people who wanted to get tough on cocaine and some expert's opinion on addictiveness got translated into weight. The numbers are a fabrication of whoever wrote the law, but not reality." Under the 100-to-1 ratio, a powder dealer had to sell $50,000 worth of cocaine to get the same five-year mandatory sentence as someone who sold $750 worth of crack. The law was passed without any hearings.[^1]
### Footnotes
[^1]: Gary Webb, *Dark Alliance*, Chapter 15: "This thing is a tidal wave"