mr. stamper. .4% has come from people who've committed homicides. yet 61% has been drug offenders. 61%. most of them non-violent. yet .4% for homicides. so not only are we putting families and others through a real human toll that follows some of them the rest of their life for only having a bag of marijuana in their pocket, but we're already building up these huge costs in terms of prisons, filling them up with people when a very small percentage of them are the people committing homicides and violent crime. >> well, the prison industrial complex, the law enforcement drug enforcement industry. the cartels themselves are very deeply invested in the status quo. they are very much invested in making sure protecting and expanding their drug markets that they will continue to reap the enormous untaxed obscene profits associated with elicit commerce. >> the war on drugs gives more than financial incentives to police. it actually funds whole communities. i want you to listen to this clip from the documentary "the house i live in." >> all sorts of people get a vested interesting with a financi