I. Drug-Control Strategy: An Overview

Endnotes
1 Harvard University/University of Maryland, American Attitudes Toward Children's Health Issues (Princeton, N.J.: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1997).
2 Christopher Mumola, Substance Abuse and Treatment, State and Federal Prisoners, 1997, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1999).
3 Darrell Gilliard and Allen Beck, Prisoners in 1997, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1998).
4 Here and elsewhere in the Strategy, reference to "intelligence" is generally intended in a generic sense, descriptive of the gathering of information by law enforcement entities in support of broad investigative initiatives or general law enforcement information needs. It does not refer to the gathering and use of national level intelligence, such as performed by agencies of the Intelligence Community, unless either stated or clearly implied in the context. National level intelligence collection is governed by the Director of Central Intelligence. Sometimes, and only under properly circumscribed circumstances, foreign intelligence may be used to support domestic law enforcement interests.
5 Published simultaneously with this document and on the ONDCP Web site (http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov).