Pubdate: Mon, 10 Dec 2001
Source: Gazette, The (CO)
Copyright: 2001 The Gazette
Contact:  http://www.gazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/876
Author: Barry Bortnick

SHERIFF SCOFFS AT DRUG WAR

San Miguel Lawman Calls Effort Waste Of Money

BOULDER -- Longtime San Miguel County Sheriff Bill Masters used to be 
a hard-charging warrior in the fight against drugs. He even got an 
award from the Drug Enforcement Agency for a job well done.

But now the state's only Libertarian lawman rides to his own tune. He 
turns down federal grants for drug enforcement programs and contends 
the nation would be better off if narcotics were legal.

It's a view Masters says state leaders, government officials and 
other sheriffs agree with, even though few take that stand in public.

"Privately, many public officials say I am right, but they can't say 
that publicly because the community won't support them," Masters said.

Masters outlined his anti-drug war argument during a lecture 
Wednesday at the University of Colorado and in a telephone interview 
to promote his upcoming book, "Drug War Addiction: Notes from the 
Front Lines of America's #1 Policy Disaster."

The sheriff, who has held office for more than 20 years and plans to 
seek re-election in 2002, remains one of the few Colorado lawmen to 
take such a public stand.

Most state leaders put Masters out in left field.

"Our society cannot afford to trivialize or ignore the serious 
problem of drugs or that children are at risk every day," Gov. Bill 
Owens said when asked about Masters' views. "Making drugs legal would 
make dangerous substances even more widely available to our young 
people. That is a chance we cannot take."

El Paso County Sheriff John Anderson considers Masters a friend but 
disagrees with his stance on drugs.

"I don't support the idea of medical marijuana and think drugs are 
harmful to society," Anderson said. "I have seen the devastating 
effect drugs (have on) people and families."

Anderson said Colorado's 60 other sheriffs consider Masters a good cop.

"He is respected for being a hard-working guy," Anderson said. "This 
is the only issue we disagree on."

Despite his views, Masters does not turn a blind eye to drug crime in 
Telluride. There were more than 40 drug-related arrests in San Miguel 
County last year, representing about 10 percent of the area's total 
criminal cases.

Still, Masters said he can't justify spending billions of dollars 
year after year in a failed campaign. Better, he says, to use a 
fraction of the money on clinics that would hand out "maintenance 
dosages" to the seriously addicted and help others kick the habit 
altogether.

John Suthers, an ex-El Paso County District Attorney, newly confirmed 
by Congress as Colorado's new U.S. Attorney, disputed Masters' drug 
stance.

"San Miguel County is not Ground Zero on the war on drugs," Suthers 
said. "But if you look in the eye of a mother whose daughter has died 
of an Ecstasy overdose, it is a whole different perspective.

"(Masters) took an oath of office to enforce the laws of the U.S. and 
Colorado. If you don't like it, become a critic, not a law 
enforcement officer."

But Masters is not a lone wolf howling against the wind. Sheriff Bob 
Braudis of Pitkin County said he and Masters are just ahead of their 
time.

"The thinking man's solution is legalization," said Braudis, who has 
served four terms in office. "If we were to legalize it, the 
narco-traffickers would be out of business overnight and we'd save 
billions.

"Eventually, others will agree, but it may not happen in my 
professional lifetime."

"People all over Colorado think the drug war is ineffective," Masters said.

"I don't know if that translates into political success, but I know 
people will respect honesty and the honest answer is this is not 
working."

The Sept. 11 terror attacks in New York and Washington only enhanced 
Masters' beliefs that too much time, effort and money is wasted on 
dopers.

He pointed out that 750,000 Americans were arrested for possessing 
marijuana in the same year terrorists brought down the World Trade 
Center.

Things might have been different on Sept. 11 had the federal 
government diverted the $17.8 billion it spends each year on the drug 
war toward terrorist threats, Masters said.

"Secretary of State Colin Powell was not in Pakistan on Sept. 11," he 
said. "He was in Peru discussing drug control."

The endless and costly drug war makes no sense to Masters. Instead, 
he says, it turns dealers into daring entrepreneurs who inflate the 
cost of their inexpensive products to compensate for the risks of 
trafficking.

"It seems clear to me that our tactics have failed and we have made a 
bunch of punks who could not run a garden hose fantastically 
wealthy," Masters said.
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