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US NJ: LTE: Drug-Enforcement Initiatives Far From Failures

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URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n071/a07.html
Newshawk: Cherylheart Project www.cherylheart.org
Votes: 1
Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jan 2005
Source: Ocean County Observer (NJ)
Copyright: 2005 Ocean County Observer
Contact:
Website: http://www.injersey.com/observer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1212
Author: Terrence P. Farley, First Assistant Ocean County Prosecutor

DRUG-ENFORCEMENT INITIATIVES FAR FROM FAILURES

I must admit that I do not know Edward Decker, who to me is the all too prolific contributor to your editorial pages, but I assume, based on the number of letters he writes, that he is retired and, based on his overwhelmingly negative comments on most issues, that he is a very unhappy person. 

I don't believe I have ever specifically responded to any of his letters; however, the one entitled "The war on drugs is far from over" in the Observer on Jan.  3 deserves a law-enforcement response. 

He initially wrongfully attacks Michael Pasterchick, the special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration in New Jersey, who is a bright, intelligent and thoughtful agent and administrator. 

He translates the good news given by SAC Pasterchick that heroin quality, while still very high, has dropped about 10 percent over the last year in New Jersey, into something sinister. 

He implies, without any basis in fact, that because the heroin purity is down means that someone is cutting the heroin with some deadly product which is dangerous to addicts and that this is the reason for the lower purity. 

He next denigrates the entire efforts of our State Department, the U.S.  military, law enforcement and other agencies that are working on the heroin production problem in Afghanistan. 

None of the above denies that this is a major problem, but we are taking many positive steps to eliminate it. 

He then claims the work of the DEA over 90 years has been a failure. 

Without challenging his time line, let me suggest that Decker speak to the parent of just one drug addict whose supplier was arrested by the DEA or other law enforcement agency, or to any of the thousands of parents, teachers or other professionals who attended training programs sponsored by the DEA and other law enforcement agencies and ask them if all of their efforts were a failure. 

I submit that he'll hear very much to the contrary. 

Finally, he suggests that the way law enforcement and the government are handling the drug crisis is all wrong, but, like most naysayers, he made no positive proposals as to how we could do our jobs better, which we would certainly encourage. 

Let me make a suggestion to him -- get a life. 

Try, just once, to look at the positive side of something -- anything -- and send in a letter about that. 

Terrence P.  Farley

First Assistant Ocean County Prosecutor


MAP posted-by: Beth

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