Pubdate: Thu, 21 Sep 2006
Source: Valley Gazette (CT)
Copyright: 2006 The Valley Gazette
Contact:  http://www.valleygazette.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1398
Author: Kenneth Hoffman, Staff Writer

FORMER OFFICERS CALL TO END DRUG WARS

Police officers have been on the front lines of the "War on Drugs" in 
this country for more than 30 years.

Now some of them are saying the war is not working and are calling 
for an end to the drug war through the legalization and regulation of 
all drugs.

A group of former police officers who decided they did not believe 
the drug war was the best way to control drugs in 2002 founded Law 
Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP).

They began delivering their message and gathering members across the 
country. Representatives will address Rotary and Lions clubs in 
Connecticut over the next two months.

Peter Christ, the idea man behind LEAP, spoke at the Sept. 15 meeting 
of the Woodbridge Rotary Club.

A former police captain in upstate New York and vice-director of the 
organization, Christ admitted that LEAP was not an easy group to 
accept on face value. "We're controversial," he said,

He chatted about Sinclair Lewis and Ezra Pound over lunch but was so 
eager to begin his presentation that he left his calamari to get cold.

Christ gave a brief history of the group. It began with his premise 
that a group of law enforcement professionals who advocated 
legalizing drugs could not be dismissed as uninformed or "not getting it."

The inspiration was the group Vietnam Veterans Against the War, which 
protested the Vietnam War after returning from it, he said.

After explaining LEAP's origins, Christ moved on to the heart of the 
matter. He promised to discuss policy, not enforcement.

"We don't talk about policy[in this country]," he said, "we make it 
then move on."

The current drug policy, he said, is called by the wrong name. It is 
called the "War on Drugs," but he believes it should be called prohibition.

"War should be a short-term thing," he said. "Can we win this war? 
Does anyone think we can make the drugs go away forever?"

Prohibition

"Who thinks Al Capone was created by alcohol?" Christ asked. "Or by 
alcohol prohibition?"

The room universally chose the second option.

Christ said news headlines that say "drug-related shooting" are 
misleading because they draw the inference that the shooter or victim 
was high on drugs.

In reality, Christ said, most of the drug-related violence is not 
associated with drug use but with fighting over drug-dealing territory.

"It should be called a prohibition-related shooting," he said.

Christ said that LEAP is calling for a federal policy change. He said 
major policy changes have been made before, citing the abolition of 
slavery, women's suffrage and desegregation as examples.

"We are capable of changing," he said.

He said the Constitution had to be amended to institute alcohol 
prohibition because it was in violation of the commerce clause.

Article 1, section 8 of the Constitution states, "The Congress shall 
have power...to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the 
several states and with the Indian tribes."

Christ and LEAP believe that by prohibiting all drugs, they cannot be 
regulated by Congress although they should be, as an interstate 
commercial business.

"[Drug use] has to be legal in some form," Christ said. "Everyone 
agrees with me if they agree that all these drugs have so much 
potential to do harm that they must be regulated."

"Right now, the thugs and gangster make the rules about drugs," 
Christ said, "not the government."

Experience

The crux of Christ's argument is in his 20 years of police experience.

He said he went into police work believing that drug legalization was 
the way to go. He said he saw so much violence because of the 
prohibition of dugs that he became even more convinced of the 
necessity of ending the drug war.

"Drugs are bad," he said. "The drug war is worse."

He said that drugs are cheaper, more available and purer than they 
have ever been, even after more than 30 years fighting the drug war.

"We need a discussion on this," Christ said. "No one is discussing 
this. Until we end prohibition, regulation is impossible. We are 
doomed on this path."

As the members of the Woodbridge Rotary filed out after the 
presentation, some joined LEAP and others were still skeptical, but 
everyone thanked Christ for presenting a different point of view.

John Stewart, president-elect of the Rotary, said, "I have never done 
drugs of any kind, even though I grew up in the '60s, but he's right."

"You ban them, and you turn them over to a criminal element," Stewart 
said. "Instead of being prescribed by a doctor, it is being 
prescribed by someone on the corner."

Attorney General Richard Blumenthal declined to comment for this 
article. Connecticut Chief State's Attorney Kevin Kane and the State 
Police did not return calls seeking their comments.

For more information on LEAP and drug legalization, visit http://leap.cc.

The organization has sent speakers to the Ansonia and Seymour-Oxford 
Rotary clubs.

Upcoming dates for additional presentations in the region are as 
follows: Oxford Lions Club, Sept. 26 at 7 p.m.; Bridgeport Sunrise 
Rotary, Oct. 11 at 7:30 a.m.; Bridgeport Host Lions Club, Nov. 1 at 6:30 p.m.
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MAP posted-by: Elaine