Pubdate: Mon, 26 Sep 2011
Source: Colorado Independent (CO)
Author: Scot Kersgaard

COLORADO POLICE, JUDGES CHAMPION DRUG LEGALIZATION

Hundreds of law enforcement professionals including Denver's U.S.
District Judge John Kane have come together on a curious quest: Saying
the drug war has failed, they want to legalize drugs.

Some are very nuts and bolts, saying the war on drugs has cost
trillions of dollars while only making the problem worse. Others like
Kane, while agreeing on that point, are more philosophical. "Our
national drug policy is inconsistent with the nature of justice,
abusive of the nature of authority, and ignorant of the compelling
force of forgiveness," he says on the web site of Law Enforcement
Against Prohibition.

Tony Ryan, who was a Denver police officer for more than 35 years,
told The Colorado Independent that not only has the drug war been
utterly ineffective but that it has also been counterproductive in
many important ways.

He says the war on drugs is the number one reason cops become corrupt.
"It's the money. These drug cartels don't care who they kill. Even a
good cop, faced with the choice of `take this money or we'll kill you'
will often take the money. And it is getting worse. Drugs are a
vicious business," he said.

Ryan, now retired, says he never worked in narcotics but that illegal
drug trafficking puts every cop's life at risk and puts every cop in
the position of potentially being offered the take a bribe or die
proposition.

"If you stop someone for a minor traffic matter and drugs are visible,
you have to do something about it," he says simply.

He notes that the online DrugWarChronicle has no problem coming up
with a new story every week about corrupt law enforcement
professionals.

He says that while the money coming from the sale of drugs causes huge
problems on one hand, money coming from the federal government-with
virtually every law enforcement organization in the country getting
grants of one sort or another to fight the drug war-causes additional
problems.

"The war on drugs is an addiction because of the money police
departments get," Ryan says.

With budgets down everywhere, he says one reliable source of funds for
police departments is money for drug enforcement. "They don't hire
more officers," he said. "They use the money to avoid layoffs, and
they shift people from other uses to drug enforcement."

Ryan is among those circulating petitions for Colorado's Regulate
Marijuana like Alcohol initiative. He also serves as a public speaker
through LEAP.

"We give members of law enforcement, who saw the drug war up close and
risked their lives for it, a voice," Tom Angell, spokesman for the
group, told the Colorado Independent. "They will almost universally
tell you that the drug war distracted them from the mission of solving
crimes and ensuring public safety."

He says LEAP wants to see all drugs made legal. "There is no drug that
is made safer to the public by turning its manufacture and
distribution over to cartels and gangs. You don't want gangs selling
drugs on your street corners, but that is what you have," he said.

The FBI released a report this month showing that even while drugs may
be for sale on a street corner near you, it is not for lack of effort
that the drug war is being lost. Last year, in the United States, 1.6
million people were arrested on drug charges, with more than 80
percent of those arrested on possession charges. Just under half of
all arrests were for simple possession of marijuana.

"Since the declaration of the `war on drugs' 40 years ago we've
arrested tens of millions of people in an effort to reduce drug use.
The fact that cops had to spend time arresting another 1.6 million of
our fellow citizens last year shows that it simply hasn't worked. In
the current economy we simply cannot afford to keep arresting three
people every minute in the failed `war on drugs,'" said Neill
Franklin, a retired Baltimore narcotics cop who now heads the group
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP). "If we legalized and taxed
drugs, we could not only create new revenue in addition to the money
we'd save from ending the cruel policy of arresting users, but we'd
make society safer by bankrupting the cartels and gangs who control
the currently illegal marketplace."

It goes without saying that plenty of people still believe the war on
drugs is worth fighting. Colorado Attorney General John Suthers said
in a recent public forum that if marijuana were legalized in the
United States, the cartels would simply move into new lines of
business.

Angell said continuing the current policies of prohibition serve no
purpose, arguing that drug use in the United States is higher than
almost anywhere else in the world. "Almost half of all American adults
admit to having used illegal drugs. Everyone who wants to use drugs
already is using drugs," he said.

Angell said that making drugs legal and treating addiction as a health
issue would save money and lives.

Former Lafayette judge Leonard Frieling agrees.

"Who do you want controlling the supply of drugs? Gangs, cartels, the
Taliban, or the government?" he asks.

When the city of Lafayette proposed increasing the fine for possession
of marijuana from $100 to $1000 and a year in jail, Frieling resigned.
In his resignation letter, dated 2-12-2007, he wrote, "I cannot in
good conscience sit on the bench while being unwilling to enforce the
municipal ordinances. I personally cannot support such a misguided
law. Have you considered that for some, cannabis is medicine? Have you
considered the relatively benign effects of the drug compared to
alcohol?"

The city backed down, but Frieling was done as a judge. He works today
as an attorney, doing mostly criminal defense, including a lot of drug
defense work.

"A new report shows that more people in the United States are killed
by prescription drug overdoses than by traffic accidents," Frieling
said.

"If people want to worry about something, they should worry about
that," he says.

In fact, he's right. A story aired this week by ABC News, says that
for the first time in history more people in the U.S. are killed by
drug overdoses than traffic accidents and that the bulk of those
deaths come from accidental overdoses of prescribed opoids. ABC News
reported that cases of addiction to prescription drugs is up 400
percent in the last decade.

He says if efforts to legalize drugs are successful, he will smile as
his job as a drug defense attorney is eliminated.

"Drug prohibition is such a waste of resources and it does so much
damage to lives, and creates so much violent crime," he says.

Frieling said that people who abuse drugs have a health problem that
needs to be addressed. "You can't charge someone with a felony because
of a health problem and then expect them to pull themselves out of the
gutter."

Frieling says that up until the 1910s all drugs were legal in the
United States and that the rate of drug abuse in the country was about
the same as it is now. "If you can't win a war in 40 years, you
probably can't win the war. At some point you need to face the fact
that the war cannot be won."
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