Pubdate: Mon, 30 Dec 2013 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2013 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/yMmn4Ifw Website: http://www.gainesville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 Author: Hal Cohen Note: Hal Cohen was a sitting judge in Palm Beach County, elected in 1976 and retired in 2004. Before that he was a prosecuting attorney. He moved to High Springs after his retirement and resides there with his wife and two dogs. LEGALIZE DRUGS AND SPEND SAVINGS ON TREATMENT, EDUCATION Ashley Reeb's intelligent and sensible Dec. 22 column, "Long sentences fail to address causes of drug abuse," together with The Sun's recent editorial on mandatory minimum sentences have inspired me to suggest a radical but long-needed solution to the problem of drug crimes and mandatory, obscene and disproportionate sentencing in this state and nationally. I write from personal experience -- over 35 years in the justice system as a former prosecutor, former county judge and former circuit court judge who has now been retired since 2004. My background is not that of a "bleeding heart." I have actually personally sentenced people to death and imposed life sentences where appropriate. However, I have come to the conclusion that the so-called "War on Drugs" is a mammoth failure. In all my years on the bench, I could count on one hand the number of serious or high-level drug dealers ever brought before me. The endless parade of low-level addicts and street people that have come before me - including disproportionately high numbers of minorities - are statistics used to justify swollen law enforcement and prison budgets. You may read about "drug sweeps." By and large these are low-level drug users trying to feed their habits. President Eisenhower warned of a "military industrial complex" when he retired. I have now seen a law enforcement/prison industrial complex develop and grow wild. The more arrests, no matter how petty, and the longer the sentences, no matter how unfair, feed the law enforcement/prison complex endlessly. It has cost taxpayers not billions, but trillions of dollars since the "War on Drugs" began in the 1980s. And to what end? Has drug addiction and use been stopped? We have spent -- and continue to spend - taxpayer dollars on an endless and hopeless cause to fill the pockets of an "industry" that deludes the public into thinking something is being accomplished when, in fact, the only thing being accomplished is locking up people for unseemly long sentences to profit what has now become a private business to a great extent - prisons. Judges at every level of the justice system, federal and state, have been sickened by being required to impose unfair and despicable sentences ruining the lives of thousands of young people and their families. My solution: Drugs -- all drugs - should be decriminalized or legalized. They should be purchased legally and taxed like cigarettes - -- perhaps the most addictive and damaging drug of all. The revenue saved from the idiotic "War on Drugs" and prisons used to support it, taken together with the tax revenues received from the sale of drugs, would probably balance the budget of all the states. Funds diverted from this law enforcement extravaganza should be used for treatment and education. The insane and dangerous drug wars fought by the drug cartels would cease. In much the same way that eliminating Prohibition in the 1930s put an end to the bootleg battles of that era, decriminalizing or legalizing drugs would end these current-day drug wars. Many of these illegal substances were once very legal in this country. They could be purchased in a local pharmacy. I am amazed to see some of the old sales brochures of that era. We have been brainwashed into a spending frenzy to "protect our children." We have failed. Our children can purchase illegal drugs on the street of almost any town in America - urban, suburban or rural. It is time for a radical change if our current politicians have the guts to admit what has been going on for the past decades is a charade and do what makes perfect sense to anyone who knows what is going on in the real world. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D