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Law Enforcement Officials Who Support Legalization of All Drugs

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2002661006_sunstamper04.html

Sunday, December 4, 2005 - Page updated at 12:00 AM


Guest columnist

Legalize drugs — all of them
By Norm Stamper

Special to the Los Angeles Times

Sometimes people in law enforcement will hear it whispered that I'm a former cop who favors decriminalization of marijuana laws, and they'll approach me the way they might a traitor or snitch. So let me set the record straight.

Yes, I was a cop for 34 years, the last six of which I spent as chief of Seattle's police department.

But no, I don't favor decriminalization. I favor legalization, and not just of pot but of all drugs, including heroin, cocaine, meth, psychotropics, mushrooms and LSD.

Decriminalization, as my colleagues in the drug-reform movement hasten to inform me, takes the crime out of using drugs but continues to classify possession and use as a public offense, punishable by fines.

I've never understood why adults shouldn't enjoy the same right to use verboten drugs as they have to suck on a Marlboro or knock back a scotch and water.

Prohibition of alcohol fell flat on its face. The prohibition of other drugs rests on an equally wobbly foundation. Not until we choose to frame responsible drug use — not an oxymoron in my dictionary — as a civil liberty will we be able to recognize the abuse of drugs, including alcohol, for what it is: a medical, not a criminal, matter.

As a cop, I bore witness to the multiple lunacies of the "war on drugs." Lasting far longer than any other of our national conflicts, the drug war has been prosecuted with equal vigor by Republican and Democratic administrations, with one president after another — Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush — delivering sanctimonious sermons, squandering vast sums of taxpayer money and cheerleading law enforcers from the safety of the sidelines.

It's not a stretch to conclude that our Draconian approach to drug use is the most injurious domestic policy since slavery. Want to cut back on prison overcrowding and save a bundle on the construction of new facilities? Open the doors, let the nonviolent drug offenders go. The huge increases in federal and state prison populations during the 1980s and '90s (from 139 per 100,000 residents in 1980 to 482 per 100,000 in 2003) were mainly for drug convictions. In 1980, 580,900 Americans were arrested on drug charges. By 2003, that figure had ballooned to 1,678,200. We're making more arrests for drug offenses than for murder, manslaughter, forcible rape and aggravated assault combined. Feel safer?

I've witnessed the devastating effects of open-air drug markets in residential neighborhoods: children recruited as runners, mules and lookouts; drug dealers and innocent citizens shot dead in firefights between rival traffickers bent on protecting or expanding their markets; dedicated narcotics officers tortured and killed in the line of duty; prisons filled with nonviolent drug offenders; and drug-related foreign policies that foster political instability, wreak health and environmental disasters, and make life even tougher for indigenous subsistence farmers in places such as Latin America and Afghanistan. All because we like our drugs — and can't have them without breaking the law.

As an illicit commodity, drugs cost and generate extravagant sums of (laundered, untaxed) money, a powerful magnet for character-challenged police officers.

Although small in numbers of offenders, there isn't a major police force — the Los Angeles Police Department included — that has escaped the problem: cops, sworn to uphold the law, seizing and converting drugs to their own use, planting dope on suspects, robbing and extorting pushers, taking up dealing themselves, intimidating or murdering witnesses.

In declaring a war on drugs, we've declared war on our fellow citizens. War requires "hostiles" — enemies we can demonize, fear and loathe. This unfortunate categorization of millions of our citizens justifies treating them as dope fiends, less than human. That grants political license to ban the exchange or purchase of clean needles or to withhold methadone from heroin addicts motivated to kick the addiction.

President Bush has even said no to medical marijuana. Why would he want to "coddle" the enemy? Even if the enemy is a suffering AIDS or cancer patient for whom marijuana promises palliative, if not therapeutic, powers.

As a nation, we're long overdue for a soul-searching, coldly analytical look at both the "drug scene" and the drug war. Such candor would reveal the futility of our current policies, exposing the embarrassingly meager return on our massive enforcement investment (about $69 billion a year, according to Jack Cole, founder and executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition).

How would "regulated legalization" work? It would:

• Permit private companies to compete for licenses to cultivate, harvest, manufacture, package and peddle drugs.

• Create a new federal regulatory agency (with no apologies to libertarians or paleo-conservatives).

• Set and enforce standards of sanitation, potency and purity.

• Ban advertising.

• Impose (with congressional approval) taxes, fees and fines to be used for drug-abuse prevention and treatment and to cover the costs of administering the new regulatory agency.

• Police the industry much as alcoholic-beverage-control agencies keep a watch on bars and liquor stores at the state level. Such reforms would in no way excuse drug users who commit crimes: driving while impaired, providing drugs to minors, stealing an iPod, assaulting one's spouse, abusing one's child. The message is simple. Get loaded, commit a crime, do the time.

These reforms would yield major reductions in a host of predatory street crimes, a disproportionate number of which are committed by users who resort to stealing in order to support their addiction.

Regulated legalization would soon dry up most stockpiles of currently illicit drugs — substances of uneven, often questionable quality (including "bunk," i.e., fakes such as oregano, gypsum, baking powder or even poisons passed off as the genuine article). It would extract from today's drug dealing the obscene profits that attract the needy and the greedy and fuel armed violence. And it would put most of those certifiably frightening crystal meth labs out of business once and for all.

Combined with treatment, education and other public-health programs for drug abusers, regulated legalization would make your city or town an infinitely healthier place to live and raise a family.

It would make being a cop a much safer occupation, and it would lead to greater police accountability and improved morale and job satisfaction.

But wouldn't regulated legalization lead to more users and, more to the point, drug abusers? Probably, though no one knows for sure — our leaders are too timid even to broach the subject in polite circles, much less to experiment with new policy models. My own prediction? We'd see modest increases in use, negligible increases in abuse.

The demand for illicit drugs is as strong as the nation's thirst for bootleg booze during Prohibition. It's a demand that simply will not dry up. Whether to find God, heighten sex, relieve pain, drown one's sorrows or simply feel good, people throughout the millenniums have turned to mood- and mind-altering substances.

They're not about to stop, no matter what their government says or does. It's time to accept drug use as a right of adult Americans, treat drug abuse as a public-health problem and end the madness of an unwinnable war.

Norm Stamper is the former Seattle police chief and author of "Breaking Rank: A Top Cop's Exposé of the Dark Side of American Policing" (Nation Books, 2005). He is an advisory board member of LEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition), www.leap.cc
 
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Cops Call To Legalize All Drugs

http://www.CopsSayLegalizeDrugs.com/
http://www.cannabisculture.com/v2/content/cop-calls-legalize-drugs
http://www.straight.com/article-206649/cop-calls-legalize-drugs


by Carlito Pablo, The Georgia Straight. Posted on Thursday, March 19 2009 04:58:28

DRUG WAR

BC Police officer David Bratzer wants the provincial government to regulate drugs like it regulates alcohol

Cops like David Bratzer are a rare breed.

Think of the late Gil Puder. A distinguished Vancouver police officer, Puder called for an end to the war on drugs while he was in active service during the late 1990s and continued to do so despite threats of disciplinary action from his superiors.

Or the recently retired West Vancouver police chief Kash Heed. At one time, while he was still with the Vancouver police, Heed, according to Bratzer, also spoke about the legalization of drugs.

Bratzer has been with the Victoria police for only three years, and already the 31-year-old officer has stepped forward to question the basis of the country’s drug laws.

“As a police officer, you always want to help people, so it’s very frustrating to be a police officer and enforce laws that are not necessarily helpful,” Bratzer told the Georgia Straight by phone.

Last month, he addressed participants in a cannabis convention held at the University of Victoria, where he presented his proposals for a post-prohibition era.

Step one, he said, is to legalize all drugs. Step two is for the provincial government to regulate drugs in the same way it regulates alcohol. Step three, he continued, is to decide what to do with the “peace dividend” or the funds that government can save by stopping the war on drugs.


Bratzer also told participants at the convention, which was organized by the International Hempology 101 Society, that among the things guaranteed in a war-on-drugs regime is criminal activity. This comes from both drug users in need of money for a quick fix and organized-crime groups involved in the production and distribution of drugs, he said.

Coming out to speak about these things as a volunteer with Law Enforcement Against Prohibition—a Massachusetts-based group composed of current and former members of the police and justice communities—isn’t easy.

“It’s been mixed,” Bratzer said when asked about the reaction of his Victoria police colleagues. He stressed that his views are entirely his own and do not reflect the position of the police department.

He also has two older brothers who are with the Victoria police. “We have talked about it,” Bratzer said. “They understand that I have my own opinions and they respect that. They don’t necessarily agree with me but they respect my right to free speech.”

The Straight caught up with B.C. solicitor general John van Dongen earlier this month at a private screening of A Warrior’s Religion, a documentary dealing with gangs in the South Asian community. When asked about the prospects of legalization, van Dongen said: “That is a federal issue and certainly the Conservative government has made their position clear that they’re not going there.”

Where Canada’s war on drugs may lead to in the future worries Tony Smith, a retired 28-year veteran of the Vancouver Police Department and also a LEAP member.

In Mexico, Smith noted, drug cartels have grown so powerful with profits from the drug trade that they can either buy off police, judges, and politicians or kill them at will.

“What’s really the difference here and there?” Smith asked in a phone interview with the Straight.

In the U.S., according to Smith, there’s much talk about drug corruption among law enforcers. That may not be the case in Canada, but he warned that once it starts happening here, “you won’t know which policemen are under the pay of the drug people and which policemen aren’t” and “it’s a very thin line once you approach that point.”

Referring to the ongoing turf war among gangs here in the Lower Mainland, Smith noted that drug lords now don’t seem to care about “what level of violence they’re using amongst themselves”.

What if, Smith asked, somebody comes “stepping out of the line and thinks, ‘Well, you know, screw it. I’m in a bit of a problem here. I’ll just take out the policeman or the judge or whatever.’ And once that occurs, then we’ll have total anarchy.”

The war on drugs
> Share of enforcement-related activities in Canada’s drug strategy: 75 percent

> Share of drug-related criminal charges in Canadian courts in 2002: 23 percent

> Cost associated with drug cases before the courts in 2002: $330 million

> Policing costs for drug enforcement in 2002: $1.43 billion

> Correctional-service costs associated with drugs in 2002: $573 million

> Canadians reporting having used illicit drugs during their life in 1994: 28.5 percent

> Canadians reporting illicit-drug use during their life in 2004: 45 percent

Source: “Canada’s 2003 renewed drug strategy—an evidence-based review”, published in the HIV/AIDS Policy and Law Review’s December 2006 edition

- Article from The Georgia Straight on March 19, 2009.

Cops Support Legalizing Drugs and Explain Why

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition explains their mission and reasons for wanting to reform the drug war.

 
Re: Cops Call To Legalize All Drugs

:glugglug:
 

ed007

Banned
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

it’s impossible, in my opinion, to win the war against drugs when there is so much money to be made and such a huge demand for the product.

alcohol and cigarettes are addictive legal drugs which kill more people each year than illegal drugs so i say make them all legal and then at least you can control the quality, put the drug dealers out of business and use the billions in tax revenue for something useful + the police can use much more of their limited resources solving other crimes. :2 cents:
 

Legzman

what the fuck you lookin at?
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

This man speaks the truth! He should run for president in 2012! He'd get the majority vote I guarantee!
 
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

^ Call me a dreamer but I agree with you lol
 

Rey C.

Racing is life... anything else is just waiting.
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

When he was mayor of Baltimore, I thought Kurt Schmoke was a tad on the goofy (idealistic) side, for his views on drugs and the criminal justice system. But now that I think about it, maybe he was just a few years ahead of his time.

We're caught in a Wile E. Coyote cycle: "let's just keep doing what hasn't worked after almost 40 years. Maybe it'll work next month, next year... next decade." :rolleyes:

I don't know what the exact right answer is, but what we're doing now is clearly not the right answer.
 

JayJohn85

Banned
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

"Legalize All Drugs" Dont think it would be a good idea to legalize all drugs. But pot yea.
 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

Sunday, December 4, 2005

That worked. :tongue:

Legalize all crime as well. So, the police can sit around eat and get paid for doing even less than they do now. ;)
 

ed007

Banned
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

the cupcake has spoken!! :rolleyes: :tongue:

1264310856.jpg
 

Legzman

what the fuck you lookin at?
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

"Legalize All Drugs" Dont think it would be a good idea to legalize all drugs. But pot yea.

Sunday, December 4, 2005

That worked. :tongue:

Legalize all crime as well. So, the police can sit around eat and get paid for doing even less than they do now. ;)

What has the war on drugs brought us? Crime. Plain and simple. Up to and including murder. All because drugs are illegal. Rival gangs killing each other over drug selling turf. Legalize drugs and the gangs will decrease in number. Not right away, but slowly over time. You'd put non tax paying drug dealers out of business. They'd be forced to find real jobs and pay taxes and hence give the government more money to throw away. The government could also benefit from drug taxation.

Education is the answer to keeping kids off drugs not having them be illegal. If people wanna do drugs they gonna do em. Legal or not! May as well free up a shit ton of room in prisons for real crimes like murder which would, as I've stated, decline with legalization...
 

ed007

Banned
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

^^ :hatsoff: :hatsoff:

Will, in America you :ban2: the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol for consumption from 1919 to 1933 did it work? :nono: :crash: it just lead to more organised crime.

it's time to try something different and making drugs legal is the only other option alongside education. :thumbsup:
 
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

What the heck do we have to lose? Drugs on the street? Already! Less crime? I think so!
Trouble at borders? Already have that! Legalizing might ease that issue. Tax Revenue? Couldnt hurt! Addicts? Already have there sources, but if allowing legal spots to buy, part of the the revenue should go to rehab organizations. War on drugs? tons of tax dollars back into the economy.

Prohibition just does not work in the least bit, this war on drugs has proved it! A total Failure!
 

PlasmaTwa2

The Second-Hottest Man in my Mother's Basement
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

The schizophrenic homeless guy on the corner who looks like Antonio Banderas without shoes says legalizing drugs is a good idea, as well. So should he run for President?
 

Wainkerr99

Closed Account
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

Sounds too good to be true. It also sounds easier than it is. Now that people believe they have more entitlement to things generally than they ever did before, they would feel it part of their right to be in a haze or daze most of the time.

Mind you, it could open up job opportunities for certain jobs, like, say, ones where one needs to drive heavy machinery.

Still, now people feel they have more freedom, they will use this to get what they want.

My concern is for those who refuse to take drugs. Peer pressure is a powerful influence. Once drugs are freely available to anyone, there is nothing stopping students from urging their mates to 'try, just once'. Who wants to be called a square, or mocked as a Christian? No-one, for sure. To prove they are not, for example, Christians, students would feel they should try the drug. Of course it may not turn to be so healthy for that person.

But hey, not the others problem. Right?

I wonder who will be laughing all the way to the bank. Oh, that's right. The drug peddlers.

It feels strange to be part of a race that prides itself on how out of it they can be, instead of aspiring to be something more. It is an excellent method to control the population. Greater even than religion. Keep 'em drugged. Heck, you can make it buy one get one free. Or even NEW!!! IMPROVED!!! Marijuana. Now in silver bags!!! Maybe one can buy a shot at Dollar Tree. Or Walmart.

Maybe tourism would increase, should other countries not take part in this folly.

I can just imagine the effect this would have on party goers. Now women would need to be even more wary of date rape drugs.

Two wrongs don't make a right.

Oh let me stop.

I am probably one lone voice in an arena of screaming drug thirsty lungs.
 

ed007

Banned
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

i don't drink alcohol or smoke. i never have and i probably never will as it just doesn't interest me. yet, if i wanted some crack or almost any other illegal drug i'm sure i could get it today. it might take less than an hour. please let's stop kidding ourselves that we can ever win the war on drugs. it's impossibe.

do some research and you will find that the legal "drugs" alcohol and cigarettes etc. kill more people than the illegal "drugs."

The truth is stranger than fiction!! let's get real and then maybe we can get a grip on drugs and other similar problems in society. :2 cents:
 
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

it’s impossible, in my opinion, to win the war against drugs when there is so much money to be made and such a huge demand for the product.

alcohol and cigarettes are addictive legal drugs which kill more people each year than illegal drugs so i say make them all legal and then at least you can control the quality, put the drug dealers out of business and use the billions in tax revenue for something useful + the police can use much more of their limited resources solving other crimes. :2 cents:

For normal people like us that would be called common sense. But not them. They have the brains of a beer can.

I tried Speed once when I was full of the cold one winter. This was a couple of years back. It was just a standard cold. Sore throat, blocked nose, watery eyes. I thought to myself well if it easies the symptoms a little then it's better than suffering for the next three days or so. And see within 10 minutes or so of taking it (mixed in a coffee) the symptoms of the cold WERE GONE and by the time the stuff wore off. All that was left of the cold was a ever so slight runny nose, nothing more than a sniff ever couple of minutes. That stuff helped get rid of the cold's major symptoms in minutes. Compared to the crappy cold capsules and Lemsip drinks you have to buy to combat the cold legally. I've never touched the drug since though. Infact the only drugs I take are painkillers for a sore head once in a while. It gives you something to think about knowing that Speed can cure most of your cold symptoms in no time at all. But the "legal" ways of curing a cold is long and suffering by using cold capsules from a pharmacist. I was curious that day and with me full of the cold I was willing to give it a go and it paid off.
 

ed007

Banned
Re: Former Police Chief says Legalize All Drugs

^^ also remember all i'm saying is let's try and make the best of a bad situation just like we currently do with booze and sigs + some sensible education.

it's not going to make much difference to me but wouldn't it be better to get your "illegal" drugs from a pharmacy where the government, i hope, is accountable than the local neighbourhood drug dealer who mixes God knows what into your bag of crack. :2 cents:
 
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