Pubdate: Thu, 26 Oct 2000 Source: Cape Cod Times (MA) Copyright: 2000 Cape Cod Times. Contact: 319 Main St., Hyannis, MA 02601 Fax: (508) 771-3292 Feedback: http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/edits/letters.htm Website: http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/ ENDORSEMENT: QUESTION 8 While new approaches are needed to deal with illegal drugs, this ballot initiative invites trouble. Few would argue that our nation's "war on drugs" has been a dismal failure. Law enforcement officers will tell you that the amount of drug activity on the streets hasn't changed in 20 years. Our prisons are full of drug dealers, but incarceration does not cure the medical problem of drug dependency. Faced with these and other facts, proponents of Question 8 on the state ballot argue that it is time to try something different. The proposed law would loosen the eligibility requirements for drug offenders to get treatment and would set up a treatment fund that would collect forfeited drug assets that are now collected by prosecutors and police. It also would tighten rules on seizing drug criminals' assets. The trust fund administered by the state Department of Public Health is not a bad idea, especially in light of troubling evidence that police and prosecutors have not wisely spent drug forfeiture money. But the drawbacks of Question 8 far outweigh its benefits. Specifically, the proposed initiative would give judges the discretion to decide whether first-or second-offense, low-level drug defendants (those arrested for dealing up to 28 grams of cocaine with a street value of $2,800) could benefit from drug treatment instead of incarceration. If the defendant successfully completes the terms of the drug treatment program, he would carry no criminal record. The Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association and every district attorney in the commonwealth are against this approach because it basically means that the third offense in drug dealing is the first offense. Middlesex District Attorney Martha Coakley said the proposal would give drug dealers a "get out of jail free pass." Under the proposed initiative, it would take a lot longer to get drug offenders off the streets. In Bourne, for example, it would mean that an 18-month undercover drug investigation that nabbed several first- and second-offenders would have been a waste of time and resources. The defendants likely would have been returned to the community. Let's look at another dangerous scenario, one entirely possible under the proposed initiative. A dealer with 56 grams of cocaine now divides his stash in two. He sells 28 grams to a friend so that now both could be safe from incarceration under the new law. Now, consider that each dealer sells a gram to 56 individuals. All 56, if they are first-or second-offenders, could also be free of a criminal record if the judge so rules. Granted, several of the 58 individuals, if arrested, could benefit from the drug treatment under the new initiative. But what about the others? Do we allow them to continue spreading the scourge of drugs to another 58 individuals? While it is true that we as a country must develop new approaches to confronting illicit drug use in our society, Question 8 is not the way to do it. Vote no on Question 8. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst