Pubdate: Sat, 09 Dec 2000 Source: Rolla Daily News (MO) Copyright: 2000 Rolla Daily News Contact: 101 West Seventh St., Rolla, MO 65401 Fax: (573) 341-5847 Website: http://www.therolladailynews.com/ Author: R.D. Hohenfeldt, Managing Editor Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n1816/a05.html TO PROTECT AND COLLECT I'm of the opinion that Sheriff Don Blankenship and his deputies are the only people in this country who really are against illegal drugs. Oh, sure, you and I say we're against illegal drugs, but what have you done to stop drug abuse? I've done nothing, and I doubt you have, either. Blankenship and his deputies volunteer their time on a checkpoint west of town on Interstate 44, which has been called a "drug pipeline." The sheriff and his deputies have taken literally tons of dope off the highway and out of circulation. That's tons of dope that aren't going into the bloodstreams of the nation's children. Although the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that drug roadblocks are illegal, Sheriff Blankenship said his operation doesn't fit the description of what the court ruled illegal, so he's going to keep on operating the checkpoint. Good for him! The Missouri Sheriffs Association has warned its members about the ruling. The Missouri Police Chiefs Association has told its members to quit conducting checkpoints at least until the ruling can be researched. The Missouri State Highway Patrol has said it will cease conducting its drug checkpoints, so I guess in Phelps County the only people who will actively try to halt drugs on the highway are Sheriff Blankenship and his deputies. The Justice Department has told him that his checkpoint is legitimate and can continue. Officials with the American Civil Liberties Union said they believe Blankenship should stop the checkpoints anyway. "Even if the Justice Department gave him the go-ahead, I don't think it changes the fact that the practice appears to conflict with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling," said Matt LeMieux, executive director of the ACLU of Eastern Missouri. Blankenship said what differentiates Phelps County's checkpoints from others is that only drivers who are already acting suspiciously are stopped. Although the deputies set up signs on the interstate warning motorists of an upcoming roadblock, the checkpoint is set up off the interstate, so the people who go through it either live in the area or are trying to avoid what they think is a checkpoint. "We have statistics to show that the vehicles we have come through our operations, we've found drugs in 61 percent of the vehicles," Blankenship said. "That's a reason for the stops. We are confident we are well within the guidelines." Sheriff Blankenship and his deputies ought to receive some kind of recognition for this. Oh, sure, they've been recognized-and chastised-by the Kansas City Star. They've been recognized-and chastised-by the county Democrats who tried to use the drug checkpoint as a way to oust Sheriff Blankenship from office. They've been recognized-and chastised-by the county prosecutor who went so far as to have the sheriff investigated. (The investigation showed the sheriff had done absolutely nothing wrong.) The only positive recognition Sheriff Blankenship and his deputies have received is from me and the DEA. And, oh, yes, there was that majority of voters who recognized the excellent job done by Sheriff Blankenship and returned him to office for another four-year term. I guess that's some important recognition! Keep up the good work, sheriff. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake