Pubdate: Mon, 29 Oct 2001 Source: Foster's Daily Democrat (NH) Copyright: 2001 Geo. J. Foster Co. Contact: http://www.fosters.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/160 STOP THE DRUG PARAPHERNALIA CHARADE Who's Kidding Whom? Since the psychedelic days of the 1960s counterculture, shop owners have winked at their customers while telling police the water pipes and bongs arrayed on their shelves are strictly for smoking tobacco. It's a game that's been played for years in communities throughout the country. But in Dover, it's a game the police aren't playing. The department is trying to stop one merchant who markets such wares from selling them in the city. The action the department has taken of confiscating merchandise police have defined as drug paraphernalia would set a legal precedent in the state and help put so-called "head shops" out of business throughout New Hampshire. Not surprisingly, Dover's action is being challenged in court by the shop owner whose merchandise had been confiscated. A ruling by the court in the department's favor would finally give law enforcement authorities throughout the state a new tool for controlling substance abuse. The strategy to confiscate water pipes, bongs and other forms of paraphernalia has been tricky in the past for many communities. Law enforcement officials hear the same story from all shop owners. They simply tell officers their products are not intended for the abuse of illegal substances. No one is naive enough to swallow that line. And even if some shop owners really believe that themselves, that doesn't stop those who use drugs from buying the equipment to get high. But the hitch in the past has been in proving to a court that such devices are, indeed, used primarily for the consumption of illicit drugs. That's where the Dover Police Department's strategy is breaking new ground. Authorities have used expert testimony from members of the state Attorney General's Drug Task Force, educators, drug chemists from the state police laboratory in Concord and the executive director of the Southeast New Hampshire Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services Center. Undercover officers also gathered evidence prior to issuing a warrant to confiscate the items all the experts identified as being used solely for the purpose of smoking drugs. Most people know when they see a 3-foot-long bong that it's used for smoking marijuana and other illegal drugs. Nobody uses such a device for smoking tobacco. It's a no-brainer, and it's about time the issue is being taken to the courts for a review. No doubt, proving the intent of the store owners who stick to the typical story line will remain problematic for prosecutors seeking to make charges stick. But if police can at least get the apparatus of drug abuse off the shelves, then they have another means to discourage drug abuse, especially among the young people of a community. Drug paraphernalia shouldn't be difficult to identify for what it really is - - in the store or in court. After all, if it quacks like a duck and walks like a duck ... - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom