Pubdate: Sat, 02 Jun 2001 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Author: Heather Clark, Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/johnson.htm (Johnson, Gary) JOHNSON SAYS FIGHT FOR NEW NATIONAL DRUG POLICY UPHILL BATTLE Gov. Gary Johnson was preaching to the converted Saturday when he called the war on drugs a "miserable failure," but after two years of fighting for a new national drug policy he said proponents are still facing an uphill battle. "We're going to look back on this issue and recognize it as the atrocity that it is," Johnson told 700 people attending a national drug-reform policy conference. "The war on drugs is a miserable failure." Johnson, a two-term Republican who has emerged as a national proponent for the legalization of marijuana, was the keynote speaker at the conference sponsored by the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation. The nonprofit group, which has offices in New York, Washington, D.C., California and New Mexico, says it is working for a national drug policy based on public health, science, common sense and human rights. While Johnson believes he's facing an uphill battle on the national front, he said his stance on the issue has made gains in New Mexico by getting the public to look at illegal drug use as a medical, not a criminal, problem. "We've gone from status quo to neutral," Johnson told reporters after his speech, explaining that New Mexicans are generally better informed about the nation's drug policies. The governor, who has said he used marijuana and cocaine in the 1970s, also discussed two measures he hopes to add to his drug-reform package before the legislative session next winter. Johnson said he wants to look into the issues of undercover narcotics officers hounding illegal drug users and parolees being sent back to prison for substance abuse. He said almost all those arrested for using illegal drugs - with the exception of people whose vehicles are pulled over in a traffic stop - are taken into custody as a result of their involvement with undercover law enforcement officials. On the second issue, former inmates who were addicted to drugs before and during their incarceration are being sent back to prison for drug use, usually as a parole violation, because the corrections system refuses to recognize drug use as a medical problem, the governor said. "Who are we serving by putting them back in prison?" Johnson asked. The governor said he doesn't have statistics on either of the issues, but his staffers are researching them. The governor also attacked what he considers double standards in the United States when it comes to drug policy. Each year, about 450,000 people die from tobacco use and 150,000 die from alcohol use, but only 10,000 people are killed by cocaine and heroin, Johnson said. "Wake up, America, marijuana isn't even making the list," he said. Even so, 800,000 million people are arrested nationwide each year for marijuana use and of those, half are Hispanic, Johnson said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake