Pubdate: Tue, 22 Jan 2002 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2002 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Jim Schaefer MARLINGA ABANDONS HIS GET-TOUGH POLICY ON HEROIN Macomb County Prosecutor Carl Marlinga has ended his own small-scale campaign in the war on terror. Marlinga has called off his crackdown on the Taliban, or at least on the local drug peddlers he said he believed may have -- wittingly or not -- helped finance the former Afghan rulers. Last fall, to the snickers of some defense attorneys, Marlinga announced to his staff a no-mercy policy for anyone caught selling or possessing heroin in the county. At the time, Marlinga said recently, taking any action to help eradicate the terrorism responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks seemed reasonable, even if the odds of finding links to suspected terrorism mastermind Osama bin Laden or his Al Qaeda group were remote in suburban Macomb County. Plus, Marlinga was seeing a bigger picture. "If this became kind of a national policy . . . then the odds of tripping over somebody who actually did have Al Qaeda ties would be pretty high," he said. And much was being said and published then about heroin as an occasional funding source for the oppressive regime in Afghanistan, where farmers cultivate narcotic-producing poppies. So Marlinga issued a memo: If the crime suspects have ties to heroin, punish them to the fullest. No exceptions, the memo said, unless a suspect testifies against the Taliban rulers or Al Qaeda. The policy evoked criticism from defense attorneys, whose barbs four months later are buoyed by the Taliban's quick fall to military might. Said lawyer William Swor: "One can admire Mr. Marlinga's intention," but "I think it bears no relationship to the impact of heroin in the community. . . . And certainly now that Al Qaeda and the Taliban seem to be on their last legs, if they're standing at all, I don't see that there's any more need for the policy." Marlinga agreed last week, and now says that the policy is no more. No one ended up becoming the poster child for the get-tough stance. Drug enforcement experts say most heroin from Afghanistan ends up in Europe. In Michigan, most of the heroin supply comes from South America. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom