Pubdate: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2002 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: James Gill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) ARREST WEEDS OUT POTHEADS' BEST HOPE We don't know which of the candidates to succeed retiring New Orleans DA Harry Connick will get his endorsement, but we do know it won't be criminal defense lawyer Gary Wainwright. One of Wainwright's first acts, were he to be elected, might be to nol-pros his own case; he was picked up on a marijuana charge at an Algiers Carnival parade this year. He is highly unlikely to get the chance, however. Because Wainwright advocates decriminalization of marijuana possession, he was originally declared persona non grata when Connick, with his conventionally stern views on drugs, announced a briefing for candidates. Connick relented, however, and Wainwright duly turned up last week, seizing the opportunity at a subsequent press conference to spout what his host will have regarded as hippy heresy. None of the other candidates present at the briefing -- Civil District Court Clerk Dale Atkins, former U.S. Attorney Eddie Jordan and lawyers James Gray and Michael Darnell -- cared to address the topic. If they had, they would hardly have agreed with Wainwright. Although his theories make a certain amount of sense, espousing them is no way to be elected DA. Those theories are, however, gaining ground elsewhere. Nevada is about to hold a referendum on a proposition to legalize possession of up to three ounces of marijuana, which would be taxed and sold in state-licensed stores. Canadian Justice Minister Martin Cauchon wants fines instead of prison for users. And British Home Secretary David Blunkett announced last week that possession of marijuana will, in most circumstances, no longer be grounds for arrest, although at the same time the penalty for dealing will be increased from five to 14 years in prison. Blunkett must be in a muddle of five-joint proportions to conclude that it should suddenly be less wrong to possess marijuana, but almost three times as wrong to sell it. Dealers will naturally be encouraged to push more lucrative, and dangerous, hard drugs if they are liable to a long stretch regardless. The Nevada proposition makes much more sense by putting the illegal pot dealers out of business and generating a few bucks for the government. Perhaps that will raise moral objections, but what is good for alcohol and tobacco ought to be good for such a comparatively benign drug as marijuana. Wainwright, though a lonely voice in the DA's race, would find plenty of support among the police in this and other countries for the view that an inordinate amount of time and money is wasted on penny-ante drug cases. Britain's Association of Police Chiefs agrees with that proposition, although Blunkett's announcement caused the resignation of drug czar Keith Hellawell. If it is true, as hard-liners argue, that marijuana users are liable to graduate to heroin and crack cocaine, it cannot be said that strict prohibition has helped. Heroin is making a big comeback on the streets of New Orleans right now, and it may be that legalizing marijuana and regulating its sale would separate users from purveyors of the hard stuff. Since the Dutch government adopted such a policy, far fewer marijuana users are reported to have made the switch to hard drugs. In Holland heroin is the province of old timers; in New Orleans youngsters continue to become addicted. It is at least arguable that the legalization of marijuana would make New Orleans safer by freeing the police to concentrate on crimes, often committed by hard drug users, that threaten life and property. Any debate on the subject would certainly be germane in a DA's race, but the only politic course for candidates is to denounce drugs as a scourge and oppose any move to relax the laws. A liberal candidate for DA seems, after 30 years of Connick, almost a contradiction in terms. A candidate for DA who is awaiting trial takes a bit of getting used to as well. That Wainwright may not agree with the law he is accused of breaking does not make his candidacy any less incongruous. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager