Pubdate: Wed, 30 Oct 2002 Source: Arizona Republic (AZ) Webpage: Copyright: 2002 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.arizonarepublic.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: William J. Bennett WE DON'T NEED POLICE PEDDLING MARIJUANA Never has the capacity of law enforcement to do its job in America been more strained than in the year since Sept. 11, 2001. Charged with ever-increasing responsibility to protect the homeland, police have their hands full investigating crimes potentially linked to organized terror. But now, in Arizona, it is proposed that officers take their focus off protecting Americans in order to run a handout program - and it's not handing out bike safety tips or meals at a soup kitchen. They are being asked to distribute marijuana. Citizens of Arizona will vote Tuesday on Proposition 203. If passed, this policy would require state police to distribute marijuana to anyone with a medical recommendation - not even a prescription - that marijuana might mitigate some condition as minor as muscle spasms or nausea. Handouts in doses of up to 2 ounces a month for a year would be authorized (an estimated 200 joints can be rolled from 2 ounces). Police would supply the demand with confiscated marijuana. With no idea of the purity of these seized stashes, the Arizona Department of Public Safety effectively would be required to set up a marijuana-sanitizing system to avoid lawsuits over handouts from bad batches. But that's not all. Proposition 203 would also make it harder to prosecute drug offenders. It would decriminalize possession of up to 2 ounces of marijuana so that anyone whose supply did not come from the police would face nothing more than a $250 fine. Proposition 203 would also eliminate mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders and require parole for those convicted of personal possession of a controlled substance. Proposition 203 has a long list of opponents: current Gov. Jane Dee Hull and both candidates for governor, Janet Napolitano and Matt Salmon; U.S. Senss Jon Kyl and John McCain; and state associations of police, firefighters, county attorneys and sheriffs. Proposition 203 is backed by big-spending drug legalizers like New York billionaire George Soros who have foisted their agenda not just on Arizona but on other states. Now, former Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods is trying to give legitimacy to the Proposition 203 drug legalization campaign. But he does not speak for law enforcement anymore. Inexplicably, Woods has simultaneously endorsed Proposition 303, an initiative to increase taxes on tobacco because of its harmful effects. Woods previously spearheaded Arizona's anti-tobacco lawsuit. When Woods campaigns so passionately against smoking cigarettes, how can he overlook the more significant health risks associated with smoking marijuana? Marijuana smokers show higher levels of inhaled tar and carbon monoxide than tobacco smokers. Marijuana impairs short-term memory and concentration and it dulls reflexes and judgment. Proposition 203 turns law enforcement on its head, making the police dealers of, rather than defenders against, drugs. If police are handing out marijuana, they are not patrolling neighborhoods, responding to calls of distress or tracking violent criminals. The safety of our children, along with the rest of society, depends on eradicating drug use, not spreading it. With so many real threats to our homeland, let's not fabricate another one by decriminalizing drug possession. William J. Bennett was the first director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy and a former U.S. secretary of education. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom