Pubdate: Fri, 15 Mar 2002 Source: East Anglian Daily Times (UK) Copyright: 2002 Eastern Counties Newspapers Group Ltd Contact: http://www.eadt.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/913 Author: Martin Davey GRIEVING FATHER'S LEGALISE DRUGS PLEA A WRITER whose son died after taking heroin has told MPs all drugs should be legalised. Fulton Gillespie, from Burwell, near Newmarket, told a House of Commons home affairs select committee the only way to stop more people dying in the future was for the Government to take control. "I'm not advocating the use of drugs, I'm saying they should be legalised so they are in our hands and not the criminals," he said. Mr Gillespie's son Scott died of an accidental overdose in February 2000, at the age of 33. His body was found at a friend's house in Ipswich. A pathology report put his death down to the drug being "toxic" and Mr Gillespie said if the heroin had been supplied legally, it would have been pure and Scott would still be alive. "There are very few things in life that concentrate the mind like the death of a child. Heroin has no long-term side-effect. What makes it a killer is not the drug, it is the criminalisation of it," he added. "The law is there to stop drug supply, but it's unenforceable and not working. We should take it out of the hands of criminals and if we want to control supply, we have to be in charge. At the moment the law hands UKP 6 billion into the pockets of criminals." Mr Gillespie said Scott had first started using drugs when he had been at school and became a heroin addict in the past three or fours years of his life. He joined other parents whose children have suffered from heroin and other drug abuse in addressing the select committee inquiry into the drug laws. A journalist with four other children, Mr Gillespie described Scott as a "hell of a nice boy" and a "sensitive soul". "I'm not screaming for people to agree with me about this. I just want them to think about it," he said. "Just because you think your child's not involved, don't think you're not affected - you are paying for a criminal system that doesn't work. "Drugs affect everyone. Sixty-one per cent of people who are in prison are there for drug-related offences. My son, who wouldn't hurt a fly, was stealing to feed his habit." Mr Gillespie said he had received a positive reaction to what he had said and hoped to see politicians take a different approach to drugs in the next few years. It is expected the committee's report, to be published later in the spring, will endorse a more liberal approach to the drug laws. "Some people think there is this massive amount of disaffected youth who would go and take drugs if they were legalised, but it's nonsense - - all the people who want to take drugs already are," claimed Mr Gillespie. "Drug users are patients, not criminals. The whole thing is a public health issue, not a criminal matter." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek