Pubdate: Tue, 14 Oct 2003 Source: News-Enterprise, The (KY) Copyright: 2003 News-Enterprise Contact: http://www.newsenterpriseonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1663 Author: Forrest Berkshire ATTORNEY GENERAL CANDIDATE SAYS HE WILL MAKE DRUG DEALERS PAY Democrat Greg Stumbo says he's running for state attorney general because he wants to make drug pushers pay. Stumbo, in an interview with The News-Enterprise Editorial Board, said he would establish a Kentucky Bureau of Investigation within the state police and fully staff branch offices in the eastern and western parts of the state. "There are really two types of people that are in this system," Stumbo said of his plan to combat illegal drugs, which he calls "Make Pushers Pay." "There's the pushers and then there are the victims, and sometimes the victims are street-level peddlers because they have to peddle the drug to support their habit. Those aren't the people we need to be putting in jail. Those are the kind of people we need to find rehabil-itative services for. We need community support." Stumbo has made fighting illegal drugs, principally prescription abuse in Eastern Kentucky and methamphetamines, also known as crank, in Western Kentucky his priority. Stumbo said there are already regional drug task forces that have been successful in busting drug rings, but they are not permanent entities. "The problem with them is they run out of money," he said. And when they are disbanded, he said, oftentimes much of the information they have gathered is lost. Stumbo also said he plans to be more proactive in litigation against companies as part of the consumer protection role of the attorney general. He also said he would emphasize environmental protection. Stumbo is in a three-way race with Republican Jack Wood and Independent Gatewood Galbraith. Wood has drawn attention to Stumbo being sued over support for a child he fathered with a woman out of wedlock. "He doesn't know what he's talking about," Stumbo said of Wood. Stumbo said he has made child support payments faithfully and has never violated a court order. He said he felt his opponents had turned to negativity in the campaign, and that he would not. Stumbo then accused Wood of being fired from the post of assistant county attorney in Jefferson County. Stumbo said if he is elected, he will make drug pushers pay, not only with time in jail but out of their pocket books. "We go after pushers not only criminally, but civilly," he said. "I intend to sue them. I intend to pursue confiscation of their assets. I intend to do the same thing Elliot Ness did when he went in to Chicago. He made it so expensive on the mob to do business that they finally got out of business." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh