Pubdate: Thu, 13 Mar 2003 Source: Idaho State Journal (ID) Section: Reader's View Copyright: 2003 Idaho State Journal Contact: http://www.journalnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/936 Author: Stephen Heath OPERATION PIPE DREAM Oh my, how this story illustrates the law stood upon its head, thanks to the insanity of drug-warring federal officers. Assistant U.S. Attorney Monte Stiles smirks, "If you can find me a Tommy Chong bong with tobacco residue on it, then you will be in the 'Guinness Book of World Records.'" Unfortunately, the law should require Mr. Stiles to first find the bong with residue of something illegal, then make the arrest. In the case of the head shop busts, clean, unused smoking devices were essentially declared to contain such residue, which means the purveyors are being charged with participation in an imaginary action. Now these law-abiding, taxpaying business owners will be sucking up a share of Idahoans federal tax dollars as they undergo trial and possible long-term incarceration. Their families will undergo financial hardship, which could result in further drain of tax dollars via welfare and other subsidies. John Ashcroft had over 1,200 federal law enforcement agents, including over 100 federal marshals and 11 federal prosecutors employed during last week's nationwide Operation Pipe Dream. This was on a day when the government's "terror-alert" scale was on its second highest level. Rather than brushing off complaints about the feds, including Pocatello in this absurd boondoggle, Mayor Roger Chase should be sharply questioning such lunatic priorities of the DEA and the U.S. Justice Department. Stephen Heath Clearwater, Fla. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth