Pubdate: Thu, 30 Sep 2004 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2004 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: John Wildermuth, SF Chronicle Political Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) LIBERTARIAN JUDGE SAYS HE'S NO PURIST Senate Hopeful Left GOP Over Patriot Act While there are no medals for the runners-up in politics, Jim Gray, Libertarian candidate for the Senate, still will be happy to finish third on Nov. 2. Gray, a judge on leave from Orange County Superior Court, has no illusions about beating either Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer or Republican Bill Jones in the high-visibility contest. "I'm realistic," Gray said in an interview. "My chances of winning are not strong. But every vote I get will be seen as a vote for something different." Gray, a 59-year-old Newport Beach resident, was a lifelong Republican until the Patriot Act passed just weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. "I can't be part of any organization that condones the Patriot Act," he said, arguing the anti-terrorism measure crushes the right to privacy, frees the government from judicial scrutiny and has a chilling effect on freedom of expression. Even as a Republican, Gray was a maverick. Although he's been a judge for 21 years and a federal prosecutor before that, he held a press conference on the steps of the Santa Ana courthouse in 1992 to say the nation's war on drugs wasn't working and changes had to be made, including the possible legalization of marijuana. The firestorm of criticism from prosecutors and law enforcement forced him out of the criminal courts. "I've taken myself off the criminal calendar since 1992," he said. "They haven't missed me." His views on drugs have hardened since then. "I want to get the feds out of the marijuana control business," Gray said. "I want to treat marijuana like alcohol and tax the stupid stuff," with money going to treatment and education programs that he believes will do more to prevent drug abuse. Gray also supports Proposition 66, which would change the state's "three strikes" law to require that the third strike, which can send criminals to prison for decades, be a violent crime. "It's heartless what we're doing and expensive to the state," he said. While he's comfortable with the Libertarian philosophy, Gray admits he's not a purist. There's an important role for government regulation, he said, but it's a limited one. "Do we need antitrust laws? You bet," he said. "But too many people automatically rely on government, and that's not right." Cutting government regulations could trim the costs of homes and other products, Gray said, as well as giving people more freedom from government attempts to micromanage their lives. "In Anaheim, it costs $50 to get a permit to replace a water heater," Gray said. "That's nonsense. Government shouldn't be involved." He also suggested the country had to work closely with the United Nations and other international groups to deal with problems that cross the country's boarders, such as environmental pollution and fishing rights. "Is that a libertarian philosophy?" he asked. "No, I'd probably be shot, but I'm a pragmatist." And it's the way he'd be in Washington, if lightning struck and he were elected. "I won't be a partisan in Washington, because I don't have anyone to be a partisan with," Gray said. "But if you have the right answers, you have my vote." Gray has been campaigning full time for more than a year, traveling around the state and making speeches. He's raised about $250,000 in contributions and has a headquarters and a paid staff of five working on his campaign. That hasn't been enough to get him into the Senate debates expected to take place in the next few weeks. Debate sponsors have told him he needs to show at least 10 percent support in a major public poll, but a Public Policy Institute of California poll released last week lumped him in with the two other minor party candidates at a combined 1 percent. Gray argues that polls that don't list him by name as the Libertarian candidate don't accurately measure his support. He's been struggling to get his name on the major surveys, but without any luck. "If I can be in the debates, we'd talk about real issues, not more of the same," Gray said. "It would change the whole debate if I could be part of it. " For a third-party candidate like Gray, the election is less about winning than about making his voice -- and his issues -- heard. "People ask why a judge of 20 years would take an unpaid leave of absence and give up the best parking space at the courthouse to run as a dark horse," Gray said. "But the country is going in the wrong direction, and no one is talking about it." The other two minor party candidates for the U.S. Senate are both from the Bay Area. Don Grundmann, the American Independent Party candidate, is a San Leandro chiropractor. He's running against what he calls the total corruption of the Federal Reserve banking system and the Internal Revenue Service and argues that no law requires Americans to pay income taxes. Marsha Feinland, a teacher from Berkeley, is former state chairwoman of the Peace and Freedom Party and a onetime commissioner on the Berkeley Rent Board. She wants to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan and Iraq, end U. S. aid to Israel until it returns to its pre-1967 borders and raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. [sidebar] JIM GRAY Age: 59 City: Newport Beach Party: Libertarian Education: Bachelor's degree, UCLA, 1966. Law degree, University of Southern California, 1971. Occupation: Judge. Named to Santa Ana Municipal Court, 1983. Named to Orange County Superior Court, 1989. Currently on leave. Family: Married, four children. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake