Pubdate: Fri, 22 Oct 2004 Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Copyright: 2004 The Capital Times Contact: http://www.captimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/73 Author: Mike Miller Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DA HOPEFULS DIFFER POLITELY ON DRUGS Stix: No Trials For Possession For those who yearn for an end to gutter politics and the return of candidates who treat each other with civility, Edgewood College was the place to be Thursday night when Dane County's two candidates for district attorney participated in a debate without name-calling and acrimony. Instead, Dane County District Attorney Brian Blanchard, a Democrat, and challenger Sally Stix, of the Four Lakes Green Party of Dane County, exchanged views and differences of opinions on issues without engaging in the go-for-the-throat tactics that are so prevalent in other races. The forum was attended by 50 to 75 people of all age groups and was sponsored by the Progress Dane Drug Policy Task Force, the Project on Money, Education and Prisons, and the Edgewood social sciences department. It featured a series of prepared questions covering a wide range of topics about the judicial system. Those questions tended to prompt thoughtful answers rather than heated debate, and they revealed the similarity between the two candidates as well as specific differences. The most pronounced difference seemed to be on how and when to prosecute drug cases. Stix said she would not prosecute people for possession of drugs, and would make careful consideration on when to prosecute those who sold drugs. Stix said alcohol remains a bigger plague for society and she accused legislators of engaging in hypocrisy in dealing with drug problems. "My own belief is drugs are a public health issue and should not be in the criminal justice system," she said. But Blanchard said programs such as the Drug Court and the Treatment Alternative Program provide help to abusers after they are brought into the system and the benefits "together are a life-saving program." He also said he would continue to put more emphasis on prosecuting such drugs as heroin, cocaine and Oxycontin than on marijuana, and that his office would continue to make use of the so-called Len Bias law. That law allows for the prosecution of those who provide drugs to users who subsequently die "when the crime involved is distribution," and not just shared drug use. Much of what Stix had to say was based on her 24 years as an attorney involved in civil rights and labor law. She hit hard at the disparity between prison sentences for blacks and whites, both nationally and in Dane County. She said blacks make up 35 percent of the county's jail population, although they account for only 4 percent of the population. "Disparity of the criminal justice system is one of the major civil rights issues of our time," she said. "It is one of the reasons I am running for DA." One solution, she said, would be to carefully track each case by race and gender to have statistics, open to the public, to show how people of different races are treated. Blanchard agreed that such disparity is a concern, but said he has developed policies to make sure there is no racial profiling in his office and has set up training sessions to combat the problem. One issue on which the candidates were in agreement was the death penalty. Although there was no direct question posed on the issue, Blanchard and Stix, while talking about cases in which defendants have been wrongly convicted, said they were pleased that Wisconsin does not have a death penalty. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin