Pubdate: Thu, 22 Apr 2004 Source: Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2004 Allied Press Limited Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/925 Website: http://www.stuff.co.nz/otago Author: Chris Morris Cited: Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) http://www.leap.cc/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?233 (LEAP) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?227 (Cole, Jack) WAR ON DRUGS 'A FAILURE' Jack Cole speaks from 14 years of experience as an undercover narcotics officer when he says of the United States drugs policy: "The war on drugs is a dismal, abject failure." Mr Cole, who retired from law enforcement after a 26-year career with the New Jersey State Police in 1996, was in Dunedin last week to give a talk at the Community Law Centre on drug policy in the US. After 14 years spent befriending and infiltrating small groups, biker gangs and international drug-smuggling rings, Mr Cole has watched drug-use rates, availability and potency go up and prices go down. At the same time, the price of fighting drugs had skyrocketed to $69 billion annually, and mandatory minimum sentences for drug offences saw 1.5 million people in jail in 2002 - most for cannabis possession or use, he said. "Every one of those 1.5 million lives, if they are not destroyed they are certainly crippled A conviction will track you every day for the rest of your life . . . Every time you go for a job, it's over you like a cloud. "To me, that's a failed public policy," he said. Mr Cole, who is executive director of the US-based group Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), stressed he did not want to see "one additional drug user", but said the way to minimise the harm drugs caused was to end prohibition. Legalisation would freeze the income criminals could generate from pushing drugs and end the punishment of people using soft drugs, he said. Leap, formed in 2002, has 1000 members and 61 speakers who are all past or present law enforcement representatives, including judges, barristers, police officers, former New York Police Department commissioner Robert Owens and Warren Eginton, Mayor of Vancouver, British Colombia (a former member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police). Mr Cole warned law enforcement officials here against following the US example of zero tolerance: "Think about what you are doing before you follow us down this path of prohibition and zero tolerance, because it is a path to destruction." Dunedin police drug squad head Kevin Anderson, who attended the talk, said he supported Mr Cole's call to target those making money from drugs, but was against the use of mind-altering substances because "in my years of policing I see the negative side of drug use." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake