Pubdate: Tue, 19 Dec 2006
Source: Peterborough Evening Telegraph (UK)
Copyright: 2006 Johnston Press
Contact: http://www.peterboroughtoday.co.uk/contactus.aspx
Website: http://www.peterboroughet.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/961

CAN LEGALISING HEROIN REALLY HELP THE FIGHT AGAINST
CRIME?

THE link between drugs and crime is much documented,  but former 
chief constable Tom Lloyd has today spoken  in support of legalising 
heroin to cut out the dealers. MARIA THOMPSON judges the reaction.

A FORMER chief constable has come under fire after  calls for heroin 
to be prescribed on the NHS.

The one-time head of Cambridgeshire police, Tom Lloyd,  told The 
Evening Telegraph he thought the answer to  winning the war on drugs 
was to cut out dealers and  offer heroin to users.

But Mr Lloyd has found very little support for his  comments, which 
have met with fierce criticism from  both drugs workers and the 
city's MP Stewart Jackson.

Mr Lloyd said: "I believe that prescribing heroin to  addicts will 
reduce crime driven by the need to buy  drugs, stabilise individual 
users and make it easier to  help them and, importantly, take away 
the profits from  dealers and so drive them out of business."

Mr Lloyd was unclear as to why he had chosen to make  his thoughts 
known at this time, but said he hoped to  spark both local and 
national debate on an issue that  lies at the centre of crime and 
community safety.

And he added: "If you start talking about anything  other than 
locking up users, you tend to get criticised  for being soft on 
drugs. But anyone who looks at the  growing problem of drugs has got 
to turn this argument  on its head and say the current system is indefensible.

"During my police service, I became convinced that this  country's 
approach to attempting to control illegal  drug abuse was deeply 
flawed and unsuccessful.

"I learned from personal experience that enforcement is  either 
ineffective or actively counter-productive and  policy-related harms 
are now far greater than harms  caused by drug misuse.

"The whole of the drug problem is a massive problem,  and I'm 
focusing on heroin because I think it causes a  huge amount of harm."

But Peterborough MP Stewart Jackson, however, has  dismissed the 
former top cop's views.

He said he felt strongly about the issue and opposed Mr  Lloyd's 
comments, saying it would be like giving cars  to car thieves.

"I think it's a ridiculous idea," he said.

"It sends out a message to law-abiding people that the  police have 
given up on the battle against drugs, when  there is no evidence that 
it would work. It is not an  idea I would adhere to. You would not 
give cars to car  thieves."

"Giving free drugs to drug addicts would be a  disastrous social policy."

Detective inspector Fran Jones, manager of the  Peterborough drugs 
intervention program, once worked  with Mr Lloyd.

Although she does not disagree with his comments, she  said she 
thought tackling drug abuse needed to be more  holistic than just 
prescribing heroin to addicts.

"I'm not challenging his views,"she said. "It has a  validity. But 
our program is more holistic.

"I support the view about taking the profit out of the  trade, 
clearly that's a motivator for the police, but  we would argue we are 
doing that with our prescription  policy.

"The advantage would be that you would know you would  be perscribing 
a clean product, but it would be a  nightmare to administer.

"Users can need two or three hits a day and you would  have to do it, 
otherwise they might go and sell it on."

DI Jones said she thought there was probably an element  of headline 
grabbing in what Mr Lloyd was saying and  that he was maybe unaware 
of the work now being done  through the city's drugs intervention program.

In Peterborough, anyone who is arrested for what they  call an 
"acquisitive" crime aE" one in which a person  has stolen something 
for profit aE" he or she is  automatically drugs tested.

If the test is positive, they will be encouraged to get  on a drug program.

She said: "Where Mr Lloyd is naive, is that in order to  change views 
on drugs, you have to move them away from  the culture, which could 
mean moving them away from  peer groups in which drug taking has 
become the norm.

"They have to feel like meaningful people in society  and feel they 
have positive things to offer society aE"  it's a complex problem."

DI Jones has a lot of experience in dealing with  addicts and knows 
only to well the devastating affect  heroin has on people's lives.

Unlike cocaine, the body becomes addicted and can  become so from the 
first hit.

She agreed it was a problem that needed to be  addressed, but didn't 
think prescribing heroin would  change anything, as methadone was 
already being used  successfully to wean addicts off it.

She added: "The issue I would have with prescribing is  the kind of 
people who need it are not great people.  They don't make a 
contribution to society and their  mind set is on nothing else other 
than where they are  going to get their next hit."

Bridgegate is a registered charity in Peterborough for  drug users, 
any family of users and people concerned  about drug use.

The charity is also responsible for helping children as  young as 11 
who may have been exposed to heroin.

Currently the charity offers a range of different  treatments for 
heroin users including detox programmes  for young people.

The charity says one of the main ways a child or young  person ends 
up taking heroin is by being exposed to it  by a family member or friend.

Lisa Mellon from Bridgegate said: "The really good news  is we have 
very small numbers of users (under the age  of 18) in Peterborough, 
that's the really positive  thing to say.

"As far as young people are concerned the age range is  very much at 
the top end and it tends to be teenagers.

"Prescribing heroin to young people would be out of the question."

Teenage heroin users are treated differently to older  addicts, 
because they are not the same as long term  users and therefore tend 
to be treated through a  process of detoxification.

For more information about services at Bridgegate call  01733 314551 
or Freephone 0800 2792978.

This is not the first time there has been a public  debate on 
prescribing heroin to addicts.

Earlier this year the deputy chief constable of  Nottinghamshire 
police, Howard Roberts, was heavily  criticised by fellow officers 
and politicians alike  when he said it.

Mr Robert's views were his own and not representative  of the force.

He made them following the Association of Chief Police  Officers 
conference in Manchester on November 23 and  carried on the debate in 
the public arena.

Mr Lloyd does not claim to have the answer to tackling  the illegal 
drug trade, but hopes by making these views  public to continue a 
debate that may eventually result  in finding a more effective 
solution to the one we have  now.

A long and varied career in the force

Married

with four children, he was educated at New College,  Oxford 
University, where he read philosophy and  psychology from 1971 to 1974.

The year he graduated he joined the Metropolitan Police  and spent 
his early career at Marylebone and West End  Central police stations, 
in London.

His time at the Met saw him in a number of uniform and  specialist roles.

 From 1992 to 1996 he was chief superintendent in  Central London and 
in 1996 was promoted to commander.

As director of strategic co-ordination he was  responsible for 
corporate, strategic and annual  planning, liaison with the Home 
Office and the  development of information management.

In January 2000 he transferred to Cambridgeshire police  as deputy 
chief constable and was responsible for all  operational policing in 
the county.

He was awarded a Queen's Police Medal in the 1999 Queen's Birthday Honours.

Tom Lloyd became chief constable in 2004, shortly  before the Holly 
Wells and Jessica Chapman case, and  quit in May 2005.

The father-of-four took the decision to quit his UKP120,000 a year 
job after a national newspaper report made claims about his behaviour 
at a national police conference.

He is now retired.
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MAP posted-by: Elaine