Pubdate: Sun, 25 Feb 2007 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2007 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: The Associated Press BARRE MAYOR WANTS DEATH PENALTY FOR DRUG DEALERS BARRE, Vt. --Mayor Thomas Lauzon says Vermont is losing the war on drugs, and that the solutions are to legalize marijuana and impose the death penalty on dealers of crack cocaine and heroin. "I'm sure everyone will distance themselves from me," Lauzon said Saturday. "But if anyone tells you we're winning the war on drugs, they're lying." Of hard drug dealers, he asked, "What social value do they have? They are dealing crack and heroin to young people, knowing full well what the effects will be. What purpose do they serve in society other than to destroy lives, to destroy families?" Lauzon said he hopes to host a statewide forum in late April on Vermont's problems with illegal drugs. Vermont does not have the death penalty for any crime. Republican Gov. Jim Douglas has said he might favor the death penalty in some circumstances, but has stopped short of proposing one, in part because it's unlikely the Democrat-controlled Legislature would agree. Sen. Richard Sears, D-Bennington and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, expressed doubt that Vermont would soon pass a death penalty, or that drug dealers would be the first to come under it. Sears said that "if we were to have a discussion about the death penalty -- and that's a big if -- I think it would be about a different population." He also took a dim view of legalizing marijuana, saying that would put Vermont at odds with federal law. Jason Gibbs, Douglas' spokesman, said he had not talked with the governor about the death penalty for crack and heroin dealers; he reiterated the governor's earlier stated stance on the death penalty in general. "The governor certainly has no appreciation or respect for anyone who seeks to poison another individual for profit," Gibbs added. Gibbs noted Douglas had spoken out against legalizing marijuana recently in response to calls by Windsor County State's Attorney Robert Sand to do so. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman