Pubdate: Fri, 14 Sep 2007 Source: Baltimore Examiner (MD) Copyright: 2007 Baltimore Examiner Contact: http://www.examiner.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4211 Author: Stephen Janis, The Examiner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) CITY COUNCILMAN PUSHES TO END WAR ON DRUGS Baltimore City Councilman Jack Young is taking his war against the "war on drugs" one step farther. On Monday, Young said he will introduce a resolution seeking a hearing - -- with testimony from the Baltimore Police Department and the city Health Department -- to open a dialogue on what he said is a failed strategy against illegal drugs. "Like I've said before -- what we've done is not working," he said. "We need to have a dialogue about taking the profit motive out of drug dealing and ending the so-called war on drugs." In August, Young floated the idea of decriminalizing drugs at a City Council meeting, but has now decided to formalize his proposal after receiving a commitment to testify at the hearing from an organization called Law Enforcement Officers Against prohibition. Founded in 2002, the 9,000-member organization represents of law enforcement professionals who believe the war on drugs should end. Jack A. Cole, executive director of LEAP and a former undercover narcotics officer for the New Jersey State Police, said he concluded after working the streets in Paterson, N.J., for nearly 14 years that legalizing drugs was the only rational option. "If we start dealing with drug abuse as a health issue, we can stop destroying people lives by arresting and imprisoning our children," he said. "It has been a completely ineffective war." Cole cites some stark facts to back up his claim. Since 1970, law enforcement agencies across the country have made 37 million drug arrests -- soaking up nearly $1 trillion in prison, court and policing costs. Meanwhile, the number of adults using drugs has risen substantially, Cole said. Cole said the country's drug enforcement policies disproportionately affect blacks. "African-Americans are less likely to use drugs than whites, but yet African-Americans are several times more likely to be imprisoned for using drugs," he said, citing a 1999 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study that showed white high school males were four times more likely than black high school males to use drugs. "The war on drugs is the most racist policy we've had since slavery," Cole said. Among Young's rhetoric is at least one specific proposal: to make possession of small amounts of marijuana punishable with only a citation, an idea that may end up on a future ballot as part of a citywide referendum, he said. "There should be situations where police can write a citation if it's a small amount," Young said. Mayor Sheila Dixon's spokesman Anthony McCarthy conceded that inconsistent drug enforcement polices needed to be addressed. "Certainly our nationally declared war on drugs has been ineffective. But Mayor Dixon does not believe that any sort of legalization of the drugs is the answer." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake