Pubdate: Fri, 13 Apr 2007 Source: Metro (CN BC) Copyright: Metro 2007 Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/home.aspx?city=vancouver Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3775 Cited: http://www.leap.cc/ (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) HIGH TIME FOR CHANGE? Prohibition Has Failed,Veterans Of Ongoing War Against Dope Use Claim Some former law enforcement officials in Canada and the United States who have spent years fighting the ongoing war on drugs say it's a losing battle. Their views about how prohibition has failed to make a dent in the drug supply while millions of dollars continue to be wasted on criminalizing recreational drug users are told in the National Film Board documentary, Damage Done: The Drug War Odyssey. It premiers in Victoria tomorrow, followed by a showing in Vancouver on Sunday, before airing on Global TV on April 28. Most of the police officers featured in the film are part of a growing U.S.-based organization called LEAP -- Law Enforcement Against Prohibition -- which also includes corrections officers, retired and sitting judges and prosecutors. About 330 of the organization's 7,000 members are Canadians. They include Senator Larry Campbell, a former RCMP drug squad officer and Vancouver mayor who ran on a platform of reducing harm from drug use. Campbell, whose views are featured in the film, said that drug laws need to be reformed so addiction is treated as a health issue that's exacerbated by other problems including poverty, homelessness and mental illness. He said his law-and-order stance about criminalizing junkies as a Mountie changed radically when he became Vancouver's chief coroner in 1996 and saw the devastating effects of drug overdoses in the Downtown Eastside. "My philosophy had to shift because I went from enforcing the law to trying to save people's lives," said Campbell, who will speak at the Vancouver premiere of the film on Sunday. "When I really took a hard look at it, I realized that what we were doing was not saving lives. In fact, we were seeing the deaths increase." Campbell is a proponent of Vancouver's safe-injection site, Insite, which provides a harm-reduction approach to treating people who may otherwise overdose or pass on blood-borne diseases like HIV from shared needles. Campbell noted that various studies published in top international journals such as the Lancet, the British Medical Journal and the New England Journal of Medicine have hailed the positive effects of Insite, including reduced property crime by people desperate for a fix. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek