Pubdate: Thu, 3 Jan 2008 Source: Cambridge Evening News (UK) Copyright: 2008 Cambridge Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4131 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Richard+Brunstrom Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) BACKING FOR ECSTASY ROW CHIEF CONSTABLE FORMER Cambridgeshire Chief Constable Tom Lloyd has backed top police officer Richard Brunstrom after calls for his resignation, which resulted from him saying aspirin is more dangerous than Ecstasy. The North Wales Chief Constable is an ally of Mr Lloyd in the campaign to legalise Class A drugs such as heroin and cocaine. They want drugs "taken out of the hands of criminals" in a bid to reduce crime and save lives. But maverick Mr Brunstrom, known for targeting speeding drivers, sparked huge controversy when he called Ecstasy a "remarkably safe substance, far safer than aspirin". He told BBC Radio 4's Today (Thursday, 03 January) programme: "There is a lot of scaremongering, rumour-mongering around Ecstasy. It isn't borne out by the evidence. Ecstasy is not a safe substance, and I'm not suggesting that it is. But it is much less dangerous than, for instance, tobacco and alcohol." He added: "If you look at the Government's own research into deaths you'll find that Ecstasy, by comparison to many other substances, legal and illegal, is comparably a safe substance." About 400 people in the UK have died from Ecstasy since 1994. Despite the furore and calls for Mr Brunstrom's resignation, Mr Lloyd defended the chief constable - but would not say he was right on aspirin and Ecstasy. He said: "I think he is very much on the right track in terms that prohibition has failed and we need to do something about illegal drugs being controlled by criminals rather than by the government. "Nobody wants people taking drugs of any kind that cause harm whether it is alcohol or tobacco or indeed illegal drugs. "Aspirin can be dangerous if you take too many, and Ecstasy is also dangerous. But it is very difficult to compare the statistics of those who have died from taking an overdose of aspirin and those rare deaths from Ecstasy. "I haven't got the medical knowledge to comment on the dangers of aspirin compared to Ecstasy, but what Richard is trying to do is highlight the fact that illegal drugs are in the hands of criminals. We have to bear in mind that our children could be taking drugs which we have left in the hands of criminals." The National Drugs Prevention Alliance has urged Mr Brunstrom to quit over the controversy. Shadow Home Secretary David Davis said: "The real answer is to get a grip of the anti-drugs policy and not be seduced by simplistic, convenient solutions." Mr Brunstrom also believes a move towards decriminalisation is "10 years away". But a spokesman for DrugScope, the UK's leading independent centre of expertise on drugs, said: "Neither the current government nor leaders of the other parties show any inclination towards drug law reform in the near future." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake