Pubdate: Sun, 30 Mar 2008 Source: Spectrum, The ( St. George, UT) Copyright: 2008 The Spectrum Contact: http://www.thespectrum.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.thespectrum.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2483 Author: David Doddridge Note: David Doddridge is a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition LEAP. (www.leap.cc) His is also a former LAPD police detective who now lives in St. George and runs a private investigation firm. CUT IN BYRNE GRANT IS NO LOSS In a Feb. 29 editorial, The Spectrum's editorial board decried the loss of 70 percent of Utah's federal Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant program, a program dedicated to providing funds for drug task forces and criminal justice programs. The editorial proclaims, "State drug task forces have made 9,714 arrests and have removed 1,100 pounds of cocaine, 519 pounds of methamphetamine and 486 pounds of marijuana from the street." They call this success? Drugs and drug dealers are still on Utah's streets. Success is not a perpetual cycle of arrests and seizures, yet that's what our drug war has given us. When illegal drugs are seized, don't kid yourself into believing it has any impact on drug availability or public safety. Those losses are the equivalent of what major retailers expect from shoplifting or damage. It's just one cost of doing business and is factored into product pricing. Richard Nixon declared this new prohibition as a "war" in 1971. It has cost our nation $1 trillion to attempt to eliminate drugs from society. The failed war on drugs causes abuse and suffering, both financial and social. It decimates our Constitution and costs the lives of innocent civilians and police officers. It's filling our prisons with non-violent drug offenders, straining decimated lives and our state and regional budgets. When police chase drugs, they often neglect real crimes. A front-page investigation by the St. Louis Post Dispatch details the abject failure of law enforcement to find federal fugitives. Millions of felons, many wanted for violent crimes, have fled from arrest simply because police agencies fail to enter warrant data into the FBI's National Crime Information Center. Estimates are that one-third are not entered. FBI reports also state that the homicide clearance rate is now lower than it was in 1950, despite all the modern technology. In our fervor to eliminate the scourge of drug abuse - which is separate and distinct from drug use - I believe we've left grea-ter problems unaddressed. I challenge our "lock-em-up" mentality and assert there are working alternatives. Drug policy has gone unchallenged for decades and many citizens are falling for the tough on drugs rhetoric and hyperbole. When The Spectrum's editorial board considers taking a stand on subjects like the Byrne Grant funding cuts, deeper study and research would benefit our readers. Perhaps the editors should consider there are conservative organizations seeking to end the Byrne grants: the American Conservative Union, Americans for Tax Reform, Citizens against Government Waste, the National Taxpayers Union and the National Black Police Association. Have no doubt - the drug war is a colossal failure. It increases the harms from drug abuse, increases profits of criminal syndicates and fails the citizens it's meant to serve. The time has come to end this fraudulent waste of taxpayer dollars and American lives. Edward Byrne deserves to be honored for his service and ultimate sacrifice. The best way to do that is to end the travesty of policy failure that cost him his life. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath