Pubdate: Thu, 17 Apr 2008 Source: Buffalo News (NY) Copyright: 2008 The Buffalo News Contact: http://www.buffalonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61 Author: Peter Christ Note: Peter Christ is a founder and board member of LEAP, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. ( www.leap.cc ) He lives in Cazenovia. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?233 (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) 'PROHIBITION' FORCES POLICE TO WASTE RESOURCES I commend the work of all the agencies involved in the March 26 drug bust in Erie and Niagara counties. I'm a retired police captain from the Town of Tonawanda, and I understand the difficulty of the job they have to do. But I do have one question: Why do we put our police officers in this position? Look at the manpower used in this drug bust. The agencies used 100 officers to track down 36 suspects. They also say that at 4 a.m. they used 300 officers, so that's using 8.3 officers per arrest. There's nothing wrong with that except that while those 300 officers are doing that, what other jobs aren't being done? You've got 300 of them pulled off the streets for a day. Also, these arrests were preceded by an expensive and lengthy investigation. What will be the result of all this hard work, money and time spent? Will we have fewer drugs in our community? No. Will it be harder for people to get drugs? No. Will it keep drugs out of the schools? No. Nancy Cote, of Buffalo's office of the Drug Enforcement Administration, was careful to report that, "There [were] no incidents. Nobody hurt. No dogs killed." The whole idea I got from this article is that this drug bust was a kinder, gentler drug bust. Here's an idea for a kinder, gentler drug bust: How about simply not arresting people for doing drugs? I'm not talking about not arresting criminals. I'm talking about why we criminalize behavior that simply isn't criminal. If you're an alcoholic in this society today, and you don't drink and drive, and you don't hurt other people or their property, what do we do to you? Nothing. If you're an alcoholic in this society today, what do we do for you? Most people respond nothing, but that's not true. We have treatment on demand for the alcoholic. There's no waiting list for Alcoholics Anonymous; anyone who wants to come in gets treatment. Another thing we do for alcoholics is guarantee to them and the casual alcohol user, as much we're able, a purity of product. And we provide them, as much as we can, with a safe place to purchase and use that drug. But when we catch heroin addicts using heroin, we arrest them. We've cut back on treatment for drug addicts to build prisons, so we don't have treatment on demand for the heroin addict. And as far as purity of product and a safe place to buy or use that drug, it's ridiculous. We all know what we get in an underground marketplace. We claim that we're trying to help drug addicts. But if we really want to help drug addicts, let's help them like we're helping alcoholics. The only way to have a kinder and gentler approach to dealing with our drug problems is to have a regulated and controlled marketplace. And the only way you can control and regulate the marketplace is to legalize the drugs. All of them. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom