Pubdate: Thu, 01 May 2008 Source: Lantern, The (OH Edu) Copyright: 2008 The Lantern Contact: http://www.thelantern.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1214 Author: Tom Knox Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?239 (Christ, Peter) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?166 ( Law Enforcement Against Prohibition_RSS) FORMER POLICE CAPTAIN ADVOCATES END TO DRUG WAR Lauren Blalock/ The Lantern OSU student Zach Germaniak listens as co-founder and retired captain Peter Christ spoke about Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. A "South Park" episode, women's suffrage and alcohol prohibition were only a few of the topics a retired police officer discussed Tuesday night during his plea to end the war on drugs. Peter Christ, formerly a captain in upstate New York, spoke at Stillman Hall, focusing on what he called a drug policy that does not work. "Don't tell me after 20 years of police work I don't understand the problem," he said. Christ does not condone the use of drugs, but believes it is a choice that should be regulated, not criminalized. He represents the Washington D.C.-based nonprofit advocacy group Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a group he co-founded in 2002 and modeled after Vietnam Veterans Against the War because, like VVAW, his group "came from the problem." Christ urged the members of the audience to take action and push to end the war on drugs. He frequently brought up the failed prohibition of alcohol in the United States from 1920 to 1933 and its most notorious criminal as an example. "The reason we legalized alcohol, and it only took us 13 years to learn the lesson, was this: Alcohol does not create people like Al Capone," Christ said. "Prohibition created people like Al Capone." Zach Germaniuk, president of Students for Sensible Drug Policy and the Libertarian Studies Organization, which sponsored the event, thought the speaker did a good job of proving his case. "The smart solution is to take drugs from the black market and place them within the realm of the law, through legalization," he said. Although he hopes the war on drugs will end soon, Christ is realistic about the chances. Ending such laws is difficult, he said, but it is possible, citing woman's suffrage as an example. In his career dealing with drugs as a police officer, Christ said he "never once made a difference. When you make a drug arrest, nothing changes." Christ said that since the beginning of time, people have used drugs to alter their mood. He referenced a recent episode of "South Park" in which the characters engage in "cheesing," a made-up form of drug use that involves a person getting high off of cat urine. The episode highlighted Christ's assertion that people will always get high, so banning drugs is futile. As proof of the failure of the war on drugs, he pointed to the claims of some police chiefs who celebrate a high number of drug arrests. "If you make arrests last year, there should be less this year. But see, it isn't criminals," he said. "It's criminalization of consensual adult behavior." Craig Smith, a freshman in sociology and psychology, said he found Christ's "presentation of drug policies and how you should present yourself when discussing" them most helpful. Although Christ said he wishes the war on drugs would cease, his group has no definitive stance on the regulation of drugs. "Any form of a regulated and controlled marketplace is better than what we're doing right now," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin