Pubdate: Tue, 01 Dec 2009 Source: Maneater, The (Uof Missouri - Columbia, MO Edu) Copyright: 2009 The Maneater Contact: http://www.themaneater.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1283 Author: Lyndsie Manusos Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?166 (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) FORMER POLICE OFFICER SPEAKS AGAINST DRUG PROHIBITION Cole said users should be rehabilitated, not sent to prison. Jack Cole, the executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, spoke at MU on the legalization of drugs. The event took place at 7 p.m. Monday in Tucker Hall and was sponsored by Students for Sensible Drug Policies. Students from the National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws also attended. Cole is a retired detective lieutenant with 26 years of experience in the New Jersey State Police force. Cole also worked as an undercover narcotics officer for 14 years and co-founded LEAP in March 2002. The presentation consisted of how the war on drugs was unjust and a "self-perpetuating policy disaster." Cole said the best way to deal with drug use is to handle it as a health problem rather than a crime problem. "You can get over an addiction, but you can't get over a conviction," Cole said. "It will track you every day of your life." MU graduate Sean Randall and former member of SSDP and NORML said Cole offered a unique perspective. "Jack Cole is a great speaker," Randall said. "Rarely do we get to hear from people on the front lines fighting the drug war." According to LEAP's official Web site, the group is made up of present and former members of the law enforcement and criminal justice communities who are speaking out about the failures of our existing drug policies. Cole said the goal of legalizing drugs is to reduce profits for illegal drug trade. "The main alternative that we see is that we have to remove profit motive," Cole said. "It's the profit motive that drives this and it's unbelievably large." According to his presentation, the war on drugs has cost around $1 trillion in U.S. tax dollars in the past 40 years. Cole said legalizing drugs would reduce that amount. "In the end, it saves us boat loads of money," Cole said. Cole also said the amount of arrests has risen over time, with many of those arrested including non-violent drug offenders. Cole said this distracts law enforcement from protecting communities from more violent crimes. "We no longer have time to protect people from violent predators," Cole said. "This is a numbers game. Cops are promoted on the number of arrests they make." Sophomore Addie Schnurbusch is a member of SSDP and NORML. Schnurbusch said she came to the event knowing much of the information that Cole presented, but some of it was new to her. "We want to get people like Cole to talk here," Schnurbusch said. "We want people to get more educated. The power of knowledge is a good thing to have cause then those people can go out and vote." Cole said he has spoken for LEAP more than 950 times since the founding of the organization. Many of his speeches have taken him overseas and around the U.S. "I've spoken in most of countries in Europe," he said. "Any place you can name in the United States." Cole also said legalization should include all drugs, not a particular few. "The more dangerous the drug, the more reason to legalize it because you can't regulate it unless you legalize it," Cole said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D