Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2009 The State Contact: http://www.thestate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426 Author: Cindi Ross Scoppe, Associate Editor Cited: Richland County sheriff http://www.rcsd.net/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Michael+Phelps Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Leon+Lott PHELPS WAS NO VICTIM, BUT LOTT'S INVESTIGATION WAS UNWARRANTED IF LEON Lott really did treat Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps the same way he would treat anyone else, then his priorities and sense of proportionality are seriously out of whack. But I'm getting ahead of myself. This isn't the sort of thing I normally write about, but the media hype and frenzied response that has accompanied our sheriff's strange, ephemeral attempt to reconstruct a misdemeanor drug crime raises several important issues -- and non sequiturs -- that simply cry out for perspective. Let's start with the most ridiculous claim -- that this bizarre case somehow demonstrates that our drug laws are nonsensical. Please. I have questions about whether it makes sense to treat marijuana differently from alcohol (it certainly doesn't from a medical perspective), and wish we could have a grown-up discussion about that. But this case does nothing to advance either side of the drug decriminalization debate, precisely because it is so very atypical. Just as bizarre, outlier cases make for bad court rulings, they lead to some of our worst laws. Nor is there any legitimacy to the claims of all those whiny idol-worshippers who insist that Mr. Phelps was being persecuted. This isn't even debatable. Like it or not, using marijuana is against the law, the law is well-known, and no one who uses the drug has any right to complain about getting arrested. Period. That's particularly true for a celebrity. As Mr. Lott suggested, fame carries a heavy burden for both celebrities and any public officials who encounter celebrity wrongdoing. Because celebrities are front-page, talk-show-fodder news, their crimes are, too. For police to ignore their misdeeds creates cynicism, because people assume they're getting a pass as a result of their fame (or wealth, or power), and sends a message to impressionable fans that the celebrity's unpunished deeds are acceptable. If police had gotten a complaint about the now-infamous Blossom Street party while it was in progress back in November, raided it and found Mr. Phelps in possession of marijuana, they absolutely should have arrested him. And anyone who didn't like that would properly have been told that their beef was with the Legislature that wrote the law, not with the police who were enforcing it. But that's not what happened. It was more than two months after the fact that police learned, by way of a photograph that doesn't actually prove anything, that Mr. Phelps might have been using marijuana. On the basis of that and Mr. Phelps' own implicit admission, Mr. Lott dispatched deputies to identify and track down other college students who attended the party and raid their homes, knocking down doors, guns drawn, to look for drugs and press them for evidence against Mr. Phelps. And here we come to Mr. Lott's insistence that the Phelps case was no different than any other case. He would have treated anybody the same way, he said at his news conference Monday. And yes, that means he would have told his narcotics investigators to try to create a case if he saw a picture of some anonymous adolescent holding a bong, he told my colleague Warren Bolton on Tuesday. Now, it's fairly common -- and in most instances absolutely legitimate and wise -- for police to put together a criminal case by working their way up a chain, building charges against minor players, then offering them immunity in return for turning over evidence against a more important target. But these heavy-handed shoot-'em-up and roll-'em tactics are labor-intensive, and they endanger lives and subject police to potentially expensive lawsuits. That's why they are reserved for the pursuit of dangerous criminals and major criminal enterprises. (Or, minus the guns and door-smashing, vote-selling state legislators, a la Operation Lost Trust, where the feds caught lobbyist Ron Cobb with drugs and then got him to run an elaborate sting that netted a tenth of our state Legislature on extortion and drug charges.) Such tactics are not appropriate for a misdemeanor drug possession case that most prosecutors would likely plead down or divert to a pretrial intervention program. It is a ridiculous waste of resources for our state to lock up every petty drug user it can get its hands on, forcing taxpayers to fund these people's care and feeding while they get a first-rate education on how to become real criminals. We need instead to send them through the intensive probation programs, with strictly enforced drug treatment, education and work requirements, that Attorney General Henry McMaster is advocating (when he isn't busy advocating the abolition of parole), so we can turn them into productive citizens rather than productive criminals. That's not an issue at play here -- at most, at most, Mr. Phelps might have done 30 days in the county jail if somehow Mr. Lott had been able to make a case against him. But the attitudes that brought this sports superstar up against a drug-busting Southern sheriff are the very same attitudes that lead to the counterproductive, bankrupting policy that endangers the public and destroys lives. And they all need to change. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake