Pubdate: Sat, 14 Aug 2010 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2010 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 2 POLICE CHIEFS DISCUSS LEGALIZING POT Two police chiefs - former San Jose Police Chief Joseph McNamara and Pleasant Hill Police Chief Pete Dunbar - faced off over legalizing marijuana in California in a Thursday webinar hosted by The Chronicle and SFGate.com. About 60 individuals joined the online/telephone discussion to listen and ask questions about the societal consequences if voters pass Prop. 19 on the November ballot. Dana Sherne, an intern at SFGate.com, moderated the discussion. McNamara is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and Dunbar is a member of the California Police Chiefs Association. Each chief gave his views on five questions. Here's a summary: Q. Will legalizing marijuana increase the number of people using marijuana? McNamara: We aren't sure it will. But we know marijuana is making criminals out of 10 to 30 percent of the population because they use a substance we don't approve of. Dunbar: The Rand study says it will increase marijuana users in California. The proposition doesn't legalize marijuana in California. It puts the onus on 478 cities and counties to legalize its use. Some counties and cities won't approve. Q. Is increasing marijuana use a problem? McNamara: Even if the proposition increases use, it will reduce the number of people arrested for marijuana possession. Dunbar: In my experience, marijuana use leads to violence on the streets. I don't see that changing. Q. Will legalization end the black market for pot and the violence it engenders? McNamara: Yes. Alcohol was once under criminal prohibition for 13 years. We don't see the black market for alcohol operating today because sale and use is regulated. Legalization will take away a major source of funding for criminals. Dunbar: There will be a black market for juveniles. I found marijuana was the deadliest drug because of the violence behind it. Q. Will legalizing marijuana help address the injustice that, while studies show more whites use marijuana than other racial groups, more minorities are arrested and incarcerated for marijuana use? McNamara: Yes, this will change because it would eliminate marijuana arrests, which disproportionately involve blacks and Hispanics. Dunbar: I don't see this as a racial issue. To me, it is a people issue. Q. If Prop. 19 passes, and less taxpayer money is spent on cannabis-related arrests, where will those funds go? McNamara: Law enforcement, court and prison costs would be diminished. If we lower the crime rate, we can free up resources for what people really want - focus on property crimes and violence. Dunbar: For the last several years, marijuana possession has become a low priority. We still take sales and cultivation seriously. There's not going to be extra money to do anything. To listen to the entire discussion, go to sfgate.com/blogs/opinionshop. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D