Pubdate: Mon, 05 Dec 2011 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2011 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Jon Carroll SHERIFF LANGUISHES IN EPONYMOUS JAIL This is such a sad story. Not exactly tragic, but capable of promoting apparently deep thoughts about the meaning of life. Patrick J. Sullivan Jr. is now 68. Before he retired, he was one of the most decorated sheriffs in the nation. He was voted sheriff of the year by the National Sheriffs' Association. He was praised in Congress. He was a legend in Centennial, Colo. On Tuesday, he was arrested in a case in which he was charged with offering methamphetamine in exchange for sex with someone described as "a male acquaintance." He was taken away and now resides in the building named after him, the Patrick J. Sullivan Jr. Detention Facility. That is cold. Imagine sitting in a jail named after yourself, wondering where, precisely, your life went wrong. Probably it went wrong when the meth came into the picture, meth having that effect on many lives. But who knows? The irony of it all is so cheap that he should get a reduced sentence just for having to live with it. Always assuming he gets convicted of anything. He could just get counseling. He reportedly had two bags of meth on him when he was arrested, each containing less than a gram. He wasn't a kingpin. He's in his golden years. And the first line of his obit has been rewritten. Sometimes that's a good thing - your second Nobel Prize, for instance - but in this case, not so fabulous. Of course, maybe there's another explanation for the events as reported by police. I am trying to think of what that explanation might be, and failing, but that's what lawyers are for. Here's another narrative strung with the same beads of fact; we hope you like this one better. But he had the bags of meth. He has a problem. Ordinary people do not carry bags of meth. Meth heads have come up with interesting reasons why this is not necessarily true, and denial is a river in Egypt. The War on Some Drugs (WOSD) has not exactly gotten to the heart of the meth problem. Maybe because the people most affected by it are people who are not likely to vote. Just a guess. But the feds are really all over that marijuana thing. Despite evidence and testimony from numerous people who know stuff, the Justice Department of the Obama administration has decided to keep the heat on marijuana growers and sellers, no matter what the local laws. Marijuana growers are the one group that cannot be said to have benefited from lobbying money. Who knows why? Obama is a smart man; he knows the truth. A certain prissiness pervades this White House, making Obama sort of the black Calvin Coolidge. Maybe he just wants to prove to Republican voters that he's darned tough on crime. I dunno. I don't think this is a make-or-break issue with a lot of Republicans, and I bet the polling on the legalization of marijuana is more party-neutral than one might expect. Why not just drop it? The Justice Department has so much on its plate - - why, there are all those people on Wall Street who never got busted for the whole mortgage-scam thing - why doesn't it just pull back? No press release needed. Just do the fair thing while all of this is in legal limbo; let the cases work through the courts. And don't try too hard with the cases, either. That would be my request. Because I think of ex-Sheriff Sullivan sitting in a jail named after him for a sordid and ordinary crime, and I think about the sellers of pot sitting in jails named after other people for a crime that is ordinary and unsordid. To whom do they represent a threat? Of course, they've made new friends in jail. Joy. Anyway, I imagine Sullivan put a few potheads behind bars in his time. He was a tough law-and-order guy, firm but fair, given his standards. He once rescued two of his deputies during a rampage by a gunman - what the gunman was rampaging about is unknown to this correspondent - by gunning his truck through a fence and covering them while they boarded a vehicle. One imagines that all did not end well for the rampaging gunman. It rarely does. So the camera moves out on the scene until we finally see an aerial shot of the facility, with the sheriff, the other meth sellers and then the pot sellers, all clearly identified, so a sense of proportion is maintained, even in an atmosphere of cheap irony. In which a ham-handed ironist of fate takes another victim, and we speculate a little. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.