Pubdate: Sun, 09 Mar 2014 Source: Frederick News Post (MD) Copyright: 2014 Randall Family, LLC. Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/Z0khz4CI Website: http://www.fredericknewspost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/814 NEW TACTICS FOR THE FAILED WAR ON DRUGS The war on drugs has failed. This is one of the conclusions we are forced to draw from our in-depth article chronicling drug use in Frederick County schools, which detailed just how easy it is for students to get hold of heroin, LSD, ecstasy and marijuana. One way to hit back is to target the source of the supply line by making marijuana legal, regulating the trade and taxing it. In early February, The News-Post's editorial board hosted two representatives of the movement to legalize marijuana in Maryland -- Neill Franklin, a 33-year veteran officer and executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, and Rachelle Yeung, a legislative analyst for the Marijuana Policy Project. We've taken on board and debated what they said, and it's convinced us there's a stronger case for legalizing, regulating and taxing marijuana than simply decriminalizing it. Perhaps most compelling was their contention that legalization would impact the criminal organizations that traffic illicit drugs. Take, for example, 1920s- and '30s-era Prohibition, which simply forced alcohol onto the black market where its bloody trade boomed under organized crime. A similar situation exists today. Perhaps the most stunning revelation in our article on school drug use was how easy marijuana is to come by for many high schoolers. And marijuana is the No. 1 product drug dealers sell, Franklin told us. "That brings in more cash than any other single drug," he said, "and even more cash than when you combine some of the other drugs." Marijuana money is a linchpin to a violent and illicit drug trade, its revenue driving a massive worldwide criminal enterprise. Remove the money and you remove the engine from the black market's car. Decriminalizing marijuana, while a baby step overall, leaves that black market untouched -- and the black market is indiscriminate about who it sells to. At least with regulated marijuana, age limits and quality controls can be set. It's not a perfect solution. Kids will still get their hands on drugs, as they do with cigarettes and alcohol, but a regulated, controlled market is still better than what we have now. Sales in the first week of Colorado's legalization totaled $5 million - -- $5 million that didn't go into the hands of drug dealers. We'd be naive to assume the thousands of people who lined up to purchase those drugs were first-time buyers. "In addition to us shrinking the illicit marijuana trade so that fewer children are drawn into that, in addition to that, we are now separating the millions of marijuana users in this country, and we know we will always have millions of marijuana users, the question is, where do we want them buying marijuana? Franklin said. "With the regulated market we have now siphoned off in Colorado thousands of marijuana buyers from the illicit trade." More than that, take away the economic incentive and the buyers out of the equation and you indirectly impact the sale of more harmful, more addictive drugs that dealer may try to push in an attempt to create a consumer who will return again and again. "Because [marijuana is] sold alongside other, harder drugs and that drug dealers have an incentive to get their buyers to purchase those more expensive, more dangerous, more addictive drugs as well, that is what is leading people who use marijuana to then go on to more dangerous drugs," Yeung said. There are other arguments for regulating and taxing marijuana: Law enforcement is swamped; zero tolerance only seems to pack prisons and compound criminality; educational efforts, while laudable, are only making a dent in the problem; rehabilitation is a Band-Aid on the symptoms. Making marijuana legal may be one of the few recourses left. Not only has the war on drugs failed, said Franklin, "it has never worked." He said we need a new approach, and it's hard to disagree. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom