Pubdate: Sat, 07 Mar 2015 Source: Times Argus (Barre, VT) Copyright: 2015 Times Argus Contact: http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=OPINION03 Website: http://www.timesargus.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/893 Author: Eric Blaisdell POLICE DEBATE MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION AT VT. LAW SCHOOL SOUTH ROYALTON - A former New Jersey State Police lieutenant and a Vermont police chief have very different views on what to do about marijuana. One calls the drug wars a policy disaster that needs to be stopped. The other considers drug trafficking a violent crime and believes marijuana legalization will increase children's access to the drug. The Vermont Law School hosted a daylong conference discussing marijuana legalization Friday at its South Royalton campus. The conference was put on by the Criminal Law Society and SPEAK, a student organization at the school that promotes speech, persuasion, education, advocacy and knowledge. Marijuana legalization has been a hot topic in the state recently. Vermont decriminalized possession of small amounts of the drug in 2013, turning the violation into a civil matter. Sen. David Zuckerman has introduced legislation that would make the drug legal to possess in small amounts in Vermont, but lawmakers have said it's not likely to be brought up this year. Officials also flew to Colorado, where marijuana is now legal, last month to see for themselves how the change has gone. Speakers at Friday's conference included lawmakers, people running dispensaries for medical marijuana, lawyers and advocates on both sides of the debate over whether to legalize recreational marijuana in Vermont. One of the morning sessions included Jack Cole, a retired state police lieutenant in New Jersey, where he worked for 26 years, including 14 in narcotics. After retiring, he helped co-found Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a national organization composed of those who previously worked in the criminal justice field and now are speaking out against the so-called drug war. The other speaker was George Merkel, the police chief in Vergennes and president of the Vermont Association of Police Chiefs. The conversation was moderated by Chittenden County State's Attorney T.J. Donovan. Cole said the drug war has been a self-perpetuating policy disaster and needs to end. He was at the front lines of the drug war, starting his narcotics work in 1970. Working in that field, he said, there were seven things he believed police would accomplish to end the problem of drug use in the country: decreased supply of drugs; decreased purity of drugs; increased drug prices; and reduced numbers of drug users, drug overdose deaths, drug prohibition murders and drug violation arrests. Since 1970, Cole said, every one of those beliefs has been proven false and the opposite true for all of them. He said according to the Drug Enforcement Agency, in 1970, 2 percent of the country's population over the age of 12 had used an illegal drug. Now, he said, the DEA reports that number is up to 46 percent of the population. "It's hard for me to contemplate how, if what we really wanted to do was to reduce the number of people using drugs, how we could have possibly come up with a worse policy than this one," he said. Cole said there was no such thing as an illegal drug in the U.S. until opium in 1914. Back then, he said, 1.3 percent of the population was addicted to opiates. In 1970, he said, the drug addiction rate was still 1.3 percent and it stands at 1.3 percent today. "It's 46 years later, we've spent $1.5 trillion and made 50 million arrests, and today our government tells us 1.3 percent of the population is addicted to drugs," he said. Cole said the war on drugs has also had a negative impact on police work. In 1963, he said, police were credited with solving 91 percent of the murders in the U.S. That rate is down to 61 percent today. "What happened? Did we suddenly become incompetent? I don't think so. We have more police per capita than we had back then, we're better trained, better educated, better paid," he said, adding the reason is that police are now expected to chase down nonviolent drug offenders. Cole said the U.S. has reduced the numbers of people using only one drug: nicotine. He said it's the most addictive drug to humans and, in 1985, 42 percent of the country smoked cigarettes. Instead of waging a war on cigarettes, he said, officials used education and regulation to reduce that rate to 17 percent now. Cole said this type of strategy can work on illegal drugs as well. Merkel took exception to Cole's use of the term "nonviolent" when it comes to drug cases. "I'm not going to stand up here and tell you that we're winning the war on drugs, because that would not be the truth," he said. "We are losing the war on drugs, and I don't think there's one answer to change that. It's more than just fighting drugs. But it's not a choice that I have." "I've been with those families that have lost kids. I've listened to a mother's anguish. I've seen kids nodding out on a bench less than 5, 6 feet away from my desk while I'm eating lunch, nodding out because of heroin." Merkel said drug trafficking is in fact a violent crime and that he's seen the violence that comes with it, whether through weapons or assaults or the destruction it does to families who lose someone to an overdose. He said law enforcement alone won't solve the problem, but he has no choice but to fight the battle. "If somebody brings 3,000 bags of heroin to the state of Vermont and plies that to our communities, the answer is not to ignore it," he said. "I am 100 percent opposed to legalizing another substance that can be addictive, that presents a health risk to our children, that presents a danger to our communities, that presents a danger to our highways." Merkel acknowledged that not everyone who smokes a joint will become a heroin addict but said he can name 20 children he's interacted with who have told him not to worry because they were just smoking pot. He said those young people are now dead due to drug overdose. "I've seen addiction so bad that one young lady cut her pinkie off to get pain medication," Merkel said. "So she could feed her habit. They sell themselves so they can get money for their drugs. You can say that's not violent, but to me it is." Merkel said whatever the argument is for legalization, he knows the end result will make the drug more accessible to children and he can't support that. He said he wants Vermont to be known for skiing and maple syrup, not marijuana smoke. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom