Pubdate: Mon, 9 Mar 1998 Source: The Age Author: Lindsay Murdoch Contact: http://www.theage.com.au THE TRAIL OF DRUGS THAT AFFECTS US ALL When Neil Comrie took an interstate telephone call a few weeks ago he was expecting a friendly chat with a long-time friend. Instead, the chief commissioner of the Victoria Police was devastated. The friend's 22-year-old son had come to Melbourne with his girlfriend for the weekend. The young man wasn't a regular drug user and according to Mr Comrie was brought up in a decent family. But during that weekend the man was offered some of the high-purity and cheap heroin that is easily available on the streets of Melbourne. He injected and died. "We were given the job of conveying the message to his father that he wouldn't be coming home," Mr Comrie says. The chief commissioner says that during two decades working as a police officer he has been locked into a hard-line approach to drug users. But he now admits the approach has not worked and "I have in recent years changed my mind quite considerably". I ask Mr Comrie about people's anger towards drug addicts who steal to feed their habits and how hard it would be to convince the public that offenders should get warnings. "The real problem with that attitude is that it is families like them which are losing their children to drug abuse," he says. "I know, for example, a number of very decent families who have done everything they can to provide a balanced and good upbringing for their children only to find that because of idiosyncrasies in that individual's make-up they get involved in the drug scene and the next thing they are found dead somewhere," Mr Comrie says. "I don't really think that society can abandon anyone who tries drugs," he says. "There is an obligation on society to try to minimise the damage that they do but also the need to minimise the damage they do to themselves." Mr Comrie says that with the benefit of hindsight "we would probably do everything differently" from the time the drugs problem started to escalate in Australia in the early 1970s. "Previously we all looked in amazement at what was happening in the United States and the United Kingdom," Mr Comrie says. "Well it is now upon us and we really haven't used our time wisely in dealing with this problem." Mr Comrie says he personally regards drug traffickers as the "lowest of the criminal element because they really are peddling a very dangerous product which we know takes many lives".