Pubdate: Sun, 23 May 1999 Date: 05/23/1999 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Author: Tom O'Connell Editor -- During his tenure at City Hall, Mayor Willie Brown has demonstrated that his long suits are deal making and consensus building; great assets for a Sacramento pol, but not necessarily the best qualifications for running a city. He has also shown a pragmatic streak which shouldn't have surprised anyone familiar with his career in the Legislature. His urging of the Board of Supervisors that police should start taking automobiles from drug buyers and ``johns'' suggests that his usually astute political instincts may be starting to betray him. Could it possibly have escaped his notice that just recently, opposition to forfeiture had induced John Conyers, D-Mich., and Barney Frank, D-Mass., to cross the aisle and join forces with bitter congressional enemies Henry Hyde, R-Ill., and Bob Barr, R-Ga., in sponsoring a bill to severely limit forfeiture, a practice which has come increasingly to be regarded as outright thievery by law enforcement? Brown's endorsement of forfeiture is cynical; it's a policy which has resulted in police corruption without any significant improvement in the ``control'' of an incontrollable illegal drug market. Brown should be made to pay a high political price for such cynical and irresponsible grandstanding. TOM O'CONNELL San Mateo