News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Book Review: Sheriff Levels Blast At Drug War |
Title: | US CO: Book Review: Sheriff Levels Blast At Drug War |
Published On: | 2002-02-24 |
Source: | Denver Post (CO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-31 02:18:31 |
BOOK REVIEW: SHERIFF LEVELS BLAST AT DRUG WAR
Law Enforcers Are Diverted, Corrupted
DRUG WAR ADDICTION Notes From The Front Lines of America's #1 Policy
Disaster By Bill Masters Accurate Press, 135 pages, $10.95 paperback
Years ago, the sheriff of a Colorado mountain county was approached by an
informant. A load of meth was entering the state from California. The tip
was good: The informant knew who was picking up the load, what type of car
would be used, the date it was due to arrive and where it was going.
The dealers lived in a neighboring county. The sheriff filed his report
with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation and passed the tip on to the
sheriff in the county where the dealers lived. Imagine his surprise when,
more than a year later, the very sheriff he had warned was arrested along
with key members of his staff for running the meth- dealing ring.
Was that the defining moment for Bill Masters, sheriff of San Miguel County
- - the idealistic officer who received the informant's tip and dutifully
passed it on? He served on the front line of the War on Drugs even before
he was appointed sheriff in 1979. He is the recipient of an award for
outstanding achievement from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
Masters had made numerous drug-related arrests and led countless more
investigations. Today, he is one of this country's leading opponents of the
drug war. In "Drug War Addiction," Masters tells us what knocked him off
the war horse.
The son of a Marine who served in the South Pacific during World War II,
Masters grew up in Los Angeles. After enlisting in the Coast Guard, he
became a law enforcement officer. First elected as a Republican and then as
a Libertarian who won 80 percent of the vote, he is now in his fifth term
as sheriff of San Miguel County.
When Sheriff Masters takes us along with him on police training,
investigations and arrests, he clearly knows whereof he speaks. It is his
unique vantage point that makes "Drug War Addiction" such a valuable
addition to the growing dialogue on the far-reaching effects of our
country's most recent experiment with Prohibition. Indeed, according to
Masters, America is addicted to its domestic war.
"The first way the drug war has become an addiction," he writes, "is
obvious: law enforcement agencies are addicted to the money." Not only does
that enable police departments to pay the salaries of additional staff, it
also buys them guns and high-tech surveillance equipment. As famed
economist and Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman has pointed out, local
agencies benefit not just from this multibillion-dollar bonanza, but also
from the forfeiture of assets of suspected drug dealers.
In making them a beneficiary of its largesse, the drug war at the same time
diverts law enforcement from pursuing its primary mission and appointed
task of protecting the public against violent crime.
In regard to forfeiture, it isn't even necessary to charge or convict a
suspect in order to seize his property; in fact, it's far simpler to
threaten prosecution and take property in lieu of giving the suspect his
day in court. Herein lies Masters' second powerful point: the extent to
which police departments are corrupted by drug prohibition.
It is often said that familiarity breeds contempt. It is equally true that
familiarity breeds corruption. While it is impossible to know with
precision the extent to which law enforcement has been corrupted by the
drug war because many infractions amount to just looking the other way or
taking "a little cream off the top" from known dealers, the General
Accounting Office has found that between 1993 and 1997, on average, half of
all FBI-led investigations into police misconduct were related to drug
offenses. These investigations go all the way up to theft, perjury and murder.
The human face Masters puts on the corruption of law enforcement is his
most indelible contribution. "Drug War Addiction" refreshes the national
dialogue with poignant examples that bring the devastation and apparent
futility of the War on Drugs all too painfully close to our doors.
Masters writes from the battle zone. Both supporters of the drug war and
those who believe it is a failure will benefit from this brave warrior's
message.
Law Enforcers Are Diverted, Corrupted
DRUG WAR ADDICTION Notes From The Front Lines of America's #1 Policy
Disaster By Bill Masters Accurate Press, 135 pages, $10.95 paperback
Years ago, the sheriff of a Colorado mountain county was approached by an
informant. A load of meth was entering the state from California. The tip
was good: The informant knew who was picking up the load, what type of car
would be used, the date it was due to arrive and where it was going.
The dealers lived in a neighboring county. The sheriff filed his report
with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation and passed the tip on to the
sheriff in the county where the dealers lived. Imagine his surprise when,
more than a year later, the very sheriff he had warned was arrested along
with key members of his staff for running the meth- dealing ring.
Was that the defining moment for Bill Masters, sheriff of San Miguel County
- - the idealistic officer who received the informant's tip and dutifully
passed it on? He served on the front line of the War on Drugs even before
he was appointed sheriff in 1979. He is the recipient of an award for
outstanding achievement from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
Masters had made numerous drug-related arrests and led countless more
investigations. Today, he is one of this country's leading opponents of the
drug war. In "Drug War Addiction," Masters tells us what knocked him off
the war horse.
The son of a Marine who served in the South Pacific during World War II,
Masters grew up in Los Angeles. After enlisting in the Coast Guard, he
became a law enforcement officer. First elected as a Republican and then as
a Libertarian who won 80 percent of the vote, he is now in his fifth term
as sheriff of San Miguel County.
When Sheriff Masters takes us along with him on police training,
investigations and arrests, he clearly knows whereof he speaks. It is his
unique vantage point that makes "Drug War Addiction" such a valuable
addition to the growing dialogue on the far-reaching effects of our
country's most recent experiment with Prohibition. Indeed, according to
Masters, America is addicted to its domestic war.
"The first way the drug war has become an addiction," he writes, "is
obvious: law enforcement agencies are addicted to the money." Not only does
that enable police departments to pay the salaries of additional staff, it
also buys them guns and high-tech surveillance equipment. As famed
economist and Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman has pointed out, local
agencies benefit not just from this multibillion-dollar bonanza, but also
from the forfeiture of assets of suspected drug dealers.
In making them a beneficiary of its largesse, the drug war at the same time
diverts law enforcement from pursuing its primary mission and appointed
task of protecting the public against violent crime.
In regard to forfeiture, it isn't even necessary to charge or convict a
suspect in order to seize his property; in fact, it's far simpler to
threaten prosecution and take property in lieu of giving the suspect his
day in court. Herein lies Masters' second powerful point: the extent to
which police departments are corrupted by drug prohibition.
It is often said that familiarity breeds contempt. It is equally true that
familiarity breeds corruption. While it is impossible to know with
precision the extent to which law enforcement has been corrupted by the
drug war because many infractions amount to just looking the other way or
taking "a little cream off the top" from known dealers, the General
Accounting Office has found that between 1993 and 1997, on average, half of
all FBI-led investigations into police misconduct were related to drug
offenses. These investigations go all the way up to theft, perjury and murder.
The human face Masters puts on the corruption of law enforcement is his
most indelible contribution. "Drug War Addiction" refreshes the national
dialogue with poignant examples that bring the devastation and apparent
futility of the War on Drugs all too painfully close to our doors.
Masters writes from the battle zone. Both supporters of the drug war and
those who believe it is a failure will benefit from this brave warrior's
message.
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