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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Retired Cop Rides For Change To Nations Drug Policy
Title:US CO: Retired Cop Rides For Change To Nations Drug Policy
Published On:2005-06-15
Source:Brush News Tribune (US CO)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 02:56:09
RETIRED COP RIDES FOR CHANGE TO NATIONS DRUG POLICY

Wednesday, June 15, 2005 - Horseback riders on Hwy 6 between Brush and
Hillrose are as common as muck in a barnyard and usually don't rate a second
glance. However, on Monday, the sight of a cowboy wearing a t-shirt emblazed
with the words Cops Say Legalize Drugs was definitely an attention-getter.

Howard Wooldridge, a retired police detective from Fort Worth, Texas, is
riding from Los Angeles to New York City to raise awareness that the U.S's
drug policy is not working.

Has it reduced crime? Has it curbed the rates of drug related death and
disease? Has the War on Drugs done anything to keep drugs away from our
kids? Has it made America better in any way whatsoever? I Didn't think so,
Wooldridge said, ticking off his points on this riding glove-clad fingers.

Calling it his Paul Revere ride because he is spreading the word Wooldridges
message is that the country must end the failed war on drugs and the
attitude of prohibition that spawned it.

Everyone knows we are throwing good money after bad, but no one in
Washington is willing to say those three hardest words in the language: I
was wrong.

I don't know if it is ego or apathy, but no matter how long we have been
traveling in the wrong direction, it should never be too late to turn
around, he said.

Wooldridge, who was once known as "Hiway Howie" for his fierce efforts to
combat drunk drivers, said legal access to drugs for users and treatment
facilities for addicts, would free up $70 billion annually in local, state
and federal dollars.

Think about what good that money could do, instead of flushing it down the
toilet of waging an unwinnable war, he said.

Since his retirement in 1994, Wooldridge became a bi-lingual speaker for the
drug-policy reform movement, advocating an end to all drug prohibition. In
2003 he became a lobbyist in the Texas legislature where he and others were
able to help pass a bill that mandates no jail time for persons arrested for
personal amounts of any illegal drug.

Currently, he has joined forces with 44 other current and former members of
law enforcement, in 30 states, calling themselves: LEAP Law Enforcement
Against Prohibition.

Founded in 2002, LEAP is a non profit organization whose members believe the
existing drug policies have failed in their intended goals of addressing the
problems of crime, drug abuse, addiction, juvenile drug use, stopping the
flow of illegal drugs into this country and the internal sale and use of
illegal drugs.

They contend that by fighting a war on drugs the government has increased
the problems of society and made them far worse. And, that a system of
regulation rather than prohibition is a less harmful, more ethical and a
more effective public policy.

The mission of LEAP is to reduce the multitude of unintended harmful
consequences resulting from fighting the war on drugs and to lessen the
incidence of death, disease, crime, and addiction by ultimately ending drug
prohibition.

LEAPs goals are to, first, educate the public, the media, and policy makers,
to the failure of current drug policy by presenting a true picture of the
history, causes and effects of drug abuse and the crimes related to drug
prohibition; and second, to restore the publics respect for law enforcement,
which has been greatly diminished by its involvement in imposing drug
prohibition.

LEAPs main strategy for accomplishing these goals is to create a constantly
enlarging speakers bureau staffed with knowledgeable and articulate former
drug-warriors who describe the impact of current drug policies on:
police/community relations; the safety of law enforcement officers and
suspects; police corruption and misconduct; and the financial and human
costs associated with current drug policies.

For his part, Wooldridge is speaking at as many service clubs as possible
during his cross-country trek. On Monday, he was enroute to Sterling, where
he was scheduled to speak to the Sterling Rotary Club on Wednesday.

I've had a good life so far, and this country has been good to me. I decided
early on in my career that, after I retired, I would give my time and
volunteer for a worthy cause or two, because there is so much that needs
doing This is a worthy cause, maybe one of the worthiest, he said, climbing
back up on his horse and figuratively riding off into the sunset.
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