Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: OPED: Legalize Drugs? That Would Be Wrong Way To Go
Title:US NV: OPED: Legalize Drugs? That Would Be Wrong Way To Go
Published On:2005-04-24
Source:Nevada Appeal (Carson City, NV)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 15:10:56
LEGALIZE DRUGS? THAT WOULD BE WRONG WAY TO GO

Appeal police reporter F.T. Norton's powerful two-part series on Carson
City's methamphetamine epidemic focused public attention on an issue that
had been hidden for far too long in our town. And it should cause us to
look very carefully at proposals to legalize dangerous drugs in the Silver
State.

"(Meth) is the most frequently encountered drug in Nevada," Norton wrote,
"and although meth use is working its way across the United States, it's
easily been the drug of choice in Carson City for at least 20 years."

She cited moving personal examples of how drugs have impacted the
well-known families of Carson City Sheriff Ken Furlong and Assembly
Minority Leader Lynn Hettrick, of Douglas County. Both of their
twenty-something daughters have been fighting meth addictions for several
years, and are finally showing signs of kicking their drug habits, for
which they should be commended.

"I was smoking it (meth), eating it and snorting it," said Furlong's
25-year-old daughter, Kendra. "I quit my job with the state, my home was
being foreclosed on, my mother took my kids - and instead of asking anyone
for help, I closed everyone out except the people feeding my habit." I
admire her courage in speaking out in our local newspaper.

For his part, Assemblyman Hettrick acknowledged that "it (meth) doesn't
care about your status in life. It doesn't care about anything. It's
everywhere and it doesn't miss anyone." Presumably, he'll be leading the
fight against further drug legalization in our state. I say "further"
because Nevada voters approved so-called medical marijuana a few years ago
on the dubious theory that anything the federal government opposes must be
good for us. But the truth is that marijuana isn't medicine; it's a noxious
weed and that's why medical marijuana is regulated by the State Agriculture
Department rather than the Pharmacy Board.

During an April 13 public meeting organized by Sheriff Furlong, Mayor Marv
Teixeira and District Attorney Noel Waters, Detective Sgt. Mitch Pier of
the Tri-Net Narcotics Task Force said that Carson City is a "major hub" for
drug traffickers because of its central location at the intersection of
highways 50 and 395 and proximity to Reno and Lake Tahoe.

"We're seeing that a majority of the time we investigate outside the
county, we're ending up in Carson City," Pier told an audience of civic
leaders and interested citizens.

"With so much meth lying around, it's no surprise that a majority of the
crimes committed in Carson City can be tied back to methamphetamine use,"
said DA Waters. He, Sheriff Furlong and Tri-Net officers vowed to crack
down on drug traffickers. Shortly after taking office, Mayor Marv
identified meth trafficking and abuse as the No. 1 law enforcement priority
in Carson City, and I heartily to endorse his vigorous efforts to raise
public awareness on this issue.

After the April 13 meeting the conservative Burke Consortium issued the
following statement in support of the anti-drug campaign: "We applaud our
city officials for their honesty and transparency on this issue (and)
remain optimistic that our city officials have (finally) started to take
the necessary steps to control this problem." Well said! The Consortium
also asserted that most local meth is produced by violent Mexican (and
Central American) gangs operating in Mexico and Southern California, which
"monopolize the large-scale meth trade here in Nevada." That observation
coincides with what I've been writing about - a dramatic increase in
illegal immigration, drug trafficking and other criminal activity along the
porous U.S.DMexico border.

All of this leads me to reiterate my strong opposition to drug
legalization, which would inevitably lead to the ready availability of
marijuana and more dangerous drugs. After the 2005 state Legislature
declined to consider a proposal by the Washington, D.C.-based Marijuana
Policy Project to legalize possession of up to one ounce of marijuana, the
MPP announced its intention to put a misleading initiative measure on next
year's statewide ballot. This is virtually the same measure that Nevada
voters defeated by a 60-40 margin a couple of years ago.

During legislative hearings on the MPP proposal, Nevada law enforcement
officials spoke out against it on grounds that marijuana is a "gateway
drug" that frequently leads to more severe addictions. "Marijuana will not
be legalized on my watch," declared Assembly Speaker Richard Perkins, a
Henderson police official who plans to run for governor next year. I
wholeheartedly agree with Perkins on this high-priority law enforcement issue.

Kevin Quint, executive director of the private Join Together Northern
Nevada substance abuse coalition, argued effectively against drug
legalization last month in a Reno Gazette-Journal op-ed piece. "Making
marijuana a legal substance offers no benefits to Nevada citizens," he
wrote, and added that legalization would only lead to more drug use,
increased demand for publicly-funded drug treatment facilities and a much
larger prison population. He also noted that most first-time marijuana
users are under the age of 18 and are much more likely to "graduate" to
hard drugs like cocaine, heroin and/or meth.

As the Burke Consortium wisely noted, "The meth epidemic poses a whole new
set of challenges and dangers for law enforcement, first responders,
prosecutors, public health officials and child welfare agencies." Let's
join together in support of their efforts to rid our community of meth and
other dangerous drugs with particular attention to the traffickers who prey
upon our children and other vulnerable segments of society.
Member Comments
No member comments available...