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- Message-Id: <199503220745.CAA11921@clark.net>
- Date: Wed, 22 Mar 1995 02:49:33 +0000
- To: drctalk-l@netcom.com
- From: resister@clark.net (P.Scott Ehlers)
- Subject: ABA Prez on Legalization
-
- There was a request on Friday for a copy of the USA Today article which
- featured the views of the president of the American Bar Association on drug
- legalization. Here is the full text of that article.
-
- USA Today - June 28, 1994
-
- Next ABA boss: Legalize drugs
- Says it's a way to reduce crime
-
- By Leslie Phillips
-
- The president-elect of the American Bar Association favors
- legalizing drugs- from marijuana to crack cocaine- as a step to cutting
- crime.
- George Bushnell, who takes over the nation's largest organization
- of lawyers in August, says he has held that view for more than 30 years.
- His view, he says, is personal. The ABA has no position on
- decriminalization. And Bushnell says he will not try to persuade the
- 375,000-member organization to take one.
- "I personally favor decriminalization of all drugs," says
- Bushnell, a trial lawyer in Detroit.
- If government regulates or sells drugs, "it takes the profit out of
- it, which in turn reduces the attractiveness of drug activity among kids.
- "One of the main reasons for crime is that people need money to buy
- the stuff."
- Bushnell, 70, joins a handful of other public figures such as
- Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke, former secretary of State George Shultz and
- New York federal Judge Robert Sweet in advocating drug decriminalization.
- "Many thoughtful people are looking at decriminalization as away of
- dealing with the violence that's associated with the prohibition against
- certain drugs," says the ABA's Criminal Justice section chairman Randoph
- Stone. "I don't think people will be shocked or surprised...I think there
- are many members who have that view."
- By contrast, Bushnell and the ABA take a tepid view of the
- multi-billion dollar crime bill wending its way through Congress.
- Parts of it are a "step forward," Bushnell says, while other parts
- are "inappropriate."
- The ABA supports an assault weapons ban, drug treatment for state
- and federal prisoners, and grants to states for prevention and education
- programs for youth.
- But the popular "three strikes and you're out" proposal- calling
- for life in prison after a third violent felony conviction- is a "glitzy
- political response to the fear that grips our country," he says.
- The community policing program which will put 100,000 more cops on
- the street is a "phony and a fraud."
- Building more prisons for violent criminals is "a rathole for money."
- "We are not looking at what causes crime," Bushnell says. Instead,
- the bill "has become a political engine for both federal and state
- legislative candidates and in every state with a gubernatorial election."
-
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-
- P. Scott Ehlers "Although
- it is not true that all conservatives are
-
- resister@clark.net stupid...it
- is true that most stupid people are
-
- conservative."
-
- --John Stuart Mill
-
-
- "I
- have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility
-
- against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."
-
- --Thomas Jefferson
-
-
- "Laws do not persuade just because they threaten."
-
- --Seneca, A.D. 65
-