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- From: mrosing@igc.apc.org (Mike Rosing)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: New Drug Czar, Police perspective
- Message-ID: <1484000248@igc.apc.org>
- Date: 21 Jun 93 13:06:00 GMT
-
- The following article is from "Law Enforcement News" vol xix, No.
- 380 (may 15, 1993) page 5: [copied without permission, all typos
- and mispellings are mine]
-
- BURDEN'S BEAT
- by Ordway P. Burden
-
- Mr. Brown goes to Washington:
-
- U.S. DRUG POLICY MAY BE IN FOR A NEW LOOK
-
- The appointment of Lee P. Brown as Director of the Office of
- National Drug Control Policy soon after the Office's staff and
- budget hafve been cut significantly sends mixed signals to law
- enforcement. On the one hand, Lee Brown has a superlative
- reputation as a plice executive after heading law enforcement
- agencies in Portland, Ore., Atlanta, Houston, and New York. He
- has also served as president of the International Association of
- Chiefs of Police, which indicates his standing among his peers.
-
- On the other hand, President Clinton's fiscal 1994 budget slashes
- funds for the drug policy office from $17.3 million to $5.8
- millin, and cuts the staff from 147 to 25. Those cuts suggest
- that the nation's drug problem is not high on the President's list
- of priorities. But to add a puzzling note, the President has said
- he will make his new "drug czar" a member of the Cabinet.
-
- During the Presidential campaign last year, Clinton seemed to lean
- toward an increasing emphasis on education and treatment of drug
- addicts rather than tougher law enforcement. However, his budget
- left the propoertions of drug-fighting money roughly what they
- were under Presidents Reagan and Bush -- roughly two-thirds for
- fighting the supply of drugs here and abroad, and one-third for
- education and treatment. So it's not clear where Clinton will
- come down on the question of adding or subtracting resources for
- law enforcement in the anti-drug effort.
-
- In any event, the nomination of Lee Brown for drug czar seems an
- inspired choice. It was thought that Brown might get the FBI
- directorship if William Sessions were to be fired, and conceivably
- he could later take that important post. Meanwhile, he brings new
- credibility to the Office of National Drug Control Policy, whose
- mission is the somewhat nebulous one of coordinating and leading
- the efforts of t Federal agencies that are charged with some piece
- of the anti-drug action.
-
- Where Brown will stand on the allocation of resources between
- supply-side and demand-side activities remains to be seen. As one
- of the leading lights in the law enforcement field, he might be
- expected to favor continuing to give the lin's share to
- enforcement. But Brown is believed to favor enhancing education
- and treatment programs. Many people working in the drug abuse
- field -- in law enforcement as well as in education and treatment
- -- hailed Browns' nomination. The Drug Enforcement
- Administration's top man in New York, A. Bryden, was quoted in The
- New York Times as calling the choice of Brown "a great
- selection."
-
- One thing is sure: Lee Brown will put his stamp on the Federal
- Government's drug-fighting efforts. He has made his mark in every
- police job he has held so far, and there is no reason to think he
- won't do the same in the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
- The guess here is that one of his first challenges will be to
- change budget proiorities and perhaps fight for more resources.
- He may not get the President's attention, ghough, until the
- Administration's economic stimulus programs, the health insurance
- plan, and the question of intervention in Bosnia are brought under
- control.
-
- Lee Brown is likely to face a growing tide of influential voices
- urging a shift away from law enforcement and toward medical and
- social solutions to drug abuse. In March, LEN reported that
- former San Jose Police Chief Joseph D. McNamara, Baltimore Mayor
- Kurt Schmoke, Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman, and
- former Secretary of State George Shultz had signed a resolution
- saying that society "must recognize drug use and abuse as the
- medical and social problems that they are and that they must be
- treated with medical and social solutions."
-
- The resolution stopped short of recommending that drug use be
- legalized, as Mayor Schmoke and others have previously suggested.
- But the resolution did call for changes in drug laws "in order to
- reduce the harm our current policies are causing."
-
- Brown will be the third director of the drug-policy office. The
- first was William J. Bennett, who had been Secretary of Education
- under President Reagan. An outspoken conservative, Bennett was a
- steadfast supporter of law enforcement in the drug fight while
- pointing out that, among other things, enforcement gowes hand in
- hand with education. For one thing, law enforcement can teach a
- child that crime does not always pay, he told the National Law
- Enforcement Council, which this writer chairs. And, he added, the
- police rose is also important in drug treatment efforts because
- "most people in the drug world who need treatment don't wake up
- one morning and say 'I want treatment.' They're usually coerced
- into treatment, and law enforcement can often be the route
- there."
-
- In 1991, Bennett was succeeded as drug czar by former Florida Gov.
- Bob Martinez. Martinez's style was low key by comparison with
- Bennett, and Martinez was not very visible in the waning days of
- the Bush Administration. Now comes Lee Brown, a mover and shaker
- of the plice status quo who rarely raises his voice. He will
- nonetheless be heard.
-
- _(Ordway P. Burden is president of the Law Enforcement Assistance
- Foundation and chairman of the National Law Enforcement Council.
- He welcomes correspondence to his office at 24 Wyndham Court,
- Nanuet, NY 10954-3845. Seymour F. Malkin, the executive director
- of LEAF, assisted in the preparation of this article)_
-
-
-