From Transform Drug Policy Foundation
For Immediate Release: October 10 2007
Drugs prohibition is âunworkable and immoralâ says Chief Constable
The Chief Constable of North Wales Police Richard Brunstorm, recommends in a report published today, that his Police Authority officially support his call for the legalisation and regulation of drugs, as part of their submission to the drug strategy consultation being conducted by the Government. He also recommends that they affiliate to Transform Drug Policy Foundation. The Authority meets on Monday 15 October to discuss the recommendations.
Danny Kushlick, Transform Director said:
"We are absolutely delighted at Mr Brunstromâs paper. The Chief Constable has displayed great leadership and imagination in very publicly calling for a drug policy that replaces the evident failings of prohibition with a legal system of regulation and control for potentially dangerous drugsâ.
âMr Brunstromâs call is less surprising when you consider that prohibition, and the illegal markets it creates, is the single largest cause of crime in the UK, generating £100 billion in crime costs alone over the last ten years. As a senior policeman he has witnessed first hand the counter productive effects of abdicating responsibility for this dangerous trade to unregulated and often violent criminals. His call for drug markets to be brought back within the sphere of Government control stands in enlightened contrast to the populist law and order posturing of our Prime Minister, who recently announced that âdrugs are never going to be decriminalisedâ.â
âThe current Government consultation on the drug strategy has inexplicably ruled out any discussion of alternatives to prohibition, despite the policyâs systematic failure over a number of decades. Mr Brunstromâs paper puts these pragmatic alternatives firmly back on the table, where they should be, if a meaningful debate about âwhat worksâ is to be entertained. It is to be hoped that the Police Authority support the Chief Constableâs recommendations and that other Police Authorities seriously examine the impact of enforcing prohibition. It signals the start of a renewed critique of prohibition, which Mr Brunstromâs paper describes as âboth unworkable and immoralâ and should force the Home Office and indeed Government to take the issue far more seriously than it has until now. An enormous amount of respect is due to the Chief Constable for supporting a âpragmatic and ethicalâ policy, despite its taboo nature in front line party politics. Those that denounce him should be wary of relying on what Mr Brunstrom calls âmoralistic dogmaâ.â
Notes for Editors:
The drugs paper was announced on the HYPERLINK http://www.north-wales.police.uk/nwpv2/en/about/coblogs.asp
The full paper is available in pdf here: HYPERLINK http://www.north-wales.police.uk/portal/files/folders/acpoblogs/entry3817.aspx
Permission to Reprint: This content is licensed under a modified Creative Commons Attribution license. Content of a purely educational nature in Drug War Chronicle appear courtesy of DRCNet Foundation, unless otherwise noted.