40 Years of Drug War Failure: LEAP's Neill Franklin
On June 17, 1971 President Richard Nixon launched the modern-day
drug war, an effort perpetuated by every one of his
successors.
As the reform group Law Enforcement
Against Prohibition (LEAP) documents in a new comprehensive
study, the drug war has destroyed lives and property, shredded the
constitution, and distorted American education, health care, and
even foreign policy. That's why, notes LEAP, fully 75 percent of
Americans and 69 percent of police chiefs agree that the drug war
has failed.
Reason's Nick Gillespie talked with LEAP's Executive Director
Neill Franklin, a
retired major in the Maryland State Police. As Franklin explains,
he was one of the most bellicose drug warriors around until a
comrade was killed during an undercover operation. The best way,
argues Franklin, we can pay tribute to his fallen friend - and all
the other people whose lives have been laid waste by a war on drugs
that has caused far more bad than good - is to turn away from
prohibition and embrace regulation and control similar to that used
for alcohol.
Shot by Jim Epstein and Joshua Swain, who also edited.
For more videos and information about drug policy, go to here.
For more information on LEAP and to read "Ending the Drug War: A
Dream Deferred," go to http://www.leap.cc/40years/
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