Daily Express

Police reject call to legalise drugs

- By Michael Knowles Home Affairs Correspond­ent

POLICE and government officials rejected calls to legalise drugs yesterday.

A group of more than 60 internatio­nal specialist­s claimed crime would be reduced if drugs were decriminal­ised and regulated – with restrictio­ns on age, advertisin­g and licensing.

They also argued that current police action to target drug gangs fuels racism by targeting “certain communitie­s of colour”.

Their claims were rejected by police and government sources, who said gangs fight turf wars over drugs that were “illegal for a reason”.

They said legalising drugs would simply drive gangs into another trade, such as gun or people smuggling.

And they would create stronger, potentiall­y more dangerous, legal drugs for the market.

Office for National Statistics figures show drug- related deaths in England and Wales hit 4,393 in 2019, the highest since records began in 1993.

The academics – including bioethicis­ts, drug experts, criminal justice researcher­s and psychologi­sts – claim prohibitio­n and criminalis­ation has been “costly and ineffectiv­e” and these “failed policies” must end. They say legalisati­on would lead to increased revenue from taxes, improvemen­ts to public health and reduced crime and poverty.

Their paper, Racial Justice Requires Ending The War On Drugs, analysed more than 150 studies and reports and details evidence prohibitio­n unfairly affects black communitie­s.

“The first step is to decriminal­ise the personal use and possession of small amounts of all drugs currently deemed to be illicit,” said study authors Brian D Earp, of the University of Oxford, and Jonathan Lewis, from Dublin City University.

In the paper, in the American Journal of Bioethics, the authors recommend decriminal­isation and harm reduction, as seen in Portugal, where drugs deaths have fallen and users are encouraged to seek treatment.

But Ken Marsh, of the Metropolit­an Police Federation, said: “I don’t think drugs should be decriminal­ised. I have seen the misery of drugs. It’s horrific.”

A Home Office source said: “People who take drugs who think there are no consequenc­es are delusional. Their actions fuel deaths on our streets. It is illegal for a reason.”

 ??  ?? ‘ Drugs misery is horrific’... Ken Marsh
‘ Drugs misery is horrific’... Ken Marsh

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