Culture

Massachusetts Police Force Offers Free Drug Treatment Instead of Arrest

By
Mike Adams

While most law enforcement agencies across the United States continue to treat drug users as though they are common criminals, some have cast out their old school methodologies and adopted a more common sense approach to combating the scourge of addiction on their city streets.

Instead of arresting drug offenders and handing them over to the criminal justice system, the Gloucester Police Department in Massachusetts has decided to offer complimentary treatment programs for which they will pick up the tab.

Earlier this month, Police Chief Leonard Campanello took to the department’s Facebook page to announce that any addict who walks into police headquarters and surrenders the remainder of their dope and paraphernalia will not be charged with a crime. Rather, these individuals will receive an “angel” that will immediately begin guiding them through the recovery process.

“Not in hours or days, but on the spot,” Campanello wrote, adding that the department has teamed up with the Addison Gilbert Hospital and Lahey Clinic in order to fast-track rehabilitation efforts for those seeking help through the police force.

Under the philosophy of “attacking the demand rather than attacking the supply,” Campanello, who worked seven years as a narcotics officer, understands that people addicted to opiates are not criminals, but rather, they are suffering from a debilitating disease comparable to an insatiable nicotine habit.

“The reasons for the difference in care between a tobacco addict and an opiate addict is stigma and money,” he said. “Petty reasons to lose a life.

Instead of using the money that has been seized from drug dealers to afford luxuries for the department, Gloucester Police plan to spend it on nasal narcan, an overdose antidote, which will be distributed with the help of local pharmacies for drug users without health insurance.

“We will save lives with the money from the pockets of those who would take them,” Campanello wrote in the Facebook post. “We recognize that nasal narcan is not the answer, but it is saving lives and no one in this City will be denied a life saving drug for this disease just because of a lack of insurance.”

This progressive approach to fighting the real War on Drugs is the result of an increasing fatality rate across the city.

Four people have already suffered deadly overdoses in 2015—this in a town with a population of about 30,000. On a state level, opioid overdoses claimed the lives of more than 1,000 people in 2014, according to The Boston Globe.

Although it remains uncertain just how successful Campanello’s plan will be, there is no denying that treatment is a more sensible alternative to incarceration. Several years ago, Seattle launched a Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) program, which works to keep addicts out of jail by providing them with the essential resources they need to get clean and lead a normal, productive life.

Interestingly, unlike most drug courts, Seattle’s program does not punish offenders with jail time in case of a relapse… And this approach appears to be working. A recent study published by the University of Washington found that people enrolled in LEAD were 60 percent less likely to be arrested than those thrown into the traditional probationary methods.

Mike Adams

Mike Adams is a High Times Staff writer hailing from the darkest depths of the Armpit of America—Southern Indiana.

By
Mike Adams
Tags: Police

Recent Posts

Louisiana Legislative Committee Unanimously Passes Adult-Use Cannabis Framework Bill

If signed into law, the Louisiana bill would establish a regulatory framework for recreational cannabis,…

24 hours ago

Weed Made Me Less Angry. Now It Sometimes Makes Me Mad.

I was once angry. But weed helped. Then, weed kinda made me angry again.

24 hours ago

DEA Challenges Bid To Use Psilocybin Under ‘Right To Try’ Legislation

The DEA is challenging an attempt by a Seattle physician to give psilocybin to terminally…

24 hours ago

Study Reveals State Cannabis Legalization Lowers Immigrant Deportation

There's just a false sense of security related to the federal government to worry about.

24 hours ago

Vegans Rejoice as Farmers Switch from Chickens to Hemp

A trend is emerging among poultry farmers who are converting operations to industrial hemp farms.

24 hours ago

Arizona Church Reaches Settlement with DEA To Allow Sacramental Use of Ayahuasca

The Church of the Eagle and the Condor has affirmed its members’ right to use…

2 days ago