Site search

newsletterarticles newsletterarticles
newsletterarticles
newsletterarticles
newsletterarticles

 

 
Home | About Us | Our Services | Membership | Contacts | Newsletter | Events | Messages | Drug Facts | Memorial Page


newsletterarticles

Acceptance Speech of John L. Kane Jr

John L. Kane, Jr is winner of `The Justice Gerald LeDain Award for the Achievement in the Field of Law' presented at the Drug Policy Foundation Awards Ceremony on 20 May 2000, introduced by Judge Jim Gray.

Thank you. I am especially honoured to receive an award named after a great jurist. I am very grateful to receive it from Judge Gray who has been an inspiration to me. Where he has led, I have followed with enthusiasm and confidence.

I am grateful to this organisation and its participants who provide a voice of reason in the midst of flattering propaganda and duplicitous hysteria. While I do not for a moment wish to be understood as diminishing or deprecating the importance of those poor souls who are filling our prisons or the evisceration of fundamental constitutional rights, I want to make note of the `other victims' of the so-called War On Drugs.

The `other victims' are those people and businesses who can't get into court to have their cases heard. They are the victims of traditional crimes such as burglary, rape and robbery who can't get justice because the police are tied up with drug cases. They are the merchants going bankrupt because the police no longer have time to investigate or prosecute bad check cases. They are the battered spouses whose abusers are not sent to jail because there's only room there for pot smokers. They are the physicians and other medical care providers who cannot treat their patients according to conscience and the discipline of their profession. They are the sick and dying who endure unnecessary pain. They are the children whose parents are taken from them. They are the police who have given up honourable and challenging work investigating and detecting crime because they have become addicted to and dependent upon an informant based system reminiscent of Lenin's dreaded Cheka. They are the families forced to select one member to plead guilty lest the entire family be charged. They are the prosecutors and defence attorneys who have turned the temples of justice into plea bargaining bazaars. They are, most painful to me, the judges who let this happen and don't say a word.

Let us continue our opposition to this infamous War on behalf of all its victims.

John L. Kane, Jr.

Drug Policy Institute Washington DC

Back To Articles Index

FDS Site designed, created and managed by Cyberart-FX Web Design, Sydney, Australia