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BAYANET drug enforcement should not be cut in Isabella County

 

The five-county sting that resulted in $4,241,000 worth of marijuana being seized again proves the importance of the Bay Area Narcotics Enforcement Team.

BAYANET should be preserved as much as is financially feasible for Isabella County. Deterring rampant illegal activity, especially drug-related, is extremely important, and the team has made clear progress in cleaning up drug activity in the county.

Isabella County was considering cutting one officer from its branch of BAYANET, which currently has seven full-time equivalents. Eight of the 25 arrests were in Isabella County and more marijuana plants were seized in Isabella than any of the other four counties involved in the sting, proving the money spent on BAYANET in the county is paying off.

If BAYANET was not active in Isabella County, there would be millions of dollars worth of marijuana being distributed.

Sheriff Leo Mioduszewski said despite Isabella County leading BAYANET in arrests, they may leave the team in 2011 because of budget cuts. This news follows considerations last month that one full-time position may be cut from the Isabella team.

At the end of the day, the county only has so much money to use to enforce the law. But the results BAYANET has produced makes their effectiveness and importance clear.

Isabella County houses both a large college community and a large rural area, which makes it particularly conducive to marijuana growth operations and distribution of marijuana and other drugs.

Some may argue Isabella County’s BAYANET team is larger than it needs to be, but their aggressive approach to drug enforcement has paid off in a big way, rather than being excessive.

Isabella County’s team is considerably larger than that of the other five involved counties, but the team’s success makes it logically difficult to argue against its continuation.

Obviously drug enforcement will continue in Isabella County if its BAYANET team is maintained, reduced or cut, but having a team of officers dedicated to narcotics enforcement has created concrete, tangible results.

If the team is cut for budget concerns, drug enforcement will become a greater challenge for general law enforcement in the county.

 
 
  • that guy

    the war on drugs has done nothing but cost trillions of tax dollars since its “creation”.. maybe if we spent that money on rehabilitation and education, then perhaps we wouldn't have a huge drug problem..

  • Radioactivedrummer

    You are tremendously misguided. The reason all this marijuana was growing was mostly by growers selling for medical use. When it comes to recreational use, the majority of the public knows that marijuana is not as harmful as alcohol or tobacco and should be treated as such. If you don't believe me look it up. “That guy” is correct when he says the war on drugs has completely failed. Drugs will always exist no matter what. We should treat them as a health risk instead of a criminal risk. The legalization of marijuana is going to happen, as “the people are ahead [of the polititians] on this one” – Former New Mexico governer Gary Johnson. He also states “legalizing marijuana will take it out of the hands of drug cartels and into the hands of legitimate growers and businesses”. Do your research. Talk to some lawyers before you say this. Bayonet is an innappropriate organization that turns students against other students and uses rats who get other students in trouble, who get other students in trouble, etc.. only for smoking marijuana.

    How many people have died from smoking weed? 0. Alchohol? Thousands.

    Peace.