|
Jack A. Cole
| Medford, MA, USA |
Jack A. Cole
State Police Undercover Officer
"This is Not a War on Drugs - it's a War on People."
Jack Cole knows about the war on drugs from several perspectives. Cole retired as a Detective Lieutenant after a 26-year career with the New Jersey State Police. For fourteen of those years Cole worked as an undercover narcotics officer. His investigations spanned the spectrum of possible cases, from street drug users and mid-level drug dealers in New Jersey to international "billion-dollar" drug trafficking organizations. Cole ended his undercover career living nearly two years in Boston and New York City, posing as a fugitive drug dealer wanted for murder, while tracking members of a terrorist organization that robbed banks, planted bombs in corporate headquarters, court-houses, police stations, and airplanes and ultimately murdered a New Jersey State Trooper.
After retiring, Cole dealt with the emotional residue left from his participation in the unjust war on drugs by working to reform current drug policy. He moved to Boston to continue his education. Cole holds a B.A. in Criminal Justice and a Masters degree in Public Policy. Currently writing his dissertation for the Public Policy Ph.D. Program at the University of Massachusetts, his major focus is on the issues of race and gender bias, brutality and corruption in law enforcement. Cole believes ending drug prohibition will go a long way toward correcting those problems. As Law Enforcement Against Prohibtion's first executive director, serving from 2002 to 2010, he led LEAP from five founding members to an organization of more than 30,000 supporters calling for an end to the war on drugs.
A national and international speaker, Cole has taught courses to police recruits and veteran officers on ethics, integrity, moral decision-making, and the detrimental effects of racial profiling. He has spoken about drug policy: in colleges and universities; on many radio programs; and at conferences across the United States; and he has addressed the European Parliament, in Brussels, Belgium, on the subject of US drug policy.
Cole is passionate in his belief that the drug war is steeped in racism, that it is needlessly destroying the lives of young people, and that it is corrupting our police. Cole's discussions give his audience an alternative perspective of the US war on drugs from the view of a veteran drug-warrior turned against the war.
Reviews:
July 11, 2003
Jack, thanks so much for a great talk - one of the best in my nearly 20
years of holding these programs. I knew before your talk that I supported
lifting prohibition and now I know why I support it! It really was a great
presentation from a very credible and effective messenger. Your talk has
already elicited quite a buzz in our group.
Best, Paul
Paul Y. Watanabe
Inst. for Asian Am. Studies and Dept. of Political Science
University of Massachusetts,
Summer Institute Lecture
John F. Kennedy Library
Boston, MA
JACK ROCKED!!!!!!!! The faculty told me that he was the best presenter that the department has ever sponsored. My house is always open for people like you and Jack. It was our pleasure. - Jeff
Jeffrey London
Assistant Professor
Southwest Missouri State University
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Crime and Society Program
Springfield, MO |
Jack A.'s Blog:
| LEAP At the United Nations in Vienna | |
I recently returned from three days in Vienna, where I attended the United Nations' NGO conference, “Beyond 2008". LEAP has been selected as a consulting NGO for the United Nations and as such was one of the 300 NGOs from around the world to participate in the event. I ...
|
| Judge Eleanor Levingston Schockett Will Be Missed | |
I am very sad to have to report that Judge Eleanor Levingston
Schockett died Saturday, January 12, 2008, at Mission Hospital in Asheville,
North Carolina.
Eleanor was a close friend, a colleague, ...
|
| DEA’s ‘Demand Reduction Program’ Brochure | |
Howard Wooldridge, LEAP’s Educational Specialist on Capitol Hill, recently gave me a brochure put out by Drug Enforcement Administration. As I read it, I found two very good points for why we should end drug prohibition.
On the first side it says, “Nearly 80 ...
|
|
Click Here to book a LEAP speaker, or
contact Shaleen Title, Speakers Bureau Director,
cell (617) 955-9638 or fax (781) 393-2964
|