Claim: New Hampshire cop being turfed for supporting pot legalization

By Daniel Tencer
Thursday, October 29th, 2009 -- 10:02 pm
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bradleyjardis Claim: New Hampshire cop being turfed for supporting pot legalizationA police officer who once confronted Sen. John McCain about marijuana decriminalization is being silenced and possibly pushed out of his job with a New Hampshire police force for speaking out against marijuana prohibition, his supporters say.

Bradley Jardis, an officer with the Epping Police Department, is challenging a six-day suspension he received after reportedly getting into a heated argument with a supervisor. According to blogger David Bratzer, Jardis received the suspension after refusing an "illegal" request from his bosses to refrain from speaking to the media.

Jardis is an outspoken critic of marijuana prohibition and a supporter of medical marijuana laws, as well as a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, pro-legalization group. Jardis was featured earlier this year in an article in the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union-Leader profiling police officers who object to the drug laws they enforce.

Jardis also penned an op-ed in April for the Union-Leader in which he spoke in favor of a proposed medical marijuana law for New Hampshire. Sometime after those two articles appeared, Jardis began to experience pressure from his employers, his supporters allege.

A blogger writing at FreeKeene, a local New Hampshire news forum, stated the following:

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After [the] Union Leader article ... certain people at the EPD began "screwing" with Brad and they started down the road of getting rid of him. It has progressed to the point where Brad is currently looking at a total of a 6 day unpaid suspension. The suspension is currently on hold pending the outcome of the appeals process, which ends with the Epping Board of Selectmen. Brad received the suspension for how he interacted with his sergeant in which he stated he wouldn't follow an illegal order forbidding him to speak to the media after Brad was removed from a case by the sergeant; and for sending an e-mail to his fellow union members in the department describing malfeasance involving their union president and the Lieutenant who was in charge of investigating/disciplining Brad on the illegal order issue.

New Hampshire citizen journalist Dave Ridley reports that Jardis also became the subject of harassment, presenting as evidence a hand-drawn cartoon Jardis says he found stapled to his locker, showing a man dressed in a superhero outfit and captioned with the words "gay man." Ridley reports that Jardis is not gay.

"On the plus side, it looks like Jardis may someday generate new case law that will protect free speech for all police officers in New Hampshire," Bratzer writes. "The downside is that this is probably going to be a long, messy, expensive and painful process for him."

JARDIS VS. McCAIN

In late 2007, Jardis confronted Arizona Sen. John McCain about America's drug laws during a New Hamsphire campaign stop.

"I've served here in my state as a law enforcement officer for nine years now, and after nine years of working on the streets ... I have seen first-hand that the war on drugs causes crime, it causes children to have access easier and it does nothing to curb the problem of drug abuse," Jardis said to McCain. "Like alcohol prohibition, after the 18th Amendment passed, the country wised up and we passed the 21st Amendment which curbed violent problems in this country greatly. What is it going to take for a powerful politician like yourself to realize that the war on drugs is a failure and we need to get smart about drugs, not tough?"

"It's gonna take a lot before I adopt your viewpoint," McCain responded.

The Republican candidate went on to argue that the alcohol analogy was incorrect because "most experts would say that in moderation, one or two drinks of alcohol does not have an effect on one's judgment, mental acuity, or their physical abilities. I think most experts would say that the first ingestion of drugs leads to mind-altering and other experiences, other effects, and can lead over time to serious, serious problems."

The following video was posted to YouTube on November 17, 2007.

The following video, produced by David Ridley, was posted to YouTube on October 20, 2009.

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Story comments are below...

  • Freedom of Speech forever!!!!

    Your girl Mary :)
  • warren444
    Live free or die? What happened to freedom of SPEECH?
  • flowerguerrilla
    Here is the Epping, NH, Police Dept. Phone umber: Let's call and demand the end of Bradley Jardis' harassment! (603) 679-5122
  • mntnman
    The last time this happened the officer who was trying to exercise his right to free speech was awarded over $800,000
    New Hampshire...Live Free or Die???

    http://www.leap.cc/cms/index.php?name=News&file...
  • johnm2141
    This is disgusting, if true. A police officer may say what he likes when he is off duty. While he cannot represent the department without their consent, he can identify himself as a police officer and speak his mind. How sad, if true, for the police to be abandoning our constitution!

    I support Bradley Jardis in seeking to right whatever wrongs were commited. Personally, I find prohibition to be irrational and dangerous. While I personally don't use many psychotropic drugs, caffeine and very seldom ethanol, I have enough sense to know a) its none of my buisness what another adult does on their property with other consenting adults, and b) that drug prohibition is driving crime through an unregulatable market for drugs with an artificially inflated value.

    Finally, as a biochemist, I find the comments John McCain made to be ridiculous. Numerous studies show "one or two" drinks to cause impairment, and the fact he classes "drugs" as different than alcohol categorically betrays the fact of his ignorance. Alcohol is a "drug" and "drugs" do not, as a group, do anything. From the cocaine your surgeon uses, to the methamphetamine your internal medicine and psychiatrist uses, to the morphine your oncologist uses, to the prozac, wellbutrin, lithium, ethanol, marijuana, corticosteroids, and other things all of america uses: they are not as a class anything in particular.

    This qualtitative distinction McCain makes is a disservice to the American people, who should demand real science, real facts, and reject the knee-jerk defense mechanisms employed by McCain.

    (and in case you were wondering, this is a guy that prefered McCain over Obama saying this. It isn't political, its science, sociology, and economics. Most importantly its a moral issue: it's wrong to stop another adult from making their own choices regarding themselves on their own property)
  • So what happened to free speech? Come on pot legalization is becoming the norm and in 5 years expect half the country to have it available. What is more just?... Locking up non-violent marijuana offenders and training them into a criminal lifestyle via prison and jail... Or just letting them use the product that they deem suitable for them. Where does the government think they get this power to control us in every way limit us from using a relativley harmless drug... But then support pharma companies who are tied in with the FDA monetarily wise, who pump out new potentially much dangerous drugs ALL THE TIME. THEN Forcefeed them to us through constant and bombarding advertisements. UGHHHHHH!!!
  • Phil E. Drifter
    It's not a war on (some) drugs it's a war on minorities to replace outlawed slave labor with prison labor. Asians smoked opium so opium was outlawed. Mexicans and blacks smoked 'marihuana' so cannabis was outlawed. Cocaine was blamed on blacks too but it's simply a case of big pharma outlawing naturally growing substances so they can stuff their pockets with synthetic mimics of natural substances. Read tinyurl.com/1mn
  • ophkablozom
    In Dumbfuckistan, that's what making sense gets you.
  • Hologram5
    "It's gonna take a lot before I adopt your viewpoint," McCain responded.
    -------------------------------
    Like what? A gang banger shooting a member or your family? Or shooting you? As long as it is illegal, the drug dealers will have a hay-day with it.
  • marxymcliberalson
    OK I take back everything I've said about cops, there actually is one good cop, oh and that guy whos doing the Kopbusters program.
  • Qew
    It's a matter of get out of my business and mind your own and to any ego-inflated politicrit I say it's time for you to take a long walk off of a short pier.
    If underground is where they want me then I'll do everything underground, including spend my money.
  • Great article about a fascinating story--wonder why I haven't read about it in the mainstream media... Without a doubt, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition is essential to ending this ongoing atrocity and Officer Jardis has already made some very "powerful" people very nervous. It is unfortunate that they're harassing him and suspending him for being honest and intelligent enough to question idiocy, but their clumsy actions prove that they are just grasping at straws. It's only a matter of time. And once enough people figure out that clinically-proven medicine (marijuana, among others) cannot simultaneously be a "schedule I narcotic", then their time is up. Drug use should not be a criminal action, but rather a health concern--that is the consensus which has been reached by such respected groups as the United Nations and the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy (not to mention the good folks at Law Enforcement Against Prohibition -- www.leap.cc.) Please call your representative and/or make a donation to LEAP today. It's the best investment you can make in your family's future, guaranteed.
  • shrapnel
    Its time the Fraternal Order of Police took a stand on this issue. Cops have a right to speak out against the insane drug war and the FOP is shirking its duty by failing to defend this right.
  • mcthorogood
    It's a matter of liberty. If you don't want to smoke pot, you may drink alcohol.  Personally, I don't do either one, but whatever you do, don't force your values on my life.
  • Uncephalized
    McCain is an asshole and I am ashamed to have him as my Senator. Unfortunately I am too young to have voted against him in his last Senate election (though I did in the Presidential), but I sure as hell will next time.
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