William Vandergraff began his career as a police officer in 1972. After 6 years of walking Main Street beats he graduated to detective, which he worked as most of his 29 years. He worked as Staff Sergeant and was in charge of Homicide, Major Crime and Street Gang Unit.
William became aware of L.E.A.P, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a U.S. based group comprised of police officers, judges, prosecutors, prison officials and politicians from around the world who recognized that the prohibition of drugs was causing the very same crime problems that the alcohol prohibition had done early in the 20th century. William believes that the majority of murders he investigated could be attributed to the Prohibition on Drugs. William will discuss his career working in Homicide in Canada's murder capital and the work he now does with L.E.A.P. LAW ENFORCEMENT AGAINST PROHIBITION
I dont care if he was a police officer,"give them an inch and they will take a mile",if you legalize marijuana and pot,then others will want to legalise cocaine and heroine,it is a domino affect,drugs leeds to violence and so does alcohol,and it leads to disease,but most of all it really makes people stupid,drugs slow down your ability to think rationally,you might as well be going backwards in time to the swinging sixties,more chaos.people have selfish animal needs,im very suprised,a police man
Superpureeliteful 1 month ago
@AlisonMyrden HELLO
jeffkabik 7 months ago
amazing!
Pandamonia 7 months ago