Conference sheds lights on drug dangers

Doug Peterson speaks in the Student Center
Attorney General of Nebraska, Doug Peterson, speaks during "High in the West: The Tragic Trail Left by Drugs" Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2016, in the Student Center. The conference was the ninth annual sponsored by the Professional Social Work class (SW 435). (Photo by Tena L. Cook/黑料大事记 State College)

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CHADRON – Law enforcement officers, judicial representatives and school officials discussed the availability of drugs, and their negative effects as well as resources for treatment Wednesday during the annual 黑料大事记 State College Social Work (SW 435) conference.

The day-long conference in the Student Center included speakers, videos and panel discussions.

The opening speaker, Jay Dobyns, spoke about assignments where he infiltrated criminal organizations as an undercover Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) agent.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a nasty, dirty, vomit-covered world. Drug dealers don鈥檛 value human life. They take what they want,鈥 said Dobyns, who is now retired after 27 years with the ATF.

The former college football player at the University of Arizona said he didn鈥檛 have what it took to be in the NFL, so he joined the ATF.

鈥淒on鈥檛 become jaded or lose sight of what you鈥檙e doing. Do your work for the greater good, make sacrifices to help others, not for the money. You will need to give up the world definition of success as being rich and famous to make a contribution that will make the world a better place. You鈥檙e not going to get trophies and handshakes,鈥 Dobyns said.

Dobyns鈥 son Jack is a CSC criminal justice major and member of the football team, said a case where he was involved with Hells鈥 Angels case got the most publicity but it wasn鈥檛 his most important one.

After the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, Dobyns helped stop a plan he called 鈥淥klahoma City, Part Two鈥 to bomb three casinos in Las Vegas that potentially could have killed thousands.

鈥淲e (the ATF team) built the bombs they wanted but arrested them before they could use them,鈥 he said.

Retirement was uncomfortable for Dobyns, who admitted his relationships were rocky, but that changed when a friend asked him to go to Africa to rescue orphans with .

鈥淓verybody I had been around was on the hustle, on the take. It altered my view of the world. I wanted my parade after sacrifice and public service. I was bitter. But those babies changed my life. They saved me,鈥 said Dobyns of his work in Africa.

Shelley Thomas, a forensic interviewer with  in Gering, Nebraska, focused her presentation on methamphetamine, noting 75 percent of children she interviews are exposed to the drug in their homes.

She said Panhandle meth arrests have increased over the past three years and the amount of meth seized increased from 228 grams in 2012 to 5,500 grams in 2015.

Many of Thomas鈥 clients鈥 parents steal to get money, buy meth, use it and then repeat the pattern daily. She cited lost work productivity and increased traffic fatalities among adults and nutritional, emotional, social, medical and dental neglect among children as some of the vast array of negative effects of meth use.

鈥淭he children are awake all hours of day and night, strangers are coming and going, they are exposed to porn, and sexual abuse when their parents are either buzzed or crashed,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淜ids are taking care of themselves and younger siblings. Often, their utilities are disconnected, or they are evicted, living in cars or hotel rooms.鈥

Thomas called on CSC students to be mindful of the power of their examples.

鈥淩emember, every move you take and word comes out of your mouth at the movie or the game, a kid is watching and thinks you are cool. Volunteer in a program to mentor a child. Those positive interactions may not be happening at home. A lot of children don鈥檛 have anybody building up their souls and their confidence,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淚f somebody listens and they know somebody cares, they respond.鈥

Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson compared the marketing campaign directed at young people by cigarette companies decades ago to sales techniques being used in Colorado and other states where marijuana is legalized.

鈥淢arijuana is our number one problem. It is cigarettes 2.0,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you feel big tobacco deceived consumers by not disclosing the risks of their product, the marijuana industry is doing the exact same thing now with products like candy.鈥

At a conference of western attorney generals several years ago, Peterson said attorneys and other members of the expert panel were saying to the governors, 鈥淕et over it. You can鈥檛 stop it.鈥

Within months, he learned that the panel members had changed their stances.

鈥淭hey admitted they were not prepared for it, that it got ahead of them and that bad actors are a bigger problem than they anticipated,鈥 Peterson said.

Peterson shed doubt of the legitimacy of medical cards for marijuana by pointing out that five doctors prescribe over 50 percent of medical marijuana in Colorado.

While touring a marijuana outlet in Colorado with a colleague, Peterson spoke to an employee who bragged about the 28.8 percent potency of the latest designer plant which won the Cannabis Cup Contest.

鈥淧otency is everything,鈥 Peterson said citing studies showing the damaging effects of marijuana even with 10-15 percent potency.

Peterson also discussed heroin and prescription opioids abuse and their proper disposal.

鈥淲e need a three-pronged strategy including prevention, law enforcement and treatment,鈥 Peterson said

During a law enforcement panel, officers discussed new methods youth have invented including pouring vodka in their eyes, snorting bourbon and inhaling alcohol fumes poured over dry ice. Retired Nebraska State Patrol officer Chuck Elley said more women are raped under the influence of alcohol than all other drugs combined.

Retired Nebraska Army National Guard Colonel Tom Brewer shared slides of missions he led in Afghanistan to prevent production and exportation of heroin. He said 94 percent of the world鈥檚 heroin is produced in Afghanistan. He said his team burned 28 tons of heroin a week during one period.

He noted drugs and alcohol are both problems on the reservations north of 黑料大事记 and encouraged audience members to volunteer with youth so they can see good examples of healthy lives.

The final panel discussion addressed drug court, treatment options, drug testing, school programs and their varying degrees of effectiveness in helping addicts and their families

-Tena L. Cook

Category: Campus Events, Campus News, Justice Studies, Social Work