Pubdate: Mon, 30 Mar 1998 Date: March 30, 1998 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Author: Steve Watanabe Re "Family Says Teen's Work as Informant Led to Death," March 23: If it is true that Chad MacDonald Jr. was being used by the Brea police as an informant, the ultimate act of hypocrisy may have been committed. Chad essentially became an unwilling soldier conscripted by the government in its silly war on drugs and ultimately paid with his life. By all accounts Chad was a typical middle-class Yorba Linda teenager and a good student. He made a foolish mistake in experimenting with methamphetamine. For the mere possession of this substance, which is used by thousands of middle-class people, the police and the district attorney were going to ruin his future and his life. If convicted he would have served time in detention and rehabilitation, and the conviction might have made it very difficult for him enter college or obtain employment. Under duress, both Chad and his mother agreed to cooperate. The police should know better than to send a young, naive teenager to do the work of a hardened criminal. It is very ironic, indeed, that the same government that spends millions of our dollars and tramples the rights of many to keep drugs, pornography, alcohol and tobacco out of the hands of children is yet willing to sacrifice the life of one. My guess is that, being a "druggie," this child's life was deemed expendable. Steve Watanabe Irvine