meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Psychedelics Today

PT427 – Sarko Gergerian, MS, MHC, CARC – The Philosophy of Law Enforcement, the Criminalization of Self-Directed Behavior, and Transformative Care for Police

Psychedelics Today

Psychedelics Today, LLC

Life Sciences, Science, Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.6598 Ratings

🗓️ 28 July 2023

⏱️ 94 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, Joe interviews Sarko Gergerian, MS, MHC, CARC: a police peer support, community outreach, and health-fitness officer; founding member of the Community and Law Enforcement Assisted Recovery Program (C.L.E.A.R.); and psychotherapist trained in ketamine- and MDMA-assisted psychotherapy.

Any regular listener of the show should be familiar with how passionately Joe is against the drug war and the resulting policing of what many of us feel should be legal, so this in-person conversation with a police officer who seems to mostly be on our side is pretty refreshing to hear. 

Gergerian discusses his entry into the force in his 30s, and what it was like to bring in a healthy "why is this illegal?" viewpoint on drug use and personal agency vs. the slow moving attitudes he saw in much of law enforcement. He talks about how working nightclub security taught him about safe spaces; the problems with officers not proactively moving on actionable information and building relationships with communities; and the very philosophy behind law enforcement: what do they hope to accomplish, do they want to make real change, and do they believe in the laws they're enforcing? 

And they discuss so much more: the need for diversity, cultural competency, and broadness in perspective; the criminalization of self-directed behavior; the effect critical incidents have on officers; drug war paranoia, legitimate concerns over hotlines and sensitive data, and psychedelic culture's relationships with police; creating a culture of harm reduction within law enforcement, and what it might look like for police officers to receive psychedelic therapy.

Click here to head to the show notes page. 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, everybody, welcome back to psychedelics today. This is Joe Moore coming out here from Bracken Ranch, Colorado.

0:16.9

Today on the show, we have Sarko, who is a police officer working out of kind of the Boston area

0:25.8

and we got to link up in downtown Boston that's awesome and talk about psychedelics stress in law

0:35.4

enforcement kind of some cultural issues in law enforcement space.

0:40.0

And then we really talk about, you know, how do we discuss this with law enforcement today

0:46.5

and see where, you know, how can we make this a productive future to work with law enforcement,

0:54.0

even perhaps before federal legalization, but, you know, getting them ready also for legal frameworks like the Maps Protocol and things like that.

1:02.5

So really, really a great program, I think. I had a great time with Sarko and Boston and really hope we can do it again.

1:15.2

This idea of philosophy and law enforcement was a big theme.

1:16.8

So look out for that.

1:17.7

All right, everybody.

1:19.4

Enjoy this episode.

1:23.8

And I can't wait to bring you the next episode.

1:25.1

So see you on the other side.

1:25.5

Bye.

1:35.3

Here we are psychedelics today. I'm in downtown Boston, right outside the Boston Garden,

1:42.2

which is one of Boston's proudest locations. And we're here with Sarko. How do we say your last name? I didn't even get to ask you yet.

1:45.5

Gergerian.

1:47.0

Nice.

1:48.2

So close.

1:49.3

That's all good.

1:54.5

That's awesome. So you are a law enforcement professional.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Psychedelics Today, LLC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Psychedelics Today, LLC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.