US Marijuana Party

Thursday, June 30, 2005

Paramilitary Law Cements Colombia's Double Standard

By Sean Donahue,
Posted on Wed Jun 29th, 2005

Any pretense that the U.S. and Colombian governments were cooperating in a real war on cocaine trafficking in Colombia was erased completely last week when the Colombian Congress passed the Orwellian "Justice and Peace Law" which allows paramilitary leaders implicated in drug trafficking to get off with a slap on the wrist, hold on to their wealth, maintain their terror networks, and escape extradition by making vague confessions and accepting light prison sentences.

This despite the fact that the Uribe administration's own study on demobilization, prepared in secret two years ago, concluded that paramilitaries are responsible for at least 40 percent of the cocaine trafficking in Colombia.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Justice Souter's House Under Eminent Domain Threat?


Press Release

For Release Monday, June 27 to New Hampshire media
For Release Tuesday, June 28 to all other media

Weare, New Hampshire (PRWEB) Could a hotel be built on the land owned by Supreme Court Justice David H. Souter? A new ruling by the Supreme Court which was supported by Justice Souter himself itself might allow it. A private developer is seeking to use this very law to build a hotel on Souter's land.

Justice Souter's vote in the "Kelo vs. City of New London" decision allows city governments to take land from one private owner and give it to another if the government will generate greater tax revenue or other economic benefits when the land is developed by the new owner.

On Monday June 27, Logan Darrow Clements, faxed a request to Chip Meany the code enforcement officer of the Towne of Weare, New Hampshire seeking to start the application process to build a hotel on 34 Cilley Hill Road. This is the present location of Mr. Souter's home.

Clements, CEO of Freestar Media, LLC, points out that the City of Weare will certainly gain greater tax revenue and economic benefits with a hotel on 34 Cilley Hill Road than allowing Mr. Souter to own the land.

The proposed development, called "The Lost Liberty Hotel" will feature the "Just Desserts Café" and include a museum, open to the public, featuring a permanent exhibit on the loss of freedom in America. Instead of a Gideon's Bible each guest will receive a free copy of Ayn Rand's novel "Atlas Shrugged."

Clements indicated that the hotel must be built on this particular piece of land because it is a unique site being the home of someone largely responsible for destroying property rights for all Americans.

"This is not a prank" said Clements, "The Towne of Weare has five people on the Board of Selectmen. If three of them vote to use the power of eminent domain to take this land from Mr. Souter we can begin our hotel development."

Clements' plan is to raise investment capital from wealthy pro-liberty investors and draw up architectural plans. These plans would then be used to raise investment capital for the project. Clements hopes that regular customers of the hotel might include supporters of the Institute For Justice and participants in the Free State Project among others.

# # #

Logan Darrow Clements
Freestar Media, LLC

Phone 310-593-4843
logan@freestarmedia.com
http://www.freestarmedia.com
---------------------------------------------------

MUAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!! How sweet is that? I hope the Board of Selectman comes up with three votes....and in New Hampshire they just might do it.

Action Alert

Ask your Representative to SUPPORT H.R. 3037, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2005

Currently, the United States is the only developed nation that fails to cultivate industrial hemp as an economic crop, according to a 2005 Congressional Resource Service (CRS) report. Hemp is a distinct variety of the plant species cannabis sativa that contains only minute (less than 1%) amounts of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the primary psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. Farmers worldwide grow hemp commercially for fiber, seed, and oil for use in a variety of industrial and consumer products, including food.

Advocate records medical marijuana radio ads

Montel Williams joins Oakland woman in national campaign
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Inside Bay Area

The voice of Oakland's Angel Raich might soon be emanating from radios near and far as medical marijuana advocates launch a nationwide advertising blitz.

The Marijuana Policy Project on Monday sent CDs with 30- and 60-second spots to 1,000 radio stations from coast to coast.

The campaign includes ads with Raich, a plaintiff in the recently decided U.S. Supreme Court case, and television talk show host Montel Williams speaking about how medical marijuana has helped them survive serious illnesses. Raich uses marijuana for a variety of maladies, including a wasting syndrome, while Williams uses it to control symptoms of multiple sclerosis.

Another pair of spots features novelist Tom Robbins describing his mother's battle with glaucoma.

"We are proud to partner with these three distinguished Americans to bring a message of hope — and accurate information — to patients and those who love and care for them," said MPP communications director Bruce Mirken.

Although the Supreme Court ruled federal authorities can enforce the federal marijuana ban even in the 10 states with medical marijuana laws, Rhode Island lawmakers have just passed a medical marijuana bill that could get a gubernatorial signature this week.

The MPP ads are available online at www.mpp.org/media/psa.html.

Medical Marijuana? Rhode Island Says Yes

By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Published: June 29, 2005

The Rhode Island legislature passed a bill yesterday allowing the use of medical marijuana, three weeks after the Supreme Court ruled that federal authorities could prosecute those who use the drug for medicinal purposes, even in states with laws allowing it.

The bill passed the State Senate by a vote of 33 to 1 last evening and will head to the desk of Gov. Donald L. Carcieri, who is likely to reject it. Supporters of the bill, which passed the House 52 to 10 last week, are confident they have the necessary three-fifths majority to override a veto and make Rhode Island the 11th state to authorize patients to use the drug.

The law would allow those with a "debilitating medical condition," including cancer, glaucoma and AIDS, to receive a signed statement from their doctor stating they would benefit from marijuana. Patients and their caregivers would be entered into a registry kept by the State Department of Health.

Patients, who must be Rhode Islanders, would receive a state registration card allowing them or their caregivers to grow up to 12 marijuana plants indoors or possess up to 2.5 ounces without being arrested. Doctors would be able to prescribe the drug for only five patients at a time.


Marc Emery Direct Marijuana Seeds

UN report says world drug use rising, led by cannabis, but ecstasy declining

Canadian Press

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Global drug use is on the rise with cannabis leading the way, but synthetic narcotics such as amphetamines and ecstasy are declining, a UN report said Wednesday.

About 200 million people around the world - or five per cent of the global population between the ages of 15 and 64 - use drugs at least once a year, the 2005 World Drug Report said, analyzing figures from 2003 and 2004. The number of drug users had increased by 15 million from last year's report.

In Afghanistan - where a majority of the world's opiates are produced - the amount of land dedicated to growing opium poppy increased to record highs, but bad weather ruined much of the crops so that the global increase in opium production stayed at two per cent, the report said.

The overall retail value of illegal drugs sold worldwide in 2003 was about $322 billion US - higher than the individual gross domestic product for 88 per cent of the world's countries, the report said.

Marijuana and hashish remain by far the most popular street drugs. Almost 161 million people had used cannabis at least once, up from about 150 million a year earlier. The use of cannabis is likely to grow in coming years, said the report by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.

However, the use of amphetamines and ecstasy dropped, mainly in the United States and Southeast Asia, the report said.

Amphetamines was still the world's second most popular drug, with 26 million users, while there were an estimated 7.9 million ecstasy users worldwide.

The report said the main "problem drugs" globally for people seeking help at treatment centres are cocaine and opiates, such as heroin. In Europe and Asia, 62 per cent of those seeking help for drug abuse in 2003 were addicted to opiates, while 59 per cent of all drug treatment in South America was for cocaine. Cannabis was the most common drug for people seeking treatment in Africa and North America.


UNODC 2005 World Drug Report

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Loretta Nall now Featured on Cultural Baggage Radio

I would like to thank my friend Dean Becker for inviting me to do a weekly spot on his awesome and highly respected drug war radio show.
Please check out Drug Truth Network listen to the shows and then pass it on.

DRUG TRUTH NETWORK UPDATES:


4:20 Drug War News now online for 06/27/05 to 07/03/05

Monday: 06/27/05 Norm Stamper former police chief of Seattle & author of "Breaking Rank"

Tuesday: 06/28/05 Reporters Dennis Bernstein of Flashpoints & Loretta Nall of US Marijuana Party & Pot TV

Wednesday: 06/29/05 Howard Wooldridge & horse Misty cross America for Law Enforcement Against Prohibiton

Thursday: 06/30/05 Philippe Lucas, N Americas First High THC study, at Vancouver Compassion Club

Friday: 07/01/05 Drug War History,
Drug War Facts


Saturday:
07/02/05 Poppygate, Fully Informed Jury PSA

Sunday: 07/03/05 Loretta Nall chops drug war at knees

The Cultural Baggage 1/2 hour program for 06/24/05 is now online featuring Norm Stamper, former police chief of Seattle and author of "Breaking Rank."

MP3

Listen to Cultural Baggage Live on Friday, July 1st, 7 PM CT KPFT . Guests: Blair Anderson from New Zealand and Andria Efthimiou-Mordaunt from Great Britain discuss US involvement in drug reform in their countries.

All DTN programs available at DrugTruth & Audioport

"The court's decision to allow surveillance and control of America's gardens and windowsills is ludicrous." - Houston Chronicle, June 10, 2005

Dean Becker
281-752-9198
Drug Truth Network/Pacifica
419 Lovett Blvd.
Houston, Tx. 77006

"Best FM Talk Show" ­ Houston Press, 2004 (Cultural Baggage)
"Best Radio Commentary" ­ Houston Press, 2003 (4:20 Drug War NEWS)

Federal Funding for Mental Health Screening of Kids

by Rep. Ron Paul, MD

On Friday Congress defeated an amendment I introduced that would have prevented the federal government from moving forward with an Orwellian program to mandate mental health screening of kids in schools. This program, recommended by a presidential commission, has not yet been established at the federal level. However, your tax dollars are being given to states that apply for grants to establish their own programs – and a full-fledged program run by the Department of Health and Human Services is on the way.

Nearly 100 members of Congress supported my amendment. Many of these members represent Texas and Illinois, two states that already have mental health screening programs in place. They have heard from their constituents, who believe intimate mental health problems should be addressed by parents, kids, and their doctors – not the government. These parents do not appreciate yet another government program that undermines their parental authority.

The psychiatric establishment and the pharmaceutical industry of course support government mental health screening programs in schools, because they both stand to benefit from millions of new customers. But we should not allow self-interested industries to use a government program to create a captive audience for their products.

full article

Lawmakers Press For More Prison Funding

Channel Oklahoma.com

McALESTER, Okla. -- Hoping to draw attention to the funding needs of the Department of Corrections, a group of lawmakers walked the floor of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary on Monday in the garb of prison guards Monday.

The short tour of duty came after Sen. Kenneth Corn, D-Poteau, held an appropriations subcommittee meeting in the warden's board room. Corn, whose Senate budget subcommittee handles prison funding, said conditions at the penitentiary illustrated problems throughout the system.

"We want to be tougher on crime than any other state around us," said Corn, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Public Safety. "We have got to find some creative solutions for funding."

More Marijuana Treatment Referrals Coming from Justice System

JoinTogether.org

The majority of treatment admissions for marijuana came from the criminal-justice system in 2002, according to a new report from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

The Drug and Alcohol Services Information System (DASIS) report found that 58 percent of all marijuana treatment admissions in 2002 resulted from referrals from the criminal-justice system, compared to 48 percent in 1992. The report also found that those admitted to treatment from non-criminal-justice sources were more likely to be daily users of marijuana and other drugs, such as alcohol, cocaine, opiates, or other substances.

Home Grown: Why cannabis is the new DIY boom

Most of the cannabis consumed in Britain is now cultivated domestically. Terry Kirby reports on a vibrant cottage industry

Independent, UK
28 June 2005

In countless spare rooms, attics and garages, hundreds of thousands of leafy plants are being lovingly tended, their roots fed by nutrient-rich water, their leaves bathed by hot lamps 24 hours a day.

And if the neighbours have a room with the windows blacked out from which emanates a rich, earthy smell, they are probably growing something far more potent than tomatoes.

They are likely to be part of an unprecedented boom in domestic cultivation of cannabis, which is now believed to account for more than half of all the drug consumed in Britain.

Drug War Fails to Dent U.S. Supply

By Sonni Efron
Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration and congressional allies are gearing up to renew a plan for drug eradication in Latin America despite some grim news: The $5.4 billion spent on the plan since 2000 has made no dent in the availability of cocaine on American streets and prices are at all-time lows.

United Nations figures released this month show that coca cultivation in the Andean region increased by 2% in 2004 as declines in Colombia were swamped by massive increases in Peru and Bolivia. And the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service said last week that the anti-drug effort had had "no effect" on the price or purity of drugs in the United States.

The findings have fueled skepticism in Congress, where conservative groups have joined efforts to lobby against continued funding. The National Taxpayers Union called the anti-drug program a "boondoggle."

Nonetheless, a House committee last week approved the administration's request for $734.5 million for next year as part of a foreign aid bill. Debate on the bill could start as early as today. President Bush also may unveil a renewed multiyear commitment to South American anti-drug efforts this year when Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, a staunch U.S. ally, is expected to visit.

Monday, June 27, 2005

White House Drug Plan Excludes Anxiety Drugs

TalkLeft is reporting that the White House has excluded anxiety drugs like ativan, xanax and valium from Medicare coverage. The elderly will have to switch to a less addictive medication or pay for this class of drugs out of their own pocket.

READ MORE...

I see a possible return of grandma and grandpa growing that miracle weed in the back yard.

THE SECRETARY-GENERAL MESSAGE ON THE INTERNATIONAL DAY AGAINST DRUG ABUSE AND ILLICIT TRAFFICKING

26 June 2005

On this International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, we celebrate the choice that millions of people around the world have made to live healthily, and we applaud the courage shown by those who have stopped using drugs. In doing so, we send a positive message to all people who use or might be tempted to use drugs: “Value yourself... make healthy choices”.

This day is also an occasion to highlight the fact that nearly 200 million people are still consuming illegal drugs. These drugs might have names that sound colourful or enticing, such as crack, pot, junk, crystal meth, and disco biscuits. But these are little more than tickets to a dead end. For those trapped by addiction, treatment is a way out, and the choice to seek treatment is not only courageous, but often life-saving. Those who have not ventured down the path of drug abuse should learn the lesson from those who have, and firmly choose not to.

Making healthy choices also means choosing a lifestyle that has a positive effect on the body and mind, including, for example, participation in sports to improve health and well-being, teach the value of teamwork and discipline, and build self-confidence.

On this day, let us strengthen our collective resolve to live in a society free of drugs, and let us encourage all our fellow human beings to make personal choices to lead healthy lives.
-Mr. Kofi Annan

Pot decriminalizing measure up for debate

By Jon Brodkin
Milford Daily News
Monday, June 27, 2005

PA - Lawmakers on Beacon Hill today will debate a proposal to decriminalize possession of less than an ounce of marijuana, a measure advocates say would save the state at least $24 million a year and prevent pot smokers from losing government student loans and scholarships.

The bill, filed in the Senate, would make marijuana possession a civil offense punishable by a $100 fine.

"As far as public opinion is concerned, this should pass," said Whitney Taylor, executive director of the Drug Policy Forum of Massachusetts. "Voters are way ahead of the politicians on this."

Voters in six legislative districts approved nonbinding measures in favor of marijuana decriminalization last November, according to the Drug Policy Forum. Since 2000, there have been 36 ballot questions regarding decriminalization, medical marijuana and marijuana taxation and regulation, and voters approved every one, the group said.

But the bill being debated today has been around six years without being implemented, and lawmakers are reluctant to pass it.

Sheriff conference addresses meth epidemic

RYAN LENZ
Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - The message about methamphetamines was simple for sheriffs from around the nation who gathered to exchange ideas about curbing production: Law enforcement needs help.

Sheriffs from across the nation went to the National Sheriffs Association's annual conference, which began on Sunday, to discuss such topics as meth and the ongoing battle with prescription drug abuse.

Later Sunday, U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales instructed the sheriffs to spread the word about the usefulness of the Patriot Act, which gave law enforcement officers more ways to detect and combat terrorism, organized crime and drug trafficking.

"I know how important the tools of this act are to the war on terror," Gonzales said. "No one has provided me with evidence that the Patriot Act is being misused or abused."

Sunday, June 26, 2005

I TOLD YOU SO!!!!!

Generally, I avoid the words "I told you so" because I find them to be among the four most useless in the English language. However, this recent development calls for those words like no other.

New parolee return rate climbs

By John Davis
Montgomery Advertiser

Sixteen percent of state inmates purged from the prison system in the past two years are finding their way behind bars again -- a 10-percent jump from a year ago.

In April 2003, the state began a program to accelerate the release of nonviolent criminals as a way to relieve prison overcrowding. Now more of these inmates than ever are returning to the system.

"We expect it (the recidivism rate) to grow even more," said Cynthia Dillard, assistant executive director of the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles.

In July of last year, the board reported that only 6 percent of the special docket inmates were returning to prison. That number has grown steadily and is catching up with the 22-percent return rate of parolees who were not fast-tracked.

The state has paroled 4,174 inmates through the program, and 679 have returned to prison.

The move to purge the prison system of nonviolent offenders meant a 31-percent increase in paroles last year, the second-highest increase in the nation.

"We had just an overwhelming lot of work," said Scott Perkins a probation and parole supervisor. "We were struggling just to keep our head above water."

By August of last year, the special docket paroles slowed to a trickle, but Pardons and Paroles still had to watch over all of the parolees, leading to the hiring of more officers.

"Our caseloads are still higher than we want them to be," Perkins said. The department oversees 39,923 probationers and 7,603 parolees.

"We're trying to get more and more into the rehabilitation mode," Perkins said.

The governor's office characterized the accelerated parole program as a short-term solution. The program did push the overall prison population down to 25,977 prisoners in October of last year, but inmate numbers are once again on the rise, hitting 27,585 in April.

During the last legislative session, some lawmakers moved to disband a special docket parole board, but the measure never made it to the governor's desk. Riley has said he's in favor of disbanding the special docket parole board if its work is done

Trooper accused again of forcing another couple to strip

By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs Writer
Posted Thursday, June 23, 2005

An Illinois State Police trooper was charged Thursday and accused for a second time of forcing people to remove their clothes to avoid prosecution.

Jeremy Dozier, 31, was arrested late Thursday morning on official misconduct charges stemming from an April 29 incident in Gurnee.

Dozier, who has been a state trooper for 10 years, faces similar charges in Cook County for a June 16 incident along the Edens Expressway and Route 41.

In both cases, officials said, Dozier forced the young couples he encountered to disrobe and run around in exchange for Dozier not citing them for what he said was illegal activity.

Suit claims police brutality

Beaver County Times

BEAVER, PA - Five Beaver County residents have sued Beaver, its police department and officer Jeff Wijnen-Riems in federal court, claiming they were brutalized by Wijnen-Riems and their civil rights were violated.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Pittsburgh, seeks damages in excess of $75,000 for each of the following parties: Lorri Stiles and her husband, Joel Koslicki, both of 431 Rotteck St., Baden; Christopher E. Green of 239 Taylor Ave., Beaver; and Robert Capo Sr. and his son Benjamin, of 790 River Road, Beaver.

According to the lawsuit, filed by Ambridge attorneys James Ross and Charles F. Bowers III, Wijnen-Riems displayed a pattern of attacking people, and though his superiors in the police department were notified, they did nothing to stop the incidents.

According to the lawsuit, Green was at the Beaver police station on July 7, 2003, at the request of police who were investigating an incident that was not detailed in the lawsuit.

Green was taken to an interrogation room, where, the lawsuit says, Wijnen-Riems screamed at Green and accused him of giving police false information. Green was then handcuffed, and Wijnen-Riems slammed Green's upper body into a window, which shattered, injuring Green, the suit says.

Robert Capo and his family, after his unsuccessful run for mayor prior to September 2004, was being harassed by police, according to the suit.

On Sept. 28, 2004, Benjamin Capo was arrested after Wijnen-Riems was citing him with not having a light on his bicycle. Capo walked away as Wijnen-Riems was citing him, according to court records, and Wijnen-Riems is accused of assaulting Capo while arresting him and after taking him to the police station. The lawsuit says Wijnen-Riems put Capo in a chokehold, slammed his head into a glass door and hit his head with a clipboard.

When Capo's father arrived at the police station, Wijnen-Riems attacked the elder Capo, according to the lawsuit, putting him in a chokehold and slamming him into a wall, also injuring his wrists with handcuffs.

Both Capos were charged with various offenses, but those charges were dismissed in a preliminary hearing before District Judge C. Douglas Loughner.

According to Beaver Police Chief Anthony Hovanec, earlier complaints the Capos made about Wijnen-Riems' behavior that night have been forwarded to the FBI for investigation.

In another accusation, Stiles said she was arrested on Oct. 21, 2004, after she witnessed a fight at the McDonald's restaurant in Vanport Township.

When she approached Wijnen-Riems to tell him what she had seen, he "recognized Stiles as the person who wrote an editorial about the Beaver police in the local newspaper the previous year and told (Stiles) to shut up and insisted she was drunk," according to the suit.

Stiles was arrested and her blood tested, but no alcohol was found, according to the suit. But she was still taken to the Beaver County Jail, the suit says, where she remained for seven days after Wijnen-Riems charged her with aggravated assault by vehicle while driving drunk, along with other charges. The outcome of those charges was not available Friday afternoon.

Also according to the suit, Wijnen-Riems called Stiles' husband and told him that Stiles was having sex with another man in the back seat of a police car the night of her arrest and that she had tested positive for Viagra.

Attorneys said that along with the complaints in the lawsuits, others were made to Beaver police against Wijnen-Riems, but that Beaver police did not properly investigate the claims or discipline him.

Hovanec said Friday that he hadn't seen the lawsuit, so he couldn't comment on it or any of the allegations within it. Wijnen-Riems could not be reached for comment Friday.

Saturday, June 25, 2005

Family grieving after father is shot and killed

Peoria Journal Star, IL

According to police, David L. Green, 47, was under investigation by the West Central Illinois Task Force when officers came to his rural Glasford home to serve a search warrant at 6:10 a.m.

Illinois State Police Capt. Kenneth Yelliott said Green confronted officers with a long gun and a handgun and pointed the handgun at officers after being told to drop his weapons.

An officer Yelliott described as a veteran fired at Green, who was later pronounced dead at the home.

An autopsy Friday shows Green died of multiple gunshot wounds to the chest and abdomen, according to Fulton County Coroner Steve Hines. He said Illinois State Police asked him not to release the number of shots fired at Green.


Green's ex-wife Linda Mordue:

"I'm not trying to say what he was doing was OK," she said. "But in 14 years I'm sure they've busted people for things more serious than watering marijuana plants."

Mordue said she thinks police have been arrogant about the shooting when she asks questions. She also believes police were out of line, and Green did not have to die.

The History Of Marijuana As Medicine

CBS 5, CA

Transcript: WLOS asked man to smoke pot

Asheville Citizen-Times

ASHEVILLE — Federal prosecutors Friday reviewed a court transcript in which a WLOS-TV reporter describes prodding a source to smoke marijuana for a news story and referred the case to the Buncombe County district attorney.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Edwards said he sent the case to Buncombe County District Attorney Ron Moore’s office “for them to handle in whatever manner they deem appropriate.”

In a WLOS report about the use of marijuana for medical purposes, Steven William Ward was seen rolling a joint and puffing on it. Ward, at the time of the June 8 broadcast, was awaiting sentencing in federal court for threatening to kill a judge.

His probation officer saw the footage, resulting in a hearing Tuesday in which U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis Howell revoked Ward’s probation and sent him to prison. The judge found that Ward had violated the terms of his probation by using drugs.

Probation officer Eric Simpson testified that after the segment aired, Ward said he took two puffs of marijuana but didn’t inhale. But in a later interview Ward denied the substance was marijuana, as he did on the stand during Tuesday’s hearing. Simpson also said a drug test performed on Ward turned up negative.

In closing arguments to the judge, Edwards called the claim the substance wasn’t marijuana “just incredible” and said a drug test could easily come back negative if only one or two puffs were taken.

Friday, June 24, 2005

Proposed federal anti-drug cuts decried

WASHINGTON -- Local law enforcement officials decried Thursday huge budget cuts proposed by the Bush administration to a national network of drug-interdiction task forces, including one that provided more than $12 million to the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area this year.

Members of the Maryland State Police, Baltimore Police Department and the Charles County Sheriff's Department joined a bipartisan group of senators and representatives on Capitol Hill to protest President Bush's recommendations to cut funding for the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area programs by more than half.

Under the administration's budget, funding would be reduced from $227 to $100 million for the coming fiscal year.

Maryland Rep. Steny H. Hoyer, a Democrat who has long supported the program, said that his state likely could make up part of the $12 million spent in his region this year. But to do so, he said, would miss the beauty of the anti-drug effort.

"It's the coordination" among local, state and federal narcotics officials (this translates to "federalization of the local police" LN) that makes the task forces so successful, Hoyer said.


READ MORE
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So, 2.5 million American citizens in prison, largely due to the drug war, is a beautiful thing?

Millions of families ripped apart is a beautiful thing?

Untold monetary, societal and human life costs are a beautiful thing?

And...dead Police Officers, countless other dead, injured, orphaned or widowed victims, a rise in violent crime, criminal gangs, police corruption,rising drug use combined with lower costs, higher purity and easy (UNRESTRICTED...dealers don't ask for ID) access of dangerous drugs to our kids equals SUCCESS?

Someone please explain this to me. I must be a simpleton or something because I can't reconcile "success" with any of the things I see as products of the "drug war".

Former Crossville mayor, police chief sentenced for rape of 10-year-old

Former Crossville mayor, police chief sentenced for rape
6/24/2005, 5:37 p.m. CT
The Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — The former police chief and mayor of Crossville has received a 20-year sentence for the rape of a 10-year-old girl, Attorney General Troy King said Friday.

A DeKalb County jury convicted Ronald Dale West in March of first-degree rape, which occurred in December 1997 while he was police chief.

According to the Attorney General's office, West took the child to visit her great-grandfather in the hospital, stopped at a fast-food restaurant and then drove her around to look at Christmas lights. He then took the girl to a secluded back road and raped her, authorities said.

"The violation and pain he inflicted upon an innocent child must not be tolerated," King said Friday in a statement. "I hope that this verdict and the delivery of justice will bring some measure of comfort to the victim and her family."

Under the 20-year split sentence, West will serve five years in prison, during which he will be ineligible for parole, King said. He will then serve five years of probation with the remainder of the sentence suspended.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Yes Attorney General King, I am sure that young girl and her family will feel much safer after the rapist cop spends 5 years in prison.

The average sentence for first degree felony marijuana possession in Alabama is 6 years and one month while the average sentence for child molestation is 5 years.

I don't know about y'all but, I would much rather have a non-child molesting pot smoker living next door to me and my kids than a child sex predator who hides behind his badge.

Even though Troy King might not admit it publicly I am sure he would feel the same.

US man makes $13,000 from pennies

BBC

Some people may not consider it worth bending down to pick up a penny, but Edmond Knowles knows their value.

After 38 years of collecting pennies, Mr Knowles has cashed in his collection which totalled a whopping $13,084.59 (£7,182.69).

The 1,308,459 one-cent coins - known as pennies - stored in his garage in Alabama, weighed 4,082kg (4 tons).

The 62-year-old said he planned to use the money for his retirement, home repairs and medical expenses.


No word yet on how many of the pennies the government plans to seize from Mr. Knowles.

Eminent Domain and the Drug War

CNN

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that local governments may seize people's homes and businesses -- even against their will -- for private economic development.

"The city has carefully formulated an economic development that it believes will provide appreciable benefits to the community, including -- but by no means limited to -- new jobs and increased tax revenue," Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority.

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who has been a key swing vote on many cases before the court, issued a stinging dissent. She argued that cities should not have unlimited authority to uproot families, even if they are provided compensation, simply to accommodate wealthy developers.

The lower courts had been divided on the issue, with many allowing a taking only if it eliminates blight.

"Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party, but the fallout from this decision will not be random," O'Connor wrote. "The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms."

She was joined in her opinion by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, as well as Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
-------------------------------------------------

This is, of course, an unbelievable decision, but it is what has been happening to us, disguised as asset forfeiture and carried out under the drug war, for years.

Basically, if local governments find your piece of real estate to be of monetary value to them then they can take it from you and there isn't a damn thing you can do about it.

This ruling is a classic example of
"I told you if they take away my rights they will eventually take away yours" and I think all reformers and others who care about this issue should seize this opportunity and point out the paralells.

Two weeks ago the SC ruled that we have no rights to our bodies and now they have ruled that we have no private property rights.

I see a big opportunity to bring over former enemies and turn them into allies.

Making the SC's eminent domain ruling unenforcable in Alabama will be part of my election platform in the gubernatorial race that is looming on the horizon.

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Senator Specter May Introduce Med MJ Legislation in the Senate

Philly.com

Arlen Specter says he "may introduce legislation" in the Senate in favor of medical marijuana.

The U.S. senator, who has long supported the use of human stem cells for disease research, told Your Humble Narrator yesterday that he's in favor of a state's right to decide whether to allow its doctors to prescribe marijuana.

Specter himself, who is battling Hodgkin's disease, could be a candidate for medical marijuana use.

The Supreme Court ruled earlier this month that federal agents could arrest people who use doctor-prescribed marijuana in states that have authorized it, including California and Oregon.

Medical research has proven the drug successful in reducing pain and nausea in people with cancer and other diseases.

Specter's remarks to the Daily News came before a speech at the Loews Hotel (12th & Market), where he was honored by the Philadelphia Bar Association.

He vowed during his speech to beat his cancer. His spirits were up, and he joked several times about the Bar Association medal, which disappeared after rolling under a row of tables when it was to be handed to him.

The medal was later found by a Loews staffer and Bar Association Chancellor Andrew Chirls presented it to Specter, none the worse for wear.

Pain Relief in the 'Land of Plenty'

by William Campbell Douglass II, MD

God have mercy on you if you live in this "Land of Plenty" and develop some form of horrific pain. You’ll end up with "plenty" alright: plenty of unnecessary pain and suffering. The government is so obsessed with "fighting" drugs that they’ve destroyed the ability of doctors to reduce suffering among their patients.

Police Use A Taser On An 82-Year-Old Man

D.K. Wright
State Journal, WV

MARTINS FERRY, OH - On Saturday morning 82-year old Alfred Jim Edwards reportedly urinated in Martins Ferry's City Park. Police say they questioned him about the urinating, and he started to walk away several times....and finally they say he resisted arrest. Police then used a taser on the man. Edwards' family says he has dementia and he was frightened and confused, but never combative. Martins Ferry Police Chief Barry Carpenter called the FBI in to investigate, and they say if they find there was excessive force or civil rights violations, the officer will face discipline.

Torture by Taser

Fort Worth Weekly, TX

Since the 1950s, guards at jails and prisons have used stun batons — cattle prods — and stun belts on prisoners considered to be dangerous. Those devices carry a jolt of about 5,000 to 10,000 volts. Then in the early 1970s, police began using early-generation TASERS — an acronym for Thomas A. Swift’s Electric Rifle. The punch these early Tasers carried was equivalent to or slightly stronger than that of a stun baton.

But those early Tasers were a far cry — a long, agonized scream, victims might say — from the powerful weapons being used by police today. In 2000, TASER International of Arizona introduced the M26, which the company touted as being nearly four times more powerful than its predecessors. Looking like something out of a sci-fi movie, the gun shoots two fish-hook-barbed electrical wires that can travel up to 21 feet and deliver a 50,000-volt shock in a cycle that lasts five seconds. It can also be fired by placing the weapon in direct contact with clothing or skin. The shock renders the recipient instantly immobile, and the five-second cycle may be increased if the officer continues to hold the trigger down. The M26, with bright yellow striping across a black body, comes equipped with “built-in laser sights and an onboard data chip that records the time and date of each firing to back up an officer’s use of force reports.”

But for a weapon whose makers crow about its “stopping power,” Tasers occupy a strange place in the police rulebook. Law enforcement officers learn what is called a “use of force continuum” to determine what means or weapons they may use in different situations. The “continuum” begins with simple police presence, then moves up to issuing commands, then the use of open hands, and after that, pepper or other chemical sprays, closed hands (including elbows and knees and other takedown moves), the use of a hard baton, and finally, the use of lethal force.

You might think Tasers would fit somewhere near the “lethal force” end of that list, right before a gun. Instead, however, many police agencies place Tasers immediately after the “issuing commands” force level — which suggests to officers that using a Taser is less serious even than a push or pepper spray. Which also means that if an officer asks you to produce your driver’s license and you ask “Why?” rather than immediately complying with the order, there’s a chance, in some jurisdictions, that you could, within their rules, be hit with a Taser for refusing the command. That’s in part how Tasers have begun to be used, not as serious, life-threatening weapons, but as a bully’s tool of compliance, something to get people in line — with sometimes egregious consequences.

Marijuana Growers Wanted by State Police

WBKO

KY - Police are reaching out to the public in their effort to find marijuana growers!

"Wanted posters" are available through Kentucky State Police. The forms allow you to report illegal marijuana growers anonymously. There is a space to list the name of the grower, along with his or her address and a description of the home.

The information can be mailed to an address on the form or called into 1-800-DOPE-TIP.

Click here for a printable form.

South Dakotan completes cross-state tour for medical marijuana

DIRK LAMMERS
Associated Press

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. - A Hermosa man has completed a cross-state bicycle tour aimed at gathering signatures to put a medical marijuana measure on the 2006 ballot.

Longtime activist Bob Newland pedaled into Sioux Falls Tuesday night after logging 440 miles and gathering 250 signatures along the Matthew Ducheneaux Trail to Safe Access Bicycle Tour Across South Dakota.

The petitions need about 17,000 signatures by May 2006 to get on the 2006 ballot. Newland said his target is 20,000 to provide a cushion for invalid signatures.

"We have a year," he said in an interview. "My plan is to find 100 people who will each get 200 signatures."

"Actually, I picked up $200 in contributions the first three days, and people were stopping me to sign the petition and people were offering me weed," Newland said.

Federal agents raid marijuana clubs

By J.K Dineen
San Francisco Examiner

Federal agents raided three medical marijuana clubs and more than 20 other homes and businesses Wednesday in what law enforcement authorities are calling a sprawling investigation into an alleged criminal organization involved in money laundering and other illegal activities.

While the details of the investigation will not be officially released until indictments are unsealed today, the probe is focused on three medical pot clubs: the Sunset Medical Resource Center at 454 Judah St.; the Herbal Relief Center at 1545 Ocean Ave.; and the Alternative Relief Co-Op at 1939 Ocean Ave.

Law enforcement authorities say the group, which has ties to Singapore and Vancouver, was allegedly laundering millions of medical-marijuana dollars through a number of specialized gardening centers catering to pot growers, including one on Filbert Street in North Beach and one on Ocean Ave. Money from the pot clubs, which are illegal under federal law, was allegedly funneled through the gardening stores, which police say were essentially fronts.

"This is not a medical marijuana thing," said a high-ranking law enforcement official who has been working on the case for months. "This is an organized, criminal conspiracy to launder money, to make a ton of profit utilizing sick people and the medical marijuana laws of the state of California."

Marijuana bill advances in R.I.

By Associated Press | June 23, 2005

PROVIDENCE -- A bill that would allow patients with serious diseases to grow and smoke marijuana continued its advance through the General Assembly, winning overwhelming support from House lawmakers yesterday.

Qualifying patients suffering from such diseases as cancer, AIDS and Hepatitis C would be shielded from arrest and prosecution under the bill, which passed 52-10. Their doctors and physicians also would be protected.

Rhode Island would become the 11th state to authorize the medical use of marijuana, according to the legislation.

Under the bill, patients would be able to possess up to 12 marijuana plants or 2.5 ounces of usable marijuana.

Supporters say it provides a compassionate way to ease the pain of the seriously ill. But some questioned a provision allowing people to grow the drug in their homes.

The House Health, Education and Welfare Committee was expected to take a Senate bill and conform it with the House version. That bill would then return to both chambers.

Governor Don Carcieri has threatened to veto the bill. But legislators said it had enough votes to override a veto.

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

DEA Raiding SF Dispensaries RIGHT NOW!!!

This just in from Tony Bowles President, California Marijuana Party

The DEA, possibly with the SFPD, has raided at least 3 dispensaries on
in San Francisco RIGHT NOW today.

The Sunset Medicinal Resource Center at 445 Judah Street has been raided, I believe it is connected to the Herbal Relief Center which was raided at 1545 Ocean, along with one other club on Ocean that is not connected to the other two, but was in dispute with the city over wether they were opened before the moritorium or not. The Alternative Relief Center which is at 1944 Ocean, which is across the street from dispensary in dispute with city, was Not raided.

The DEA along with SF Narcotics inspector Marty Halloran were spotted on the scene of the crime. ASA staff is headed to the scene now. Please join us at 445 Judah Street to protest
and show your support for safe access to medical marijuana! We will be planning for an emergency demonstration tomorrow at around noon, on City Hall, more info will be sent out on final location of Action, so stay updated because we are on High Alert for the time being.


Tony Bowles 415 368 7187

House to Vote on Government Forced Child Mental Health Screening

We're trying to help Representative Ron Paul, who
also happens to be a medical doctor, do something
very important...

* Protect parental rights,
* Protect children from dangerous, mind-altering
drugs.

We call our campaign, "No Child Left Undrugged," but
the real title of the bill is HR 181 - The Parental
Consent Act of 2005. You can
send a message to Congress right now,
or continue reading to obtain
more information and talking points:

As reported yesterday by the Liberty Committee, the
American tradition of parents deciding what is best
for their children is under attack. The major
pharmaceutical lobby wants universal mental screening
for every child in America, including preschool
children.

But universal screening alone is not what the
pharmaceutical lobbyists want. The real payoff for
these select drug companies is the drugging of
children that will result - as we learned tragically
with Ritalin - even when parents refuse!

The drug companies want your children to be
"screened." The psychiatric establishment wants to do
the "screening." And even a recent presidential
commission (New Freedom Commission on Mental Health)
supports it all.

These powerful groups want your children "screened"
whether or not you, as parents, give permission.

Congressman Ron Paul, an OB/GYN physician for over 30
years, is desperately trying to keep the drug
companies, politicians and federal bureaucrats from
becoming "parents" to your children. Dr. Paul will
introduce this week an amendment to the Labor, HHS,
and Education Appropriations Act for FY 2006 that
will withhold funds from being used to implement or
support any federal, mental screening program.

In a letter to his congressional colleagues, Dr. Paul
states:

"As you know, psychotropic drugs are increasingly
prescribed for children who show nothing more
than children's typical rambunctious behavior.
Many children have suffered harmful effects from
these drugs. Yet some parents have even been
charged with child abuse for refusing to drug
their children. The federal government should not
promote national mental health screening programs
that will force the use of these psychotropic
drugs such as Ritalin."

If you think this action alert is about something
that "can't happen here," think again. In 1995, the
state of Texas launched the Texas Medication
Algorithm Project and then Governor George W. Bush
signed it into law. (WorldNetDaily.com, June 21,
2004)

The state of Illinois has also approved a mental
health screening program. The Illinois legislature
passed the Children's Mental Health Act of 2003 which
will provide screening for "all children ages 0-18"
and "ensure appropriate and culturally relevant
assessment of your children's social and emotional
development with the use of standardized tools." In
addition, all pregnant women in Illinois are to be
screened for depression.

Dr. Karen R. Effrem, a pediatrician and leading
opponent of universal screening with EdAction states:

"Universal mental health screening and the drugging
of children, as recommended by the New Freedom
Commission [presidential commission], needs to be
stopped so that many thousands if not millions of
children will be saved from receiving stigmatizing
diagnoses that would follow them for the rest of
their lives. America's school children should not
be medicated by expensive, ineffective, and
dangerous medications based on vague and dubious
diagnoses."

Dr. Effrem warns:

1. Parental rights are unclear or non-existent
under these screening programs.
2. Parents are already being coerced to put their
children on psychiatric medications and some
children are dying because of it.
3. Mental health screening does not prevent
suicide.
4. Mental health diagnoses are "subjective" and
"social constructions" as admitted by the
authors of the diagnostic manuals themselves.
5. Most psychiatric medications do not work in
children.
6. The side effects of these medications in
children are severe.
7. The untoward influence by the pharmaceutical
industry, or at least the impropriety, is
abundantly clear in two important aspects of
this issue.
8. Merging screening with the academic standards
required by No Child Left Behind, as is
happening in Illinois, will lead to diagnosis
for political reasons. School mental health and
violence prevention programs funded by NCLB and
government counterterrorism operations are
already using such criteria as "homophobia" and
"defenders of the US Constitution against
federal government and the UN" to label school
children and US citizens as mentally unstable
and violent. (source: EdAction.org)

Urge your U.S. representative to vote "yes" on the
Paul amendment to stop universal mental screening of
children.

If your U.S. representative does not vote "yes" on
the Paul amendment, he or she supports screening your
children without your permission -- just as the drug
companies want.

The U.S. House will vote on the Paul amendment
Thursday or Friday.


Also, please be sure to tell others to come to
DownsizeDC.org and send a message because time is
running short.

Jim Babka
President
DownsizeDC.org, Inc.

Kerry Spencer Sentenced to Life in Police Shooting Deaths

Wednesday, June 22, 2005
The Birmingham News

Jury recommends life for police killer
A Jefferson County jury today recommended sparing the life of convicted police killer Kerry Spencer, 25, of Birmingham. The jury recommended four sentences of life without parole, instead of the death penalty. They reached their decision about 2 p.m. after 2½ days of deliberating his punishment.

They convicted him on Sunday in the shooting deaths of three Birmingham police officers and the attempted shooting of a fourth officer last June at an apartment in the Ensley neighborhood.

Circuit Judge Tommy Nail, who has the right to reject the jury’s recommendation, will formally sentence Spencer on Sept. 9.

Carol Robinson
---------------------------------------------------------

I can't say that life without is better than the death penalty especially since I have an inside view of what the prisons are like in Alabama. However, I am happy that Mr. Spencer was not sentenced to death and I hope that Judge Tommy Nail will impose the jury's verdict and not his own.

I believe from the testimony that I read that Spencer was telling the truth about paying off the police and I can't help but wonder if there will be any type of investigation into the allegations he made against the officers involved. Something tells me no.

The drug war invites corruption and gives rise to situations like this.
Four lives lost. Four famillies destroyed. Kids without dads. Wives without husbands and parents without sons.

Drug war in Colombia: Is there any progress?

By JOHN OTIS
Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle

BOGOTA, COLOMBIA - As proof that the U.S.-backed drug war in South America is paying off, the Bush administration says cocaine production has plummeted by nearly 30 percent over the past three years.

But some American counternarcotics officials and drug-trade analysts call such triumphal pronouncements misleading.

A U.S. government task force, they note, estimated that cartels last year produced more than twice the amount of cocaine claimed by the White House. A report released last week by the United Nations maintained that cocaine output is actually on the rise.

The debate over drug numbers matters because Congress uses the White House figures as a measuring stick when determining the best way to spend nearly $1 billion annually in counternarcotics programs in South America.

Uncontrollable Urge

My original animation
Mpeg music video for Devo's "Uncontrollable Urge".
Mandella-type animation with intricate designs and pleasing color schemes.
Should stream fairly well but right-click to download full resolution mpeg.

A Design


Picture created by Terry Posted by Hello

click picture to enlarge
stare at black dot in center

The Militarization of the Police

Bob Wallace
Lew Rockwell

Do we really want to create police who dehumanize and demonize the public? That's the path to creating better killers, not better police. When's the last time they were referred to as "peace officers"?

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

ABI Agent Charged with DUI

ABI investigator charged with DUI

DOTHAN -- A state police investigator remained on leave Monday after Dothan police arrested and charged him with driving under the influence in a state vehicle.

Jayson Wade Solomon, 38, was arrested early Friday when officers found him unconscious behind the wheel of his state-issued truck, which was stopped on a Dothan road, police said.

"A field sobriety test was administered, and officers had reason to believe he was under the influence of alcohol," Dothan Police Capt. Steve Parrish said.

He said Solomon refused to take an intoxilyzer test and became belligerent and "uncooperative" when questioned by officers. Solomon was off duty at the time of the incident.

Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Martha Earnhardt said Solomon was placed on leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation. She said it would be "premature to speculate" about whether he will face further disciplinary action.

Solomon joined the department in 1994 as a state trooper and later became a Dothan-based ABI investigator.
---------------------------------------------------------------

He He He He He...Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha

Carmichael gives up center


Leon Carmichael Posted by Hello

By William F. West
Montgomery Advertiser

Attorneys for convicted marijuana trafficker Leon Carmichael reached a settlement with the government Monday in which their client would turn over his 3,000-seat entertainment venue in west Montgomery.

Carmichael also agreed to surrender up to $1 million worth of property surrounding the building and one of his cars.

"We think it sends a message to drug dealers or people who might be inclined to become drug dealers that there's no profit in it," prosecutor Stephen Feaga said afterward.

The U.S. Marshals Service will take possession of the properties, but the deal will remain subject to the outcome of Carmichael's appeal, which one of his attorneys, Susan James, said could take approximately a year to two years.

"It seems to be a fair settlement," defense attorney Ronald Brunson said afterward.

Jurors found Carmichael, a local businessman, guilty of marijuana trafficking and money laundering after just three hours of deliberation Friday.

The government at trial presented evidence showing the Carmichael Center, which opened more than two years ago at a cost of approximately $1.8 million, was paid for with drug money. It also presented evidence showing that the car, a 2001 Honda Accord, was used for illegal business.

The government had wanted a full property hearing Monday, but Carmichael and his attorneys decided not to run the risk of again facing the jury and instead huddled with prosecutors in the courtroom.

James said Carmichael could have lost his trucking company, rental properties and even his home.

After the settlement was reached at approximately 10:20 a.m., Judge Myron Thompson called the jurors into the courtroom and dismissed them. Carmichael's wife, Valerie, declined comment as she left.

Court lasted nine days, and a spectator from beginning to end was the Rev. Albert Sankey of Jesus Christ Missionary Baptist Church.

"I've been saddened all the time," he said.

Greg Calhoun, chief executive of the Calhoun Foods supermarket chain, echoed similar opinions, but was careful not to be judgmental of the jury's verdict.

Calhoun said Carmichael is a shrewd man whom he believed wanted to do some good for the west side of Montgomery. Calhoun recalled going to first-class events at the Carmichael Center.

"I hate that he's in a situation where now his family is going to be judged by his actions," Calhoun added. "And we as businesspeople have to think about more than ourselves.

Charles Kelser, director of the Carmichael Center, said he believes his boss is innocent.

"He's a very giving person," Kelser said. "He's been honest and forthright with me and with his employees, and I know that he has always been vehemently against drugs."

Jurors on Friday also found co-defendant Freddie Williams guilty of distributing marijuana.

Carmichael and Williams each face 10 years to life imprisonment on the drug distribution charges.

Carmichael also faces up to 20 years behind bars for using a Compass Bank personal account in the name of promoter Sherry Pettis to channel drug proceeds.

Carmichael and Williams will be sentenced Aug. 22.

The two were arrested in November 2003 after more than 500 pounds of marijuana and guns were found in Williams' house. Guns and at least $5,000 in cash were found in Carmichael's Honda.

Williams' attorney, Barry Teague, couldn't be reached Monday.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Now that the Byrne Grants have been chopped from drug task force budgets property seizures will become more common. There is no profit in drug dealing...unless of course you are a cop with a license to steal.

Choppers Flying in My Town

Sweep recovers 900 plants

By Amy Redd

More than $1.7 million worth of marijuana was seized from a field in Tallapoosa County during a sweep last week.

Investigators from the Tallapoosa County Narcotics Task Force, along with several other local agencies, assisted the Alabama Bureau of Investigation's Alabama Marijuana Eradication Program in recovering 891 marijuana plants from large cut over areas near Langley Road, Buttston Road and Sandy Creek Road during a routine helicopter sweep Thursday and Friday. The Tallapoosa County Sheriff's Department, Alexander City Police Department, Alexander City Fire Department and the New Site Police Department also participated in the eradication program.

Task Force Investigator Jay Turner said the ABI conducts marijuana eradication sweeps twice a year.

"The marijuana plants were found near a burn pile where land had been cleared," he said. "The area was not easily accessible. We had to use four-wheelers to get out there and then walk the rest of the way to get to the plants."

Seven marijuana plants were recovered from a kudzu patch behind a residence on Highway 50 in Camp Hill. The recovered marijuana has a street value of approximately $1,782,000 and the seized plants ranged in size from eight inches to five feet, Turner said. The state of Alabama values each recovered mature marijuana plant at $2,000 regardless of size.

"The amount found in this sweep was above what was found last year," Turner said. "One year we'll find a lot and the next year we won't find any."

Though the case is still under investigation, at the present time investigators did not expect to make an arrest in connection with the recovery of the plants, Turner said. He said it was often difficult to determine who owned the plants due to the remoteness of the locations in which they are grown.

"In some cases, we have been able to tie the plants to a house and make an arrest," Turner said. "But a lot of times, they plant on someone else's land and it's hard to tie it back to them and make an arrest."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

These are the same goons who flew over me in 2002 and subsequently launched my career in drug policy reform. You can watch the video of that raid HERE.

I haven't seen or heard the choppers out near my home this year....but I've got the video camera at the ready because I know they will come.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Sativex Now Available in Canada

TORONTO, Ontario (AP) -- A cannabis-based painkiller for multiple sclerosis patients went on sale Monday in Canada, the first country to approve the spray derived from the marijuana plant.

Sativex can now be obtained by prescription through Canadian pharmacies, Bayer HealthCare announced Monday. Bayer markets the drug in Canada for British drug company GW Pharmaceuticals, which developed the drug.

Health Canada, the federal agency that oversees medical care for Canadians, announced in April it had approved Sativex, made from components derived from the cannabis plant that have been shown to ease pain.

Medical professionals welcomed the availability.

"Effective pain control and management are extremely important in a disease like MS," said Dr. Allan Gordon, a neurologist and director of the Wasser Pain Management Center at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto. "The availability of Sativex addresses the great demand for an effective treatment option in the field of neuropathic pain in MS."

Many people with multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease that affects the central nervous system, treat their pain by smoking marijuana. But the dose is hard to regulate and the drug is difficult to obtain legally.

About 2.5 million are believed to have MS worldwide, of which about 50,000 are Canadian, according to the U.S. National Multiple Sclerosis Society. About half of MS patients say they suffer from chronic pain, the society said.

Sativex is administered through a spray pump under the tongue or on the inside of the cheek.

In 2001, Canada became the first country to adopt a system regulating the medicinal use of marijuana for people suffering from terminal illnesses and chronic conditions.

In the United States, the federal government has classified marijuana as a drug that is as dangerous as heroin, although 10 states have passed laws that allow its use under medical supervision.

Alabama Man Convicted of Killing Three Officers

When this happened last year there were some questions about the house being a "drug house" as the warrant wasn't for drugs and no drugs were found in a search conducted after the officers were killed.
During the trial, Kerry Spencer , admitted that drugs were sold from the house.However, according to The Birmingham News
"Prior to trial, one of Spencer's defense attorneys said two of the officers had received past payments to protect the dope house. When the payments stopped, the police started harassing those at the apartment, lawyer Scott Boudreaux said."



The Kerry Spencer case is a really tragic example of the DAMAGE prohibition has done to our country.

Due to the drug war, thousands of police officers (both the honest ones and those corrupted by the lucritive opportunities the Drug War provides), drug users and dealers (both responsible and irresponsible), and innocent by-standers caught in the crossfire, have died needless deaths.

We have over two million U.S. citizens in prison...many of them on drug related charges, our children have alarmingly easy access to any drug they desire, our police have become soldiers engaged in an unwinnable war against the American people and our Constitution and Bill of Rights have been DESTROYED!!

Yet, drugs are still readily available to anyone who wants them, cheaper and of higher quality than ever before.

It seems to me that Americans have been fooled into paying for their worst nightmare and the bigger the failure of the Drug War the more money we are asked to pump into it.

I don't think citizens should support any government program that puts all of us at greater risk and fails us year after year.

When will the needless death and destruction end? When will the citizens of America accept that prohibition has never worked and will never work ,no matter how many lives it destroys or tax dollars it consumes, and do what is necessary to change the laws that cause so many to suffer needlessly?

Admitting that the drug war has failed and approaching it from a health and social standpoint is not the same as condoning or advocating drug use.

Tonight, my thoughts are with ALL of the families caught up in this tragedy, which could have been avoided if people would only wake up and realize that, in the case of prohibition, THE CURE IS WORSE THAN THE DISEASE!!!
------------------------------------------------------------------
Accused cop-killer Kerry Spencer took the stand in his own defense Saturday, claiming he feared for his life when he fatally shot three Birmingham police officers.

Composed and articulate, Spencer told jurors it was him or them.

"I didn't mean to kill nobody, man," Spencer said. "This was a decision I had to make to stay alive or be shot. I did what I had to do."

Read More Here

--------------------------------------------------------------------

It took a Jefferson County jury working through the weekend less than four hours to reach a unanimous verdict Sunday in the capital murder trial of Kerry Spencer, the man charged with gunning down three Birmingham Police officers last year.

Guilty on three counts of capital murder in the deaths of on-duty officers Carlos "Curly" Owen, 58; Harley "RoboCop" Chisholm III, 40, and Charles Robert Bennett, 33. Guilty on one count of attempted murder in the wounding of Officer Michael Collins, 37. Guilty of capital murder for killing two or more people in one fell swoop.

The five-day trial wrapped to a dramatic conclusion Sunday when a woman stood and screamed at prosecutors during closing arguments. She was arrested and hauled out of the courtroom in handcuffs. The woman, like Spencer's lawyers throughout the trial, suggested the slain officers were tainted.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

The Lancet: Debating Drug Use Openly

The Lancet 2005; 365:2064
June 18, 2005
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)66712-8

Debating drug use openly

A Personal Account in this week's Lancet contains an intimate description
of an individual's dependence on -hydroxybutyrate (GHB), used as a method
of combating social anxiety. An accompanying Review surveys the evidence
for management strategies to treat complications of the recreational use
of new drugs. These two provocative pieces serve a common purpose: they
highlight the need for accurate, impartial information about the long-term
effects of illicit drugs, and lay bare the difficulties doctors face when
dealing with the consequences.

Recreational drugs are an undeniable, even routine, part of many people's
lives. Indeed, the British Medical Association reported last week that one
in 15 practising doctors in England and Wales will be addicted to drugs or
alcohol at some point during their lifetime. Their statement continued: we
do not think the figure is higher than in the general population. But, as
is characteristic of statistics purporting to inform about drug use, this
number carries considerable uncertainty.

The societal debate over how to combat illegal drug use focuses mainly on
when to legislate and to what extent. But from the perspective of health,
the problem of illicit drug use, which is nurtured by stringent laws, is
pragmatic. How can one treat a patient who may not admit to an illegal
addiction? Or conduct research into management of conditions resulting
from habits that the law urges doctors to oppose?

The Lancet does not endorse illegal drug use, but we believe that the
cloak of secrecy shrouding those who use illicit substances is the most
destructive feature by far of the cultural condemnation of recreational
drug use. Discussions framed by moralising or by adherence to social
ideals have little utility in a society of which drug use is an
inescapable part.

Without open debate, we cannot know the true extent of the problem.
Without open debate, there can be no accurate quantification of the risk
of harm. And without open debate, doctors remain starved of the knowledge
necessary to cope with the acute and long-term effects of drug use. We
proffer our website as the forum for your comments.

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Nervous Tic = Disorderly Conduct

Sun-Sentinel.com, FL

Pembroke Pines recently settled a lawsuit for $75,000 that accused one of its police officers of making a false arrest and using excessive force when trying to detain a city resident at Home Depot.

The plaintiff was Raymond Russo, a former Miami Police Department sergeant. He worked with the Miami department for 23 years and before that was with the New York City Police Department.

According to the lawsuit and a transcript of Russo's trial, here's what happened on April 20, 2003:

Goulding responded to a call at the Home Depot at 12800 Pines Blvd., where Russo was a manager. Russo had sighted a child's knapsack underneath a stack of wooden pallets near a gate in the garden department.

Russo, who feared the knapsack belonged to a lost or missing child, asked an employee to call police. As Russo led Goulding to the knapsack, Russo experienced a "tic," an involuntary movement in which his heads snaps from side to side.

Goulding testified that Russo was having "some sort of problem" and became belligerent with him and cursed at him.

Russo attempted to explain to Goulding that he was suffering from the tic, but Goulding maintained he was being belligerent. He said he asked Russo to pick up the knapsack, but he refused.

Goulding arrested Russo on a disorderly conduct charge. Goulding said that while attempting to arrest him, Russo resisted, so he sprayed him in the face with Mace.

Robert Audas, a Home Depot employee, testified that Russo did not curse at Goulding and that Goulding used Mace on Russo two or three times.

When placing Russo in a patrol car, the suit alleged that Goulding pushed Russo's head against the vehicle, knocking his glasses off.

Overkill

By JOSIAH E. CARTWRIGHT and JEREMY GRAD
The Standard-Speaker

PA - Hazleton police wearing masks, helmets and body armor broke into a house where they suspected crack cocaine sales occurred, apprehended a woman and seized evidence Friday afternoon.Police from the Special Operations Group, distinguished by their protective garb and high-tech gear, conducted the drug raid at 18-20 E. First St.

The raid began near 3 p.m. as police walked out of their van and began marching in tight line toward the house and single file up the steps.

Most carried semi-automatic weapons. Some wore helmets and all donned black masks.

A girl outside the house screamed "Mom'' more than once as police passed.

"Police," an officer announced before battering the door open.

Jacqueline Bartenope, 39, crouched behind the slats of an interior stairway banister that partially obscured the view of her through the front entrance as a police officer pointed an automatic weapon at her.

Unsure how many people were inside, police searched both halves of the double house.

They found no one else, but located drug paraphernalia consisting of "a metal pipe used for smoking crack, wrapping papers and a marijuana bong," according to a criminal complaint.

Police took Bartenope into custody and charged her with one misdemeanor count of possession of drug paraphernalia. No drugs were found at the scene.

Bartenope said she was planning to move to a different home.

Her daughter watched the raid from outside the house, while her son was down the street on his bicycle.

Police led Bartenope out of the house in handcuffs as Mayor Louis Barletta watched.

After being arraigned by District Judge Thomas Sharkey she was released on her own recognizance.

Violence escalates as Mexico steps up war against drugs

By Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan, Washington Post | June 19, 2005

MEXICO CITY -- Nobody wanted the job of police chief in Nuevo Laredo, a city on the US-Mexico border plagued by drug gangs and violence. Finally, Alejandro Dominguez, 52, a businessman and father of three, volunteered to take the post to help his besieged city. Two weeks ago, hours after being sworn in, Dominguez was assassinated by men firing assault rifles from a convoy of sports utility vehicles.

Last week, federal troops and police took over the city of 300,000 as the death toll reached 50 in an escalating drug war, and US Ambassador Antonio Garza Jr. warned of a ''rapidly degenerating situation along the border." The entire local police force was ordered off the streets after city officers engaged in a gun battle with federal investigative police that left one federal officer seriously wounded.

The human cost of Mexico's aggressive war on drug trafficking is skyrocketing as the country suffers through the worst barrage of drug-related violence in years. More than 600 people have been killed this year, often in remarkably bold and bloody executions, according to national press tallies and state-by-state crime reports.

Mexican authorities last week disclosed for the first time that 90 soldiers have been killed in drug-related violence since President Vicente Fox took office in December 2000, vowing a ''war without mercy" on Mexico's drug cartels. In addition, at least 65 agents of the Federal Investigative Agency have been killed since it was formed in 2002.

Some died in confrontations with drug dealers on city streets; others crashed in helicopters after traffickers shot them down or disabled them by stringing heavy cables across narrow valleys where opium poppies and marijuana grow.

In a recent interview, Fox likened Mexico's ''explosion of organized crime killing" to the Al Capone era in Chicago. ''It took years to get rid of the mafias, it took years to get rid of organized crime," he said. Fox said US and Mexican authorities were working jointly to confront criminals who control ''millions and millions and millions of dollars."

Saturday, June 18, 2005

Strip-searches at Traffic Court

Orlando Sentinel, FL - Jun 8, 2005

SANFORD -- Seminole County corrections officials on Tuesday ordered a sweeping review of all jail policies and practices. The action came a day after an internal investigation showed hundreds of people had been illegally strip-searched.

A team will review everything from how inmates' belongings are handled to whether policies involving highly invasive body-cavity searches are being followed, according to the Seminole County Sheriff's Office, which operates the jail.

The practice came to light after Seminole County Judge John Sloop had 11 people arrested for being late to traffic court Dec. 3. The 11, who had been mistakenly directed to the wrong courtroom, were ordered to jail, where they were strip-searched.

Random drug sweep comes up empty at Northampton County Prison

Allentown Morning Call

PA - Ten police dogs sniffed their way through most cells of the Northampton County Prison on a surprise drug search earlier this week and did not find any drugs.

The dogs, from seven area police departments, searched all housing sections of the prison except for those used by women, special-needs inmates and inmates who are segregated from other prisoners.

Prison common areas were not searched because the dogs grew tired after 90 minutes of searching cellblocks, some of which were built in 1871 and have limited ventilation.

New Developments in Central Booking Inmate's Death

Baltimore, MD (WJZ)- Two internal prison investigators who had been involved in separate high-profile inquiries, including the beating death of an inmate in Baltimore last month, were reassigned to correctional officer jobs with no explanation, according to a union representing the officers.

One of the investigators helped lead the inquiry into the homicide of Raymond Smoot, who died after he was savagely beaten at Baltimore's Central Booking and Intake Center.

The other investigator, who was based on the Eastern Shore, was involved in the investigation last year of state elections chief Linda H. Lamone.

Lamone kept her job.

"We feel (their reassignment) is strictly political," said Herbert Berry Jr., a labor representative for the Maryland Correctional Law Enforcement Union. "They have exceptional evaluations, no disciplinary history."

The department's secretary, Mary Ann Saar, authorized the transfer of the two investigators, Berry said, adding that the investigators fear that their transfers back into correctional institutions, where they have conducted investigations of inmates and staff, will put them in danger.

Oregon to resume issuing medical marijuana cards to qualified patients

Medical News Today

Oregon's state-operated medical marijuana program will resume issuing registration cards to qualified patients today as a result of Attorney General Hardy Myers' opinion that a June 6 US Supreme Court ruling does not invalidate the program.

The Oregon Department of Human Services had continued processing applications but discontinued issuing registration cards in the wake of the ruling, which prompted DHS to immediately seek an attorney general's opinion.

More than 10,000 qualified patients now have registration cards through the state program, one of 11 in the nation.

Cops Raid Wrong Duplex With Noise Device

Associated Press

NAMPA, Idaho - Police in this southwestern Idaho town raided the wrong duplex, throwing a powerful noisemaking device through the unit's window and standing outside with guns drawn.

John Simpson, convinced he was under attack Wednesday, said he hit the floor of his home, and took his wife down with him.

"I guess we're going to have to seek psychological help, I hate to say that," Simpson said Thursday. "I'm not nuts or anything, but I'm still shaking. Put a shotgun next to your ear and pull the trigger to get an idea of the noise."

A Nampa police officer had confused Simpson's window for that of residents who share a duplex with the 62-year-old Vietnam veteran, Assistant Chief Tim Vincent said. Police had intended to serve a search warrant in the adjacent unit. The officer threw the so-called "flash-bang" device in the window, breaking the glass and setting off a loud noise and light.

Simpson, a house painter, said he picked up the first thing he could find - a vacuum hose - and ran out the duplex's door to defend himself.

The police department quickly fixed the window, Vincent said. The agency also will pay for any other damages, he said. Because the officers were involved in a drug investigation, the raid was considered a high-risk operation, Vincent said.

Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms officials assisted.

Police subsequently arrested Simpson's 20-year-old neighbor. They allege he had 4 ounces of marijuana with the intent to deliver.

Friday, June 17, 2005

Slain Officers Son in Law "Legalize Drugs"

Legalize drugs, maybe,
officer's son-in-law says
By WILLIAM C. SINGLETON III
BIRMINGHAM POST-HERALD

It may be time for the government to consider legalizing drugs, said the son-in-law of a slain Birmingham police officer.

"They need to step in and control it like they did liquor 50 years ago when they were bootlegging it," said Tim Banna, 40, whose father-in-law, Carlos Owen, was gunned down at a drug house in Ensley one year ago today. "They've got all these officers risking their lives over this."

Seated in a Jefferson County Circuit courtroom during the trial of a man accused of killing three police officers, Banna said it's not his grief talking.

He just feels a general frustration about the drug trade and the inability to stop it, he said.

Officers venture into dangerous areas to bust drug dealers, only to see another dealer take their place.

"All these drug dealers are out there, and you've got them sitting in line waiting to take the place" of the next one taken off the streets, he said.

Kerry Spencer, 25, is on trial charged with capital murder in the killings of three police officers and attempted murder of a fourth.

Police have said drugs were sold in the apartment where the officers were killed. Spencer's attorney, Mike Blalock, admitted during opening testimony the residence was a drug house, and his client armed himself because such houses were always being robbed.

Spencer had claimed self-defense in the shooting, saying officers startled him as he slept in another room. When he saw officers pointing what looked like a weapon, he fired on them.

Banna said Owen wanted to make a difference in the community.

"He knew the risk and he wanted his beat clean," Banna said. "That's what he told me."

But Banna doesn't want to see more officers killed over a war that seems endless.

"When is it going to stop?" he said. "We've got to get to a point where we have some type of government control over the drugs. These policemen are risking their lives to do it. Eventually somebody's going to have to draw the line."

test

Activist alleges prison abuses

LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - What makes Jon B. Eichelman unusual isn’t that he claims to have been assaulted in prison.

He is unusual in that he reported the assault, Tom Zeager contended this morning.

Eichelman, who was arrested two weeks ago in connection with the “road rage” shooting of a 2-year-old boy, filed a complaint with Lancaster City police that he was attacked by four or five inmates while in the county prison.

He was later released after police realized they had arrested the wrong man.

Eichelman reportedly suffered a fractured eye socket, lacerated liver and three broken ribs in the attack, according to police and Eichelman’s attorney.

Zeager, president of the prisoner advocacy group Justice & Mercy, told the county Prison Board this morning that he has probably heard 50 stories of prison assaults.

“This happens in this prison regularly. This is not an isolated incident,” Zeager told the board, which includes the county commissioners, controller, district attorney, sheriff and a judge.

Justice & Mercy presented to Warden Vincent Guarini this morning an allegation of an inmate who claims he was handcuffed, thrown down a flight of stairs and had his head thrust into a glass window on April 9.

Zeager contended few such assaults are reported because the inmates fear reprisals.

Former Miami-Dade officer accused of sex with inmate

By Chrystian Tejedor
Sun-Sentinel.com
Posted June 17 2005

Miami, FL - A former Miami-Dade corrections officer was charged with sexual battery, accused of repeatedly having sex with a female inmate over a three-month period and fathering her baby, the Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office announced Thursday.

Ajmo Jolicoeur, 22, also was charged with sexual misconduct for using his position as the midnight shift officer at the Homestead Correctional Institution to gain access to the unidentified woman.

Both are felony charges.

Student made meth in research lab, DEA says

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO - A chemistry graduate student allegedly used a research lab at San Diego State to manufacture methamphetamine, Ecstasy and an anesthetic 80 times more potent than morphine, authorities said.

Matthew Finley, 26, was arrested at his home in Ocean Beach on Wednesday on drug charges and the Chemical Sciences Laboratory was shut down as investigators removed the drugs, said Misha Piastro, spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration.

"He felt he could get away with it. To his disappointment today, he did not," Piastro said. "His disregard for the safety of the rest of the student body is alarming and not something we take lightly."

Finley told investigators that he manufactured methamphetamine and a chemical used to make methamphetamine, as well as Ecstasy and an anesthetic called fentanyl in the university lab, according to a court document. Capsules of Ecstasy, vials of fentanyl and three marijuana plants were seized from his home, authorities said.

$1 million bail for meth lab owner

The Decatur Daily, AL

A circuit court judge set a hefty price tag on the freedom of a man, accused of making meth for a third time in less than a year, by ordering bail set at more than $1 million.

Authorities said they do not expect the suspected meth cook to post bail and walk free any time soon.

Morgan County drug agents arrested Kerry Dale Humphries when they raided his residence at 43 Hillside View Road in Joppa on Tuesday and discovered a methamphetamine lab, Morgan County Sheriff Greg Bartlett said.

So far this year, authorities have seized more than 25 meth labs in the county.

Drug war looks more like Prohibition

Don Parcell
The Cincinnati Enquirer

I have supported fighting illegal drugs since the war on drugs began, but recently I began to see the futility of it. We spend ever-increasing tax dollars here and abroad trying to reduce the supply, with no results.

Let's win the war on drugs

Charlotte Observer, NC

From John Emerson, assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Charlotte District office.

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Illegal Drugs

"Illegal drug use ... destabilizes our energy supplies and prices".

- U.S. Congressman Mark Souder
Republican, Indiana

Guantanamo Bay: Tourist destination

Behind the high fence, a line of cacti, and across some scrubland watchtowers built by the Americans.

The Stars and Stripes hang defiantly from each side that faces Cuba. From the Cuban side, you can hear and see the live fire exercises of the Cuban army.

The gunfire and explosions are clearly audible in the US base. It is a reminder to the Americans if they needed one whose island this is.

Of course most of this is not visible to the naked eye. So the Cubans have provided a telescope for tourists to get a closer view. It is made in Alabama, USA.

Through the lens the base shimmers in the heat. If it gets too hot, you can adjourn to the bar, where the staff outnumbers the visitors.

They will serve drinks and a meal as you watch the valley below.



Republican Strains
Emerge Over Iraq

Wall Street Journal

Although senators and especially Democrats seemed skeptical that the Pentagon's policy was enough to prevent abuses, some Republicans defended the system at Guantanamo Bay. Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama said he had visited the site, which he said "would make a magnificent resort."

"This country is not systematically abusing prisoners," Mr. Sessions said.

The hearing adjourned without any specific action being taken, and Mr. Specter acknowledged wading into Guantanamo "may be...too hot to handle for Congress."


Google News Search guantanamo sessions



U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions


Senate HELP Committee Passes Sessions’ Prescription Drug Monitoring Bill May 27, 2005

WASHINGTON-- The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee today passed and sent to the floor legislation sponsored by Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL) designed to help states prevent prescription drug abuse.

Entitled the National All Schedules Prescription Electronic Reporting Act, Sessions’ bill would create a federal grant program to help establish or improve state-run prescription drug monitoring programs. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) is chief co-sponsor of the legislation.

“The abuse and diversion of prescription drugs is a tremendous public health issue for our nation, and the problem is growing,” Sessions said. “An epidemic that first attracted public notice as a regional crisis has spread to every kind of community. Prescription drugs now rank second only to marijuana in the incidence of abuse. I believe my bill provides states with resources and guidance to help their established programs to minimize the abuse and diversion of prescription medications while ensuring patients’ access to timely, effective treatment.”

Sessions said that while press coverage has frequently focused on the abuse and diversion of OxyContin and other narcotic pain relievers, the problem extends to several classes of commonly prescribed drugs, including tranquilizers and stimulants. It’s estimated that more than 6 million Americans are current abusers of prescription drugs that fall within these three classes.


Democracy Now! Headlines for June 16, 2005
Alabama Republican Senator Jeff Sessions argued that some of the prisoners "need to be executed,"

Rene Boje Ordered Back to US to Stand Trial


Rene and Family Posted by Hello

Please see this thread at the Cannabis Culture Forums for the latest information from Chris and Rene.

What an absolute nightmare for this young mother and wife. Ripped from her baby who is still nursing and who loves his mommy very much. Ordered into the hands of murderers to stand trial for being a compassionate human being.



We Miss You, Peter McWilliams
by James Leroy Wilson
lewrockwell.com

Peter McWilliams himself said it best, in an interview in the autumn of 1999:

We are so far away from what the constitution was written as, we as well just tear the whole thing up. It's a sham. It's ridiculous. The constitution was based upon the fact the federal government had exceedingly limited powers. It was only allowed to do eighteen very limited things – the enumerated powers, period. And everything else belonged to the states and the individuals to regulate.

Now it's become such that if the constitution doesn't specifically guarantee you can have it, it's okay for the government to regulate it or make laws against it. That is putting the constitution on its head. It's like saying, if a woman doesn't carry a sign on her back that says you can not rape me, she has permission to be raped. It is that. And boy, has lady liberty been raped – repeatedly.

Congressman Everett's Med Pot Position..."Go Live in Another Country"

Alabama medical cannabis patient Laura Campbell was busy the last few days calling, faxing and emailing her Alabama Congressmen in Washington D.C. asking for their support on the Hinchey/Rohrbacher Amendment.

After the vote on June 15, 2005 Laura placed additional calls to the offices of Alabama Congressmen asking how they voted. She sent this out to the list last night.

It has taken me a couple of hours to digest this piece of information. I am still very upset by it. When I was calling around to see how everyone voted today I spoke with an Allison in Congressman Everett's office.

I told her why I was calling and she told me that there standings were no legalizing marijuana for any reason whatsoever.

I told her my story and she asked if there was no medicine I could take for my pain. I told her there was not and she said it was their office standing on cases like mine is that the patients are not looking hard enough for their treatment and we are lying about our illness just to use an illegal substance.

I told her I was the exception to the rule and I had no other options and that my biggest fear was surgery or an injury with nothing to manage the pain with!

Her suggestion to me was" not to have surgery and not to have and accident."And if I wanted to live such a" lifestyle" I could leave the country.

I don't remember but I don't think I choose to have a sick and painful lifestyle. Like I said I am still very upset. I did not get angry with them or shoot of at the mouth but man I wanted to. What actions , if any, should I take about this crap?
Laura


I am OUTRAGED!
This kind of conduct is UNACCEPTABLE.

Mr. Everett YOU WORK FOR US and if anyone leaves anything it will be you vacating that cozy seat in Congress.

Let the SHAME GAME Begin!

The following is a letter that I wrote to Congressman Mike Rogers of Alabama's third district on the day before the Hinchey/Rohrbacher vote.


Congressman Mike Rogers Posted by Hello

I intend to follow through on my promises of public shame and humiliation as well as finding a candidate who listens to the will of the people and acts acordingly.

Dear Congressman Rogers,

As you know H.R. 2862 - Science, the Departments of State, Justice, and Commerce, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2006 comes to the House floor tomorrow for debate and a possible vote.

Included in this bill is the Hinchey/Rohrbacher amendment that would cut federal funding for raids on seriously ill medical marijuana patients in states where their activities have been approved by voters.

I have lobbied you numerous times on this issue and on our last meeting in Montgomery you stated to me that if the American Medical Association had indeed acknowledged that marijuana had medicinal value that you would have no reason to vote against it. I provided you on two occasions with literature and statements from the AMA with regard to this issue.
I have publicized this meeting extensively and there are many Alabama voters who are looking to you to keep your word.

Since the Supreme Court handed down the Raich decision Congress alone holds the power to change this law.
There are many sick people in Alabama who would benefit from a change in this law and, just so you know, our medical marijuana bill passed out of the Judiciary Committee on April 27, 2005 and we have organized a 501c3 educational organization that will be seriously targeting our federal and state elected officials who oppose medical marijuana law reform.

Someone in your DC office informed one of your constituents earlier today that you would be voting NO because this bill was "too liberal."
I sincerely hope that as a Republican you would not think states rights is a "liberal" issue. That could be very embarassing for you as an Alabama Republican.

You are a nice guy and I like you but if you vote no then I must advise you that I will not hesitate to organize huge demonstrations outside your offices both here in Alabama and in Washington D.C. as I travel there often.

76% of Alabamians support medical marijuana and if you truly represent the will of the people then you will vote YES on Hinchey Rohrbacher on June 14, 2005.
If you vote no then you are standing in direct opposition to the will of the people and a campaign will be launched to replace you in Congress with someone who listens to the will of the people and acts accordingly.

Sincerely,
Loretta Nall

Peace in Colombia

My friend Sanho Tree who is likely one of the most intelligent human beings on earth in my opinion, sent out this compelling overview of the situation in Colombia.
Please take a moment and watch this flash presentation.

I traveled to Colombia last year with WFP and Sanho was the delegation leader. It was a life changing experience and you can read my take on it HERE

When you are done please Go Here and use this call script when contacting your congressman about Colombia.

Witness for Peace has also sent out the following 5 DAYS OF ACTION PLAN and offers the following guide.

1. PEACE IN COLOMBIA FLASH-MOVIE JUST RELEASED!
Featuring images illustrating Plan Colombia failure, words from peace church
leader Ricardo Esquivia, and YOU, the video makes it easy to share about
U.S. involvement in Colombia and contact your members of Congress.
Check it out! www.peaceincolombia.org/colombiafinal.html

2. LETTER FROM COLOMBIA
"The military aid sent to the Colombian government by the U.S. government
through the so-called "Plan Colombia" has been more than throwing kindling
on the fire. It's been like gasoline enflaming the fire that consumes the
Colombian society, prolonging and multiplying its lethal effects. (Plan
Colombia funding) has not helped to stop the war, but rather has contributed
to its growth." Ricardo Esquivia and Peter Stucky, Colombian Protestant,
Mennonite church leaders. Read more of this letter from these Witness for
Peace partners at http://go.sojo.net/campaign/peaceincolombia/explanation

3. LEGISLATIVE UPDATE
The vote is expected in the House of Representatives the week of June 27 as
the foreign operations appropriations bill reaches the floor. Rep. Jim
McGovern (D-MA) will offer an amendment to the bill that will cut military
aid to Colombia. Only a handful of world affairs are debated when the
foreign operations bill comes up each year, so it is significant that
Colombia is one of them. Through continuous opposition to Plan Colombia, we
have achieved our goal of making Colombia policy a controversial issue in
Congress!

The foreign operations budget this year is under pressure due to the
enormous expenditures of the Iraq war, and we have a better chance than
usual this year at cutting military aid. See www.lawg.org
and click on "Rethinking Plan
Colombia" for more background information.
Call your Representative and ask him or her to vote YES to any amendment
cutting military aid to Colombia. A sample script and talking points are
available at http://www.peaceincolombia.org/callscript.htm


4. DAYS OF ACTION: Five days of Action for five years of Plan Colombia.

June 20-24 Action Days for Colombia
5 days of Action for 5 years of failed Plan Colombia
Resources available at peaceincolombia.org

Monday, June 20: Fax and Movie
Promote the flash-movie to all your networks! Send a faxed message to your
representative asking him/her to cut military aid to Colombia. Send the
movie link to friends!

Tuesday, June 21: Media Day
Make the realities of US involvement in Colombia public! Use our sample
letter to the editor and send to your local paper. See
Peace in Colombia

Wednesday, June 22: Phone a Friend
Talk to two friends about the importance of opposing "Plan Colombia II"
and then triple the impact of Thursday's Call in Day by helping them contact
Congress.

Thursday, June 23: CALL-IN DAY 202-224-3121
Call your representative to tell him/her to vote YES on amendments that
cut U.S. military aid to Colombia, or that transfer military assistance to
social aid. Remember, congressional offices are sensitive to calls (more so
than emails) from constituents, which makes this action very important. Go
here for a sample script and talking points.

Friday, June 24: Solidarity Actions
Show solidarity with the Colombian people by lighting a candle for
peace, chalking your sidewalk, or sharing your knowledge and experience
of Colombia with your church and community. Take pictures and spread
the word!

And, GET FREE 'PEACE COFFEE' that supports an end to violence in
Colombia! The first 100 people to report back on the actions that they took
during the week will receive a free sample of fair trade coffee produced by
the Nasa in Cauca, Colombia. You may have visited Nasa communities on a
Witness for Peace delegation. Peace Coffee

This is our chance to influence the course of U.S./Colombia policy. Let me
know how your members of Congress plan to vote and about local organizing.
And please contact me if we can help you in any way. Thanks for stepping up
your heartfelt work!

Cannabis test 'positive' for AMs

BBC News, UK - A Welsh assembly member who called for his colleagues to volunteer to try out a new drug detection machine has tested "positive" for cannabis himself.

Swabs taken from Conservative AM William Graham's hands at the Welsh assembly building revealed traces of the drug, probably from a door handle.

He had arranged for police to come in to demonstrate the hi-tech machine.

Social Justice Minister Edwina Hart's hands were similarly cross-contaminated also bringing a positive test.

Mr Graham, a long time campaigner on substance abuse issues, said: "I can't think where I could have got it from".

He had arranged with Gwent Police, who had recently bought the first Ion Track drug detection system in Wales at a cost of £40,000, to demonstrate it to assembly members in Cardiff Bay.

Two charged in school drug raid

Sunbury Daily Item

SUNBURY PA — Two Shikellamy High School students have been charged with having marijuana and drug paraphernalia on school property.

Steven Naugle, 18, of Sunbury, has been charged with possession of a controlled substance, possession of a small amount of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and disorderly conduct.

A 17-year-old Sunbury girl was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia and disorderly conduct. Her name was not released because of her age.

The items were discovered May 17 during a search at the high school, the facts of which principal Terry Roden said were lost in subsequent news coverage.

"All I want to do is put the facts out there so that everybody knows what happened here," Mr. Roden said.

Of the high school’s 1,600 lockers — all of which were searched by Mr. Roden — dogs alerted him to the presence of illegal drugs 25 times.

Of those 25 alerts, five lockers were vacant, and no illegal drugs were found in the remaining 20.

Of almost 500 vehicles searched in all of the high school’s parking lots, a small amount of marijuana and a marijuana pipe were found in one and another pipe was found in a second car.

Two students were found to be in possession of illegal drugs out of Shikellamy High School’s 1,053, officials said.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Congress Votes No on Medical Marijuana

Our side didn't realistically expect to win today so we weren't disappointed.
We did pick up 13 votes from last year's tally though and that shows progress.

However, my Congressman Mike Rogers, was not among them even though he told me that he would not vote against it at our last lobby session.

Write Mike and tell him how you feel about being lied to. I'm sure he would love to hear from you.

You can view this Roll Call List to find out how your Congressman voted.

As for Alabama...we will move forward with our Compassionate Use Act....and we will launch a campaign against every Congressman who voted to continue locking up sick people in direct opposition to the will of the people. It is time to elect officials who hear us when we speak and act accordingly.

War on Crime, Not on Drugs

By Norm Stamper, AlterNet.

In an excerpt from his new book, 'Breaking Rank,' a former police chief describes how America is losing its fight against drugs -- and why we should consider decriminalization.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Officers charged with bringing drugs into jail

BY WILLIAM KLEINKNECHT
Newark Star Ledger

NJ - Essex County authorities yesterday announced charges against two corrections officers accused of smuggling drugs into the county jail and said they expected more arrests to counter the widespread availability of contraband in the facility.

In disclosing the arrests of Malcolm Hughes and Derrick Reynolds, the authorities said street gangs work with corrections officers in peddling drugs, cell phones, tobacco and other commodities in the jail. Hughes was earning up to $1,000 per week for his role in the trade, authorities said.

Paul Bradley, chief of the professional standards bureau in the prosecutor's office, said each of the officers was carrying the drugs inside a Top-brand tobacco pouch. He said Hughes had 23 grams of marijuana in three separate bags and four pills of Ecstasy. Reynolds had 10 Ecstasy pills and 7 grams of marijuana in nine bags, he said.

Medical marijuana backers seek support in Congress

By Richard Cowan

WASHINGTON, June 13 (Reuters) - Supporters of medical marijuana said on Monday they were gaining support in Congress but not enough to pass a measure expected in the U.S. House of Representatives this week that would prevent the federal government from prosecuting patients who use the drug.

Conservative California Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher will team up with liberal New York Democratic Rep. Maurice Hinchey on a measure that would prohibit the U.S. Justice Department from going after patients in 10 states that allow the use of marijuana as prescribed by their doctors.

A vote could come as early as Tuesday when Rohrabacher and Hinchey attempt to attach their amendment to a bill to fund Justice Department activities next year.

Last year, the House defeated similar legislation by a vote of 268-148.

"There's a growing number of Republicans" favoring the legislation, said an aide to Rohrabacher, who asked not to be identified. He noted that four years ago, only Rohrabacher and one other Republican voted to allow medical marijuana use. "We're hoping to get about 30 by tomorrow," he added.

If the measure fails this week, as expected, supporters are expected to try again later this year and in 2006.

Israeli researcher develops cannabis compound with unique anti-cancer action

Israel 21C

Whether or not the potential medical benefits of marijuana outweigh the dangers is a long-debated issue and currently a political hot potato.

A recent Israeli breakthrough adds a new twist: a 25-year old Hebrew University doctoral student has developed a derivative of the cannabis plant which has been shown to be effective in arresting cancerous growths in laboratory and animal tests.

Kogan's accomplishment involved developing new compounds - known as quinonoid cannabinoids - that her research has shown to parallel in their activity a group of anti-cancer drugs, the best known of which is daunomycin.

"Quinonoid cannabinoids are derived from hashish - but when they go through an oxidation process, they takes on the chemical structure of anti-cancer drugs like daunomycin," Kogan told ISRAEL21c.

However, while daunomycin is toxic to the heart, Kogan, with Dr. Ronen Beeri and Dr. Gergana Marincheva of Hadassah University Hospital, Ein Kerem, found that the quinonoid cannabinoids are much less cardiotoxic.

Born in the Ukraine, Kogan immigrated to Israel in 1995 with her parents, and earned B.Pharm and M.Sc degrees at the HU School of Pharmacy, graduating with excellence.

"I've been interested in cancer research for many years. I've actually been sitting in the same school of pharmacy for nine years now," she said with a laugh. "My goal was to develop new drugs, and working as a lab technician for Prof. Mechoulam, I got interested in cannabinoids."

Mechoulam was one of the first researchers to discover the medical potential of cannabis. Cannabis-derived molecules are already used to prevent nausea from chemotherapy, improve the appetite of AIDS patients, alleviate anxiety, and treat sleepwalking.

"Almost every pharmaceutical in the world uses the active ingredients in cannabis as a basis for existing drugs and those under development," Mechoulam told Globes.

Monday, June 13, 2005

POLL: Voters Say "Don't Arrest Medical Marijuana Patients" by 3-1 Margin

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- In a new Mason-Dixon poll released today, registered voters said by a greater than 3-1 margin that they don't want the federal government to arrest medical marijuana patients, even though the Supreme Court has given it permission to do so. In the poll, conducted June 8-11, 68% of voters said medical marijuana patients
should not be arrested, compared to just 16% who said they should.

Responses varied little by party, age, or gender, with 63% of Republicans, 73% of Democrats, and 68% of independents agreeing that
medical marijuana patients should not be arrested. Full details of the survey are available at Mason Dixon Poll .

The survey was released as Supreme Court plaintiff Angel Raichjoined religious and medical leaders in an appeal to Congress to pass the Hinchey-Rohrabacher Amendment, which would bar the Justice Department from using any of its funding to interfere with state
medical marijuana laws. The amendment is expected to be voted on by the House of Representatives as early as Tuesday.

"Last week the Supreme Court said that patients like me must ask Congress to protect us from being arrested and jailed for the simple act of taking our medicine," said Raich, who suffers from an inoperable brain tumor, life-threatening wasting syndrome, and a number of other serious illnesses. "Today, I am asking the House of Representatives to do just that by passing the Hinchey-Rohrabacher Amendment. Every House member needs to understand that a vote against
this amendment is a vote to sentence me to death -- and to sentence many thousands of severely ill Americans to needless suffering and pain."

In a letter being sent to Congress today, the United Methodist Church declares, "Seriously ill people should not be subject to criminal sanctions for using marijuana if the patient's physician has
told the patient that such use is likely to be beneficial. ... We strongly urge you to support an amendment ... that would prohibit the use of federal funds for prosecuting patients, doctors and caregivers who are following state law."

Another letter of support is coming from the American Nurses
Association (ANA), which has consistently supported legal access to medical marijuana. The ANA supported a similar proposal last year,writing, "ANA opposes the U.S. Department of Justice's willingness to pursue seriously ill people who only seek relief from chronic illnesses, and who are complying with their states' laws."

"This new poll confirms that it is not only politically safe for House members to vote to protect patients from arrest, but that it's
politically risky for them to vote to against protecting patients fromarrest," said Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy
Project in Washington, D.C. "This is one of those happy situations where good policy and good politics are one and the same, and we hope Congress is listening."
-----------------------------------------------------------------

You have NO EXCUSE for not using this to encourage your Congressman to vote YES on Hinchey/Rohrbacher

Marijuana use an un-Christian act

Arizona Republic, AZ
Jun. 13, 2005 12:00 AM
letter to the editor

Marijuana is an un-Christian pleasure, therefore illegal. No matter how it helps a medical condition, the illicit pleasure it gives is not permitted. God is in control.

If you are sick and there is treatment that is not illicit and you can afford it, use it; that is what God intended.

However, no one is permitted to do anything illegal just because it makes them feel better or live longer.

Stealing food when you're starving to death is illegal.

So if you're dying and marijuana would help, go to church instead. Find your Mother Teresa for comfort and die.

Or do drugs, go to jail without comfort or marijuana, and die. This is a Christian nation. It's God's rules. Quit complaining.

- John Gatti, Scottsdale

Sunday, June 12, 2005

Hinchey/Rohrbacher Vote on Tuesday

In from MPP

TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005
On Tuesday, the House will meet at 9:00 a.m. for morning hour and 10:00 a.m. for legislative business.
H.R. 2862 - Science, the Departments of State, Justice, and Commerce, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2006 (Subject to a Rule, Begin Consideration) (Sponsored by Rep. Wolf / Appropriations Committee)

There is nothing else on the schedule that day, so the amendment should come up on Tuesday.

You can contact your elected officials in DC at the following links

MPP Action Center

DPA

NORML

The federal medical marijuana laws in the US can only be changed by a Congressional vote since the Supreme Court ruled against Raich. It is IMPERATIVE if you are an American that you contact your elected officials starting right now and tell them to vote YES on Hinchey/Rohrbacher.

Please email, fax and call the office of your Congressman in DC starting tonight (emails and faxes). Call tomorrow and distribute this action alert far and wide and FAST!!!

Drug, sex crimes change racial makeup of prison population

Associated Press

ST. PAUL - Surging sex and methamphetamine convictions are changing the face of Minnesota prisons, resulting in a sharp climb of white inmates.

As of this January, white convicts comprised 58.5 percent of the prison population, which represents a dramatic increase. It's the highest percentage since 1989. Only four years earlier, the inmate population was 46.4 percent white.

In a state where seven of eight Minnesotans are white, the disproportionate number of racial minorities in prison has long been the subject of concern and controversy in Minnesota and around the country.

And the debate could get hotter with a new early release program for drug criminals that was championed by Republican legislators who live far from the inner cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul.

Some find irony in the latest shift in criminal justice policy.

"The surest way to get sentencing reform is to over-incarcerate white people," said Rep. Keith Ellison, DFL-Minneapolis, one of only two blacks in the Legislature (there are also three Asians and one Hispanic). "All of a sudden, folks want to talk about redemption."

Three SOA protesters released from prison

By Dan Renick
Pekin Daily Times

PEKIN (IL) -- Three woman who were incarcerated for trespassing on federal grounds at Ft. Benning, Ga., as an act of civil disobedience were met by family and friends as they were released from Federal Correctional Institution-Pekin Friday morning.

"It was definitely worth it," Liz Deligio said. "I would do it again."

Deligio, 28, Meagan Doty, 22, and Elizabeth Nadeau, 27, were arrested in November at a protest when they crossed the protest line onto the grounds of the U.S. Army's Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, better known as the School of the Americas. The three women were convicted in federal court for trespassing onto government property and spent ninety days in prison.

The SOA, which the protesters refer to as the School of Assassins, is a combat training facility for Latin American soldiers. Protesters claim that the government trains these soldiers to perform terrorist acts in Latin countries.

Deligio, student at Chicago Theological Union, said that she had protested at Ft. Benning before but had never trespassed before November.

"I decided to cross the line because of increased militarization since George Bush has come in," Deligio said. "Since 9/11 they've kept preaching about eradicating terrorism and we do some of the worst in the world.

"They're going to invade another country because of terrorism but they need to look in their own back yard."

Officer Charged With Helping Inmates Attack Another Inmate

Baltimore (AP) - State officials say a 21-year-old state correctional officer has been charged with conspiracy to commit first-degree attempted murder in the stabbing of an inmate at the Baltimore City Detention Center.

According to the Baltimore Sun, correctional officer Sherman Lawrence is accused of helping two inmates stab a third inmate, 26-year-old Ronald Scott.

Lawrence is accused of ordering Scott into a recreation area with other inmates and then ordered everyone out of the room, except for Scott and three others.

Authorities say 24-year-old inmate Donte Smith and another man threw a sheet over Scott's head, and someone stabbed him in the head and body.

The bleeding inmate was ordered back into his cell, where he was found during a security check.

Officials say Smith has been charged with attempted murder and Sherman was fired.

Saturday, June 11, 2005

Officials: Fla. Men Forced to Work at Farm

By MIKE SCHNEIDER
The Associated Press
Saturday, June 11, 2005; 9:06 AM

EAST PALATKA, Fla. -- A farm labor contractor has been accused of luring homeless men into indentured servitude by forcing them to work off debts from the purchase of alcohol and crack cocaine, authorities said.

Officials are investigating whether conditions at the farmworker camp run by labor contractor Ronald Robert Evans _ which was raided earlier this month by federal and local agents _ amounted to modern-day slavery.


Amendment XIII - Slavery Abolished. Ratified 12/6/1865.

1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

The 13th Amendment says only the government can own slaves. The government does not appreciate these fellows in Florida moving in on their territory.

Militia chief to stay in Colombia

BBC

Diego Murillo, also known as Don Berna, turned himself in last month after a three-day manhunt.

The US wants him extradited, but a senior minister said any decision would rest with President Alvaro Uribe.

Mr Murillo's role as a negotiator for the far right AUC group grants him effective immunity under Colombia's ongoing peace process.

Colombia's interior and justice minister, Sabas Pretelt, said that all legal proceedings against Mr Murillo would be suspended as long as he remains in peace talks.

Colombia's government is attempting to negotiate a settlement with right-wing paramilitary groups, who are blamed for a string of massacres throughout the country.

Energy firm sends pot farms up in smoke

By Andrew Ellson
Times Online UK

Utility company British Gas has been living up to its slogan of "doing the right thing" by helping the police uncover £8.5 million-worth of illegally-grown cannabis.

The energy firm stumbled upon nearly 50 secret cannabis farms while investigating electricity theft. It reported its findings to the authorities.

The illegal operations based in London, the South East, Merseyside, Nottingham and West Yorkshire, had all rigged their power supplies to by-pass the company’s electricity meters. The power was being used to run hi-tech hydroponic lamps needed to grow super skunk, a potent, hybrid version of the cannabis plant.

The company estimates that small-scale cannabis farms use around £3,000 of electricity each year - ten times the average domestic electricity bill.


Hydroponic lamps?

A Letter to My Friend Who Supports the Drug War

by James Muhm
lewrockwell.com

My friend, we’ve been discussing this war on drugs for quite a while, and whether or not it is doing anything to reduce drug use. We both agree that most drugs, particularly “hard” drugs, have a harmful and debilitating effect on most persons who use them. And yet, is the metaphorical war on drugs doing what it is supposed to do? Let’s see.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Sensenbrenner Cuts Mics, STORMS out of Patriot Act Hearing

VIA RAW STORY Chairman walked off with gavel, Democrats 'were shouting'

A furor erupted after Republican House Judiciary Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner shut off the microphones during a hearing on the Patriot Act Friday, accusing Democrats of raising issues unrelated to the Act such as treatment of detainees at Guantanamo Bay, RAW STORY has learned.

The Democrats' leader in the House, Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), called the move a "shameful attempt today to silence Democrats at hearing this morning on the impact of the Patriot Act," and demanded the Republican leadership force Sensenbrenner to apologize.


READ MORE

Lawmakers debate options for mentally ill prison populations

By Cyndi Roy / State House News Service
Thursday, June 9, 2005

Reading Advocate, MA -By sending mentally ill criminal offenders to prison instead of treating their sickness, the state is wasting money and potentially endangering those in the communities offenders return to, supporters of decriminalization bills told lawmakers Monday.
“There has to be a better way,” Toby Fisher, executive director of the National Alliance of Mentally Ill Massachusetts, told a legislative committee conducting a hearing on related bills. “We are spending too much money taking care of the mentally ill in correctional facilities. It’s an expensive form of treatment and it’s not treatment at all.”
More than a quarter of nearly 10,000 state prisoners are receiving mental health services, including more than 60 percent of the female inmate population, according to the state Department of Corrections. Nationally, there are more mental illness sufferers in the criminal justice system than there are in psychiatric hospitals, decriminalization proponents said, citing Human Rights Campaign data.

Judge lets prison guard take a vacation before he goes to jail

Associated Press

DELAWARE, Ohio - A former juvenile-prison guard who admitted he had sex with a 16-year-old female inmate has been sentenced to 60 days in jail to be served on weekends - after he first takes a vacation with his family.

Delaware County Common Pleas Judge W. Duncan Whitney initially ordered Cardinal Paige, 47, to start serving his sentence on June 17. But then he agreed to postpone the start by one week after Paige's attorney said the assigned time interfered with his client's vacation plans.

Paige, of Pataskala, told the court he was sorry for his actions and regretted his mistakes.

"There is no question in the court's mind that you have shown remorse," Whitney said. It was clear, too, Whitney said, that Paige's victim was partially responsible.

Prosecutor David Yost objected to the request.

Paige pleaded guilty in April to charges of attempted sexual battery and use of a minor in nudity-oriented material.

After his plea, prosecutors dismissed the nudity-oriented-material charge because they discovered the victim in that case was not a minor. She was 20.

Paige is among 12 employees at the Scioto Juvenile Correctional Facility indicted on felony charges of abusing and endangering inmates.

Pot found inside inmate's peanut butter-jelly sandwich

Associated Press

THOMASVILLE, Ga. - There was more than P-B-and-J in one prisoner's sandwich. Authorities say there was P-O-T, too.

According to jailers in Thomas County, Ga., prisoner Curtis Hall had some marijuana hidden in his peanut butter-and-jelly sandwich. Thomas County Prison officials say Hall returned from an outside work detail with the sandwich.

Guards say they found about three grams of marijuana wrapped in plastic between the peanut butter and the jelly. Hall is now in a new jam, charged with drug possession. He'll also be transferred to a different prison.

Jail Officer Investigated for Theft of Inmate's Prescription Drugs

WBAY,

WI - A Fond du Lac County jailer has resigned amid allegations he stole prescription medication from the jail.

The officer is accused of taking about 15 tablets of Vicodin from a jail inmate's prescription.

Another corrections officer noticed the pain medication missing during routine counts last month.

The sheriff's department expects to refer the case to the district attorney next week for possible charges.

Senate OKs medical marijuana but governor says he will veto bill

By Joe Baker/Daily News staff

PROVIDENCE - In a powerful show of support, the Senate Tuesday voted 34-2 to allow Rhode Islanders to smoke marijuana to ease the symptoms of debilitating illnesses.

The vote came a day after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that federal laws against marijuana use trump states' medical marijuana laws. The decision overturned a 2003 federal appeal court ruling that California's medical marijuana law prevented federal law enforcement officials from prosecuting those with marijuana prescriptions.

Sponsored by Sen. Rhoda E. Perry, D-Providence, the legislation would direct the Department of Health to issue licenses to patients diagnosed with "a debilitating medical condition," including cancer, glaucoma, AIDS, Hepatitis C, multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease and Alzheimer's disease.

Qualifying patients would be able to grow up to 12 marijuana plants or possess up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana without fear of state prosecution. The bill also would exempt two "primary caregivers" who would help the patient procure marijuana.

The Senate amended the bill to title it the Edward O. Hawkins Medical Marijuana Act in honor of Perry's nephew, who suffered for several years before dying of AIDS in 2004. Marijuana might have eased her nephew's "morphine induced dementia" and "ever-present pain," Perry said.

The bill also was changed to exempt practitioners, nurses and pharmacists from prosecution if they discuss the benefits or health risks of smoking marijuana with their patients.

Rep. Thomas C. Slater, D-Providence, the sponsor of the House version of the legislation and a cancer survivor, was overjoyed with the lopsided vote.

"This isn't about federal court rulings," Slater said. "This is about compassion for people who need help."

Slater said his bill will be amended to mirror the Senate bill and he expects the House Health, Education and Welfare Committee to pass the bill, possibly next week.

If the full House follows suit it will have to do so by a veto-proof margin since Gov. Donald L. Carcieri has vowed to veto the bill if it reaches his desk. Carcieri is taking no position on the medical benefits or health risks of smoking marijuana, his spokesman Jeff Neal said. The governor's objections are all on legal grounds, Neal said.

"This would give Rhode Islanders a false sense of security, placing them in jeopardy of federal prosecution," Neal said, noting the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling Monday.

Vancouver may urge Canada to legalize marijuana

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 8 (Reuters) - Vancouver, the West Coast Canadian city whose drug-treatment programs have drawn the wrath of U.S. officials, may press the federal government to legalize and tax marijuana, according to a published report on Wednesday.

Regulating marijuana as a legal substance would allow drug counselors to use the same types of programs now in place to fight alcohol abuse and tobacco smoking, according to a city proposal quoted by the Vancouver Sun.

Vancouver, with a population of about 2 million in its greater metropolitan area, already has a reputation of taking a more easy-going attitude toward marijuana use than the rest of Canada. A handful of cafes in Vancouver cater to pot smokers even though the drug remains illegal.

Marijuana-growing is a major illegal industry in British Columbia, with reports estimating it has a more than C$2 billion ($1.6 billion) annual impact on the province's economy. Much of the potent "B.C. Bud" produced in the Pacific Coast province is smuggled into the United States.

Physicians and Consumers Approve of Medicinal Marijuana Use

FLEMINGTON, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 9, 2005--A new national survey of physicians and members of the general public shows that a clear majority approves of using marijuana for medicinal purposes to relieve chronic fatigue and pain.

The national web survey was conducted by HCD Research and the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion (MCIPO) during June 7-8, as part of their continuing investigation of the social, political and economic issues confronting the U.S. health care system.

The study conducted among 911 physicians and 1,192 members of the general public indicates that both groups share parallel views on this issue.

Among the findings:

-- The majority of physicians (73%) and members of the general public (78%) report that they approve of marijuana use to alleviate symptoms such as chronic fatigue, nausea and pain commonly associated with AIDS, cancer and glaucoma.

-- 75% of physicians and 80% of the general public believe that the federal government should not be able to prosecute people who use, grow or obtain marijuana prescribed by a doctor for chronic fatigue and pain.

-- More than three fourths of physicians (76%) and the public at large (82%) approve of state laws allowing the use of marijuana to alleviate chronic fatigue and pain.

"As we have seen in earlier studies, physicians' and the general publics' views are generally in accord with one another," noted Glenn Kessler, co-founder and managing partner, HCD Research. "In this poll, physicians expressed a similar level of support for medicinal marijuana use as they did in our previous research relating to issues such stem cell research, physician-assisted suicide and the Terri Schiavo case."

MCIPO Director Chris Borick noted, "The survey results indicate that both physicians and the public maintain views on the use of medicinal marijuana that contrast with the recent Supreme Court decision that supports federal restrictions on the use of medicinal marijuana even when a state permits such use."

License of Doctor Accused of Growing Marijuana Suspended

AP

(Columbus) -- A state medical board has suspended the license of a doctor accused of growing marijuana in his home.
An emergency order by the Indiana Health Professions Bureau says that Dr. Arnaldo Trabucco, a urologist, is prohibited from practicing medicine in Indiana until the suspension is resolved.

Trabucco and his wife, Pamela, face charges of possession of marijuana. Bartholomew County sheriff's deputies and U.S. postal inspectors found marijuana plants growing in the couple's Columbus house. He was arrested April 28th.

Trabucco practiced in the New York City region from 1987 to 2003, when he came to Columbus Regional Hospital in southern Indiana.

He's been published in major medical journals, and he is a member of several professional medical societies and associations.

An initial hearing is set for later this month.

GW Pharma sinks on new cannabis drug blow

LONDON (Reuters) - GW Pharmaceuticals has lost an appeal with UK regulators and will have to produce more data on its pioneering cannabis medicine, delaying its launch, the firm said on Friday, whacking its shares.

GW said regulators, who had asked for more data on its experimental drug Sativex in December, had turned down its appeal against this decision and that results of a new clinical trial would not be available until the spring of 2006.

Julie Simmonds, an analyst at Nomura, said the delay could mean GW will have to raise money over the next year, as it would now no longer get a 14 million pound payment from partner Bayer AG, due on UK regulatory approval.

At 0751 GMT, the shares were down 14.7 percent at 81-1/2 pence, after touching a near 3-year low of 81p.

The stock, which floated at 182 pence in 2001, had already fallen heavily this week on a report from online medical agency Agence de Presse Medical that GW would lose its UK appeal.

Although Sativex is approved in Canada for the relief of neuropathic pain in multiple sclerosis, UK officials said in December they wanted more evidence about its efficacy when used to relieve spasticity.

Sativex was initially expected to be approved in Britain by the end of 2003, but has suffered numerous delays. The under-the-tongue spray is GW's most advanced product.

Man Shot by Mo. Police Loses $2M Judgment

By Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- A federal appeals court tossed out a $2 million judgment a jury awarded to a man who was shot by Kansas City police during a 1998 drug raid.

In its 8-4 ruling Monday, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis said police had a right to raid David Doran's home in August 1998 without knocking or announcing themselves.

Police were looking for a methamphetamine lab and shot Doran twice after he came out of his bedroom with a gun.

Doran said he was asleep when the raid began and was shot as he tried to surrender. Police said Doran was shot after he did not comply with two orders to "Get down!" He spent 16 days in the hospital and eventually lost his only functioning kidney.

Officers found no methamphetamine but did recover a small amount of marijuana, which Doran acknowledged using.

Doran's attorney, David Smith, said he plans to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Courts have allowed unannounced entries if police can show a threat of violence or a risk that evidence would be destroyed.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Culkin Pleads Guilty to Drug Charges

OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma (AP) -- Former child star Macaulay Culkin pleaded guilty Wednesday to misdemeanor charges of possession of medication without a prescription and marijuana and was given a deferred sentence.

Culkin, star of the "Home Alone" films, was arrested September 17 after police stopped a car in which he was a passenger. Officers found over a half-ounce of marijuana and several tablets of Xanax, a prescription medication used to treat depression and panic disorders, court records show.

He was given 1-year deferred sentences on each of the charges and was assessed $540 in fees.

Assistant District Attorney Greg Mashburn said Culkin had completed all requirements of his probation before coming to court, including passing a drug and alcohol assessment.

"This was a rare circumstance for Mr. Culkin," Mashburn said. "He was not an abuser."

Since when does the prosecutor get to determine what constitutes "use" and what constitutes "abuse" and where is it written in law that "abusers" should be punished more harshly than "users"? I wonder how many "users" are sitting in Oklahoma prison cells today? Considering their drug laws are as draconian as Alabama's I'd wager a great many.

Culkin, 24, arrived in court about 10 minutes before his case, wearing a gray suit and a white open-collared shirt. He made no audible comments.

He testified recently in the Michael Jackson child molestation case, saying he spent time with Jackson as a boy and was never molested

Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana on Ashcroft v. Raich

BRIEF OF THE STATES OF ALABAMA,
LOUISIANA, AND MISSISSIPPI
AS AMICI CURIAE
IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENTS

10/13/04

INTEREST OF AMICI
The Court should make no mistake: The States of
Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi do not appear here
to champion (or even to defend) the public policies
underlying California’s so-called “compassionate use” law.
As a matter of drug-control policy, the amici States are
basically with the Federal Government on this one. We
agree wholeheartedly that drug abuse is one of the
Nation’s “most important public health problem[s]”1 and
is “undercutting traditional values and threatening the
very existence of stable families, communities, and
government institutions,”2 and we are fully committed to
partnering with the Federal Government in a vigorous
prosecution of the war on drugs.

This, accordingly, is not a brief of “[d]rug legalization
advocates”3 or “pro-marijuana activists.”4 Far from it.
With respect to the issue at hand, the amici States’
Legislatures have enacted, their Attorneys General have
enforced, and their courts have routinely sustained
statutes broadly criminalizing marijuana possession and,
depending on the circumstances, punishing violators with
up to 10 years in prison for a first offense. See, e.g., Ala.
Code §§13A-5-6, 13A-5-7, 13A-12-213, 13A-12-214.
Indeed, the lead amicus here, Alabama, has apparently
earned something of a reputation for its zeal in
prosecuting and punishing drug crimes. See E.
Nadelmann, An End to Marijuana Prohibition, National
Review, p.28 (July 12, 2004) (“Alabama currently locks up
people convicted three times of marijuana possession for
15 years to life.”). It is not a reputation of which Alabama
is embarrassed or ashamed. On the contrary, Alabama’s
Attorney General has every intention of continuing to
prosecute drug crimes to the fullest extent of the law.

Drug-control policy aside, the amici States also
disagree with respondents’ contention that there is
embedded in the Constitution (whether in the Due
Process Clause, the Ninth Amendment, or elsewhere) a
“fundamental right” – however defined – to smoke or
otherwise ingest marijuana. Alabama, for instance, has
consistently urged this Court not to divine new,
unenumerated rights from the Constitution’s open-textured
provisions and, instead, to leave difficult social
policy choices to elected state legislatures. See, e.g., Br. of
the States of Alabama, et al., Roper v. Simmons, No. 03-
633; Br. for the States of Alabama, et al., as Amici Curiae,
Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003) (No. 02-102); Br.
for Amici Curiae States of California, Alabama, et al.,
Washington v. Glucksburg, 521 U.S. 702 (1997) (No. 96-
110). The amici States’ position here is no different.

From the amici States’ perspective, however, this is
not a case about drug-control policy or fundamental
rights. This is a case about “our federalism,” which
“requires that Congress treat the States in a manner
consistent with their status as residuary sovereigns and
joint participants in the governance of the Nation.” Alden
v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 748 (1999). The Government
apparently does not view the federalism issue in this case
as a serious one. See U.S. Br. 13 (“It is clear that
Congress has the authority ….” (emphasis added)). We
respectfully disagree. And, just as individual States have
intervened to challenge laudatory (and popular)
congressional statutes on federalism grounds before, see,
e.g., Br. for the State of Alabama as Amicus Curiae,
United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 598 (2000) (Nos. 99-5,
99-29), the amici States perceive a need to do so here.

While the amici States may not see eye to eye with
some of their neighbors concerning the wisdom of
decriminalizing marijuana possession and use in certain
instances,5 they support their neighbors’ prerogative in
our federalist system to serve as “laboratories for
experimentation.” United States v. Lopez, 514 U.S. 549,
581 (1995) (Kennedy, J., concurring). As Justice Brandeis
famously remarked, “[i]t is one of the happy incidents of
the federal system that a single courageous State may, if
its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory; and try novel
social and economic experiments without risk to the rest
of the country.” New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 285 U.S.
262, 311 (1932) (Brandeis, J., dissenting). Whether
California and the other compassionate-use States are
“courageous” – or instead profoundly misguided – is not
the point. The point is that, as a sovereign member of the
federal union, California is entitled to make for itself the
tough policy choices that affect its citizens. By stepping
in here, under the guise of regulating interstate
commerce, to stymie California’s “experiment[],” Congress
crossed the constitutional line.



AMICI CURIAE BRIEF PDF here.

Alabama State Motto: We Dare Defend Our Rights

Montgomery Advertiser Supports Alabama Compassionate Use Act

Alabama bill deserves debate

The Supreme Court's ruling this week on the use of marijuana for medical purposes came in a California case, but it deserves a close look here in Alabama. During the regular session of the Legislature, a measure to allow the medical use of marijuana under tightly controlled circumstances was debated, but the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee urged his colleagues not to vote on the bill until the Supreme Court ruled in the California case.

That ruling came Monday, and was a huge disappointment to many who see the therapeutic effects of marijuana for some disease sufferers as justification for allowing its use in certain cases. In a 6-3 decision, the court held that those who use marijuana for medical purposes can be prosecuted for violating federal drug laws.

The majority opinion notes that the court is not making a judgment about the value of marijuana for medical purposes, but does find that the federal regulation of homegrown marijuana as interstate commerce is permissible under the Constitution.

Here in Alabama, the medical use of marijuana is a ticklish subject in a state with notoriously harsh drug laws. However, as the Advertiser argued during the debate over the bill by Rep. Laura Hall, D-Huntsville, there is a strong case to be made for taking the side of compassion and allowing closely regulated use of marijuana for medical purposes rather than rigidly making its use and possession a crime in all cases.

There is ample evidence that some medical conditions, particularly some that involve chronic pain, respond better to marijuana than to conventional pharmaceuticals. That provides a legitimate medical basis for a serious debate of the bill.

At the same times, there is also plenty of legitimate concern that allowing the medical use of marijuana would undercut the anti-drug messages aimed at youth. The president of the state chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics warned that allowing the medical use of marijuana "gives credibility to a drug that is mind-altering and would be abused."

But the medical community is divided on the issue. Some physicians contend that the benefits to patients outweigh any such risks. Dr. Michael Saag, professor of medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and director of the AIDS center there, says the blanket ban on marijuana use is "anachronistic" and reflects an outdated view of marijuana as having no possible useful purpose.

Unlike the California law, Hall's bill does not allow the use of homegrown marijuana for medical purposes, but instead would require it to be dispensed through prescription. It requires a diagnosis by a doctor "in the course of a bona fide physician-patient relationship" that the patient has "a debilitating medical condition and the potential benefits of the medical use of marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks for the qualifying patient." The Department of Public Health would issue an identification card for the qualifying patient.

To be sure, the concerns about possible abuse should not be discounted, but there should be some way to allow the closely regulated medical use of marijuana for alleviating the suffering of people for whom conventional pharmaceuticals are not effective.

Alabama's Rep. Laura Hall Says Supreme Court Ruling Doesn't Matter

STATE MEDICAL MARIJUANA ADVOCATE TO KEEP TRYING

MONTGOMERY (AP) -- An Alabama legislator pushing for the legalization of marijuana for medical purposes said a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Monday against medical marijuana statutes won't dissuade her.

Rep. Laura Hall, D-Huntsville, said she will be back with her bill because she believes it gets around problems that the Supreme Court found with medical marijuana laws in other states.

In a 6-3 ruling Monday, the Supreme Court said state laws can't defy the federal Controlled Substances Act that makes marijuana illegal, and people who smoke marijuana because their doctors recommend it to ease pain can be prosecuted for violating federal drug laws.

The decision focused on California's law, but it affected similar laws in nine other states.

In the session of the Legislature that ended in May, Hall proposed allowing doctors to prescribe marijuana to patients with chronic or persistent medical conditions ranging from AIDS to migraine headaches.

Homegrown Marijuana

Hall's bill originally was similar to California's by providing for homegrown marijuana.

But with California's case pending before the nation's highest court, she began to modify her bill.

The final version abandoned homegrown marijuana. Instead, it provided for strict government control, with the marijuana being dispensed by prescription through pharmacies, she said.

Hall's bill got approved by the House Judiciary Committee in the closing days of the legislative session, but was never debated by the House.

She said she plans to bring it back when the Legislature's next regular session begins in January.
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Go Larua Hall Go!!

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

More Double Standards

US MS: Police Intend To Pursue Facts 'Vigorously'
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n898/a10.html

POLICE INTEND TO PURSUE FACTS 'VIGOROUSLY'

Chief: Officer's Breach Of Public Trust Affects All

Biloxi police officers, stunned by a co-worker's arrest on Ecstasy charges, will keep their chins up and hope they're not judged for his alleged mistake, said Police Chief Bruce Dunagan.

The arrest Thursday of K-9 Officer Darrell D. Cvitanovich Jr. casts a cloud of suspicion not only on the Biloxi Police Department, but on law enforcement officers nationwide, said Dunagan.

News of the 14-year officer's arrest came while police officials from around the state were in Biloxi for a training conference of the Mississippi Association of Chiefs of Police. Part of the training involved professional standards and discipline of officers who fall short.

"Like in any other profession, people are human and the vast majority are good citizens. Our men and women are professionals and well-trained," said Dunagan.
How come this mentality is adopted when it is a police officer breaking the law and not an ordinary citizen. Citizen Joe Blow who is caught with Ecstacy or any other illicit drug is made to look like scum of the earth by the police and the media.

Cvitanovich was off duty when an alleged drug sale took place, said Pope.

"We tried to defuse the situation as best we could," said Pope. "We knew he was armed by virtue of being a police officer. We knew he had weapons in the house. We knew he had a $10,000 canine trained to respond to aggression.

"His dog was in a kennel in the back yard. But we didn't just go busting in on him. That would have been inviting trouble."


Here again you have the application of DOUBLE STANDARDS. Police had no problem Shooting Other Dogs and people and inviting trouble during other raids where the suspect was likely armed.

Read More...

Medical Marijuana Plan B

I was out of town on the day the Supreme Court handed down the Raich Opinion and still have not had time to fully analyze the decision.

One thing really jumps out at me and that is;

The Supreme Court acknowledged the medicinal value of cannabis

Pete Guither over at DrugWarRant has been covering this issue in depth from the very beginning so I am going to send you to his site for some of the the very best coverage on the net as well as recommended action.

I take the Pledge!

Also visit The Drug Policy Alliance website and contact your US Congressman to demand support for The Hinchey/Rohrabacher Amendment which would cut all federal funding for raids on patients, caregivers and physicians in states where medical marijuana is legal.

I'll write more on the decision when I have had more time to absorb it.

Friday, June 03, 2005

State joins shape-up program for youths

MONTGOMERY - Alabama will participate in a federal program designed to help the state keep its children slim in a state that is getting fatter.

The program - called "We Can!" - advocates more exercise, less television and less food to cut down on childhood obesity.

"It's such a serious problem," said Karen Donato, coordinator for the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Obesity Education Initiative in Bethesda, Md., a suburb of Washington.

"There was a lack of providing information for parents," Donato said. "We felt we needed to fill that niche."

"We need to act now to prevent obesity in our children," said NIH Director Dr. Elias Zerhouni in a release. "Obesity is a high priority of the NIH. This year, we will spend about $440 million on a wide range of research on this important problem."


The government would have us believe parents are incompetent at best and abusers at worst.

The government would have us believe people are too stupid to be trusted with basic decisions such as what foods to eat.

The government is jealous of the family's role in influencing the individual.

The government says the clockwork oranges have grown too plump and must be adjusted.

All hail the therapeutic state!

"If people let government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny." - Thomas Jefferson

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Dogs in New York

Cops shoot dog in home drug raid; 2 people arrested
06/02/05

Police Shoot Attacking Pit Bull, Women During Drug Raid
05/29/05

Drug raid SWAT team fires at pit bull, hits boy
05/27/05

The Downing Street Memo

Join 89 Members of Congress in requesting that President Bush provide answers concerning the Downing Street Memo.
Sign on to the request at Representative John Conyers' website.

johnconyers.com

Letter to President Bush

Milton Friedman: Legalize It!

Forbes

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - A founding father of the Reagan Revolution has put his John Hancock on a pro-pot report.

Milton Friedman leads a list of more than 500 economists from around the U.S. who today will publicly endorse a Harvard University economist's report on the costs of marijuana prohibition and the potential revenue gains from the U.S. government instead legalizing it and taxing its sale. Ending prohibition enforcement would save $7.7 billion in combined state and federal spending, the report says, while taxation would yield up to $6.2 billion a year.

The report, "The Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Prohibition," (available at www.prohibitioncosts.org) was written by Jeffrey A. Miron, a professor at Harvard , and largely paid for by the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), a Washington, D.C., group advocating the review and liberalization of marijuana laws.

Brain Police Target Youth

TeenScreen: A Front Group for the Psycho-Pharmaceutical Industrial Complex

teenscreen.org

Bush's Texas Two-Step: TeenScreen and TMAP

Bush, Columbia University & "TeenScreen®" Program
The "Teen Screen Program" is a Mental Illness Screening Program put out by Columbia University, the same group that has been designated by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) to review the studies on SSRI-antidepressants inducing self-harm & suicide in children... Conflict of Interests!


SAMHSA Announces Funding Opportunities
SAMHSA recently announced several grant-funding opportunities for Fiscal Year 2005


Teen study stats shock
Bradenton Herald
Manatee, FL
06/02/05

Nearly one out of every five students who took the Youth Risk Behavior Survey last year admitted they had tried at least once to kill themselves.

Those students were just 14 and 15 years old, freshmen and sophomores in Manatee high schools, said Karen Stewart, chairwoman of the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Task Force.


Apparently the "Bush plans to screen whole US population for mental illness" headlines were troubling so now we have the GARRETT LEE SMITH MEMORIAL ACT focusing on teen suicide prevention which sounds much nicer on the surface and will ease the population into the idea of accepting screening.

Deputies arrest George County man after large indoor marijuana operation found

By ROYCE ARMSTRONG

BENNDALE, MS -- George County sheriff's deputies arrested Rusty Bone, 42, near his home at 113 Holly Drive in the Pascagoula River Estates subdivision near Benndale.

On Wednesday at approximately 5 p.m., Bone was charged with manufacturing marijuana and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute after authorities executed two search warrants on two adjacent residences occupied by Bone.

The raid was conducted by a joint force of officers from the George County Sheriff's Department, the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics, the South Mississippi Narcotics Task Force, the Jackson County Narcotics Task Force and the Mississippi National Guard Counter Drug Unit.

Neighbors were surprised.

"He moved here about four or five years ago. He was very low profile. We had no idea that was going on," said Connie Carlson, a neighbor. "He seemed like a nice person. It is really sad that the little boy had to see his daddy arrested."

Marijuana eradication is a bust

By Mazie Aldrich
The Daily Sentinel
Scottsboro, Alabama
Published June 1, 2005

Helicopters took to the skies in Jackson County throughout the Memorial Day weekend in anticipation of eradicating cannabis (marijuana).

Jackson County Chief Investigator Chuck Phillips said no marijuana was found during the fly-overs.

The Governor’s Marijuana Eradication Task Force which consists of the Alabama Bureau of Investigation, Alabama State Troopers, Alabama Air National Guard and the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department searched Jackson County Friday through Sunday.

In years past it was not uncommon to find hundreds if not thousands of the plants.

“Marijuana is just not the prevalent drug in Jackson County. Meth is,” Phillips said. “We are sure there is some pot out there, but we couldn’t see. Maybe we will have better luck next year.”

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

Marijuana Found at Elementary School

WTAP-TV, WV

The Washington County Sheriff's Department has discovered a single marijuana plant.

However, it's not the quantity, but rather the location where it was growing, that has parents upset.

Recess at Bartlett Elementary: children swinging, playing basketball and only a few feet away, a marijuana plant is growing.

Washington County Sheriff Larry Mincks says, "This could've been one plant or one of several. We do not know."

Mincks says a custodian noticed the plant on Wednesday and reported it to Principal Stephanie Starcher.

The Sheriff's Department was called out to destroy the plant and search for more like it.

Mike and Stephanie Sydenstricker live only one block away from the school. The two have three girls. One is in 4th grade, the other two will be at Bartlett Elementary soon.

Stephanie says she is concerned over the discovery.

"To have it in the area that close, and my girls are outside all the time."

Sheriff Mincks says this is not a natural-growing plant. He believes it was part of an indoor growing operation that someone had transferred, but who did it?

"I don't have an idea who would've done it, but it's hard to tell. There's all kinds of young kids (driving age) who are playing basketball," Mike Sydenstricker guesses.

"I would say it is probably someone who is familiar with the area, because what they do after they move them outside is they have to be taken care of," says Sheriff Mincks.


Run for the hills! It's a weed!
This story is complete with amusing video.

The government's deliberate campaign of demonization coupled with harm maximization produces this kind of irrational, superstitious anti-weed hysteria.
What was the weed gonna do, jump up out of the ground and force the children into prostitution?
If you stood in that schoolyard and pointed in any random direction you would most likely be pointing at something more toxic and potentially harmfull to the children than the herb. This includes the dirt they are standing on and the clothes they are wearing.

Doctor details prison deaths

By Mark Gladstone
Mercury News Sacramento Bureau

As many as 64 inmates die unnecessarily in California prisons each year -- the most dramatic example of a public-health emergency engulfing the state correctional system, a court-appointed medical expert testified Tuesday.

Michael Puisis, a physician who wrote the only textbook on prison health care, told a federal judge he had not seen such a level of ``macabre'' prison deaths anywhere else in the nation. He described medical charts at one institution gathering dust in an old locked trailer; a physician who may have contributed to the paralysis of an injured inmate; and another doctor who prescribed cough medicine for a case of asthma.

Legislature assembles evidence for case against marijuana

BILL: Governor hopes to raise penalties for use and possession.

By TIMOTHY INKLEBARGER
The Associated Press

JUNEAU, AK -- Possession of small amounts of marijuana at home for personal use will soon be challenged by the state, based on a body of information being compiled by the Legislature.

A proposal by Gov. Frank Murkowski seeks to increase the penalties for marijuana use and possession. It also opens a forum for lawmakers to hear "expert testimony on the effects of marijuana and to make findings that the courts can rely on in cases where marijuana is an issue," according to the governor.

The Alaska Supreme Court made possession of up to four ounces of marijuana for use at home by adults legal in 1975 in the landmark Ravin vs. state of Alaska decision. The ruling said the state must show a substantial relationship between private use of marijuana and the public welfare.

Home invasion call turns into pot bust

By Kim Lyons
TRIBUNE-REVIEW

A Mt. Washington man who called police to report his home was being burglarized was arrested this morning when police found marijuana plants growing in his backyard.

Officers arrived at 335 Kambach St. about 2:30 a.m. today, after tenant Joseph Wirth, 27, called from a neighbor's house to report a home invasion in progress at his house, police said.

Wirth told police two men burst through the front door, one brandishing a gun, and told him, "don't move or we'll shoot you," police said. Wirth said he ran out the front door to a neighbor's home.

Police arrested one of the burglars, but the other escaped. During a foot chase through the yard, officers discovered the marijuana plants, police said.

Police believe the burglars knew there was marijuana in the yard, but Wirth told them he did not recognize either of the men. The value of the marijuana is estimated at $2,000, police said.

Gary Mays, 23, of McKees Rocks, is charged with burglary, robbery, conspiracy and possession of marijuana, police said.

Wirth is charged with a list of drug violations, including possession, intent to deliver, manufacturing drugs, distribution and possession of paraphernalia, police said.

State Cashes In On Medical Pot

CBS 5

Oregon lawmakers have discovered an unexpected source of revenue—medical marijuana.

When Oregon began its medical marijuana program six years ago, officials didn’t expect it to grow so fast. Now, there are more than 10,400 registered patients who have produced a surplus of $1.1 million.

Hungry to balance Oregon’s lopsided budget, House legislators voted 49-10 last week to siphon $900,000 of that money to pay for other Human Services’ needs. The bill now moves to the Senate.

Barry Kast, the agency’s assistant director for health services, said the department was left with no choice after “three years of cuts, cuts, cuts.”

But backers of medical marijuana say that the surplus should be poured back into the program, not Human Services.

“If any of this money came from the general fund, I’d agree that some of it should be transferred back. But the medical marijuana program never cost the taxpayer a dime,” said Dr. Rick Bayer, a physician who was the chief petitioner of the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act, which passed in 1998.

Citizen's Drug Task Force is setting up headquarters and rehabilitation center

Walker County, GA

Fundraiser
What: Fundraiser for Walker County Citizen's Drug Task Force
When: June 10 at 5:30 p.m.
Who: Open to the public by RSVP to (706) 638-5829 or (423) 718-7621.
Cost: $25 per plate, other tax-deductible donations accepted. Includes barbecue, live music, Civil War reenactment, and fishing.
Where: 3450 Ringgold Road in LaFayette. To get there from north U.S. 27 and Ga.136, turn right onto Lake Howard Road. Turn left onto Ringgold Road.


Sounds fun except for the no-drugs thing.