Sept. 4, 2009 #616 |
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- * Breaking News (04/26/24)
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- * This Just In
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(1) Entrepreneurs Discover Gold As 'Pot Culture' Wafts Into Mainstream
(2) Editorial: Don't Bogart That Research
(3) Juarez Massacre Chillingly Routine
(4) The War On Drugs Is Immoral Idiocy, We Need The Courage Of Argentina
- * Weekly News in Review
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Drug Policy-
COMMENT: (5-8)
(5) U.S. Turns Blind Eye As Partner Legalize Drugs
(6) Madigan, Fed Drug Czar Address Meth Problems With Local Officials
(7) Agency Retracts Latino Warning
(8) Horgan Recall Effort Dies In Court
Law Enforcement & Prisons-
COMMENT: (9-12)
(9) Prisoner Prosecution Wastes Tax Money
(10) Man Wins Back Suspected Drug Money In Rare Fight
(11) A Year Of Living Dangerously Takes A Toll On Undercover Memphis Officer
(12) Inmates Used Drugs Testing Kit To Outwit Prison Authorities
Cannabis & Hemp-
COMMENT: (13-16)
(13) Schizophrenia Link To Cannabis Denied
(14) Buds May Blunt Booze's Abuse Of Brain
(15) Pot Shops Mobilize To Fight LA's Crackdown
(16) Clear The Haze On Medical Pot
International News-
COMMENT: (17-20)
(17) Calderon Reports Gains In Drug Fight
(18) U.N. Sees Afghan Drug Cartels Emerging
(19) Police Set Their Sights On 'Legal Highs'
(20) Residents Can Vote On New Name For Hwy. 420
- * Hot Off The 'Net
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Massacre At Mexico Drug Rehab Center - AP Video
Sgt. Northcutt's Post-Iraq Nightmare: Getting Arrested For Growing Pot
Drug Truth Network
Cruel Treatment Of Medical Marijuana Patient
A Radical Solution To End The Drug War: Legalize Everything
Obama, Ignoring Local Outrage / Moira Birss
A Protest/Memorial For Marilyn Holsten
Canadian MDMA/PTSD Study Poised To Begin
- * What You Can Do This Week
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Write A Letter
Ask The Drug Czar A Question
- * Letter Of The Week
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Nothing Positive From War Against Marijuana / Michael Honohan
- * Letter Writer Of The Month - August
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Bruce Codere
- * Feature Article
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U.S. Drug War Priorities Need Re-Evaluation / Mary Jane Borden
- * Quote of the Week
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Michel de Montaigne
DrugSense needs your support to continue this newsletter and many
other important projects - see how you can help at
http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
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THIS JUST IN
(Top)
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(1) ENTREPRENEURS DISCOVER GOLD AS 'POT CULTURE' WAFTS INTO MAINSTREAM
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 03 Sep 2009
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Source: | San Jose Mercury News (CA)
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Copyright: | 2009 San Jose Mercury News
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Author: | Adam Tschorn, Staff Writer, Los Angeles Times
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In June, an estimated 25,000 people attended the inaugural THC Expo
hemp and art show in downtown Los Angeles, an event that pumped
hundreds of thousands of dollars into the local economy - including a
$22,400 payment directly to the city of Los Angeles for use of its
convention center.
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Barneys New York in Beverly Hills is celebrating the Woodstock spirit
by selling $78 "Hashish" candles in Jonathan Adler pots with bas-
relief marijuana leaves; Hickey offers $75 linen pocket squares or
$120 custom polo shirts bearing the five-part leaf; and French
designer Lucien Pellat-Finet is serving up white-gold and diamond
custom pot-leaf-emblazoned wristwatches for $49,000 and belt buckles
for $56,000.
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Earlier this year, Season 5 of Showtime's "Weeds" kicked off with
promotional materials plastered on bus shelters, buses and billboards
throughout the city. Last year, just across from the tourist-packed
Farmers Market, a "Pineapple Express" billboard belched faux pot smoke
into the air. Even the '70s slacker-stoner comedians Cheech Marin and
Tommy Chong are back. After recently concluding an international tour,
they say they are working on another movie, voicing an animated
version of themselves and even batting around the idea of staging a
Cheech and Chong Broadway musical.
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Rolling into mainstream
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After decades of bubbling up around the edges of so-called civilized
society, marijuana seems to be marching mainstream at a fairly rapid
pace. At least in urban areas such as Los Angeles, cannabis culture is
coming out of the closet.
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[snip]
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(2) EDITORIAL: DON'T BOGART THAT RESEARCH
(Top) |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA)
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Copyright: | 2009 Los Angeles Times
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When the federal Department of Health and Human Services recently
issued a request for proposals, seeking competitive applications for
the production, analysis and distribution of "marijuana cigarettes,"
the request might have seemed a bit unusual to those unfamiliar with
Washington's dance around cannabis research. The federal government,
after all, is not widely known to support marijuana cultivation.
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But those in the know just shrugged. The department has issued
similar requests every few years to select a contractor to conduct
government-approved marijuana research, and with depressing
regularity it has then awarded an exclusive contract to the
University of Mississippi. For 40 years now, Washington has sought
such "competitive applications" and Mississippi "wins" every time.
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This rigged contest has successfully thwarted meaningful academic
inquiry into marijuana's medicinal value, without which the debate
over its efficacy is bound to endure. Other studies -- not conducted
by the University of Mississippi -- have suggested that marijuana
has therapeutic value. But because the United States has discouraged
such research and made it legally difficult to undertake, these
studies have been limited in scope. What's missing is the broad
research analyzing the cultivation and properties of different
strains and their effects on a variety of illnesses. For example, a
strain of cannabis that is most effective with glaucoma may not be
the same strain best suited to cancer patients.
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[snip]
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(3) JUAREZ MASSACRE CHILLINGLY ROUTINE
(Top) |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA)
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Copyright: | 2009 Los Angeles Times
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Author: | Ken Ellingwood, Reporting from Mexico City
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Mexico Under Siege
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Gunmen Kill 18 at a Rehab Clinic, After a Week When 75 Died. Since
Last Year, 3,000 Have Been Slain.
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The deed was stomach-turning: Hooded gunmen burst into a Ciudad
Juarez drug treatment center, gathered together those inside and
lined them up before opening fire with semiautomatic weapons. When
the shooting was over, 18 people were dead.
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Attention focused immediately on the site of Wednesday night's
killings: a rehab center, where addicts go to get clean, suggesting
a new level of depravity in Mexico's drug violence.
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Theories abounded: The victims were targets of rival gang members.
They owed money to the wrong people. They were pawns in a turf war
between cartels that has made Ciudad Juarez the scene of a bloody
death match for 20 months.
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Odds are that the slayings, like hundreds of others in the border
city, will never be solved. The crime is a further sign of the chaos
enveloping Ciudad Juarez and a reminder of another tragic
development that has accompanied the flow of cocaine and other drugs
through Mexico: a big and growing problem of local drug addiction.
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[snip]
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(4) THE WAR ON DRUGS IS IMMORAL IDIOCY. WE NEED THE COURAGE OF
(Top)ARGENTINA
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Pubdate: | Thu, 03 Sep 2009
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Source: | Guardian, The (UK)
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Copyright: | 2009 Guardian News and Media Limited
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Author: | Simon Jenkens, Staff Writer
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While Latin American Countries Decriminalise Narcotics, Britain
Persists In Prohibition That Causes Vast Human Suffering
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I guess it had to happen this way. The greatest social menace of the
new century is not terrorism but drugs, and it is the poor who will
have to lead the revolution. The global trade in illicit narcotics
ranks with that in oil and arms. Its prohibition wrecks the lives of
wealthy and wretched, east and west alike. It fills jails, corrupts
politicians and plagues nations. It finances wars from Afghanistan
to Colombia. It is utterly mad.
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There is no sign of reform emanating from the self-satisfied liberal
democracies of west Europe or north America. Reform is not mentioned
by Barack Obama, Gordon Brown, Nicolas Sarkozy or Angela Merkel.
Their countries can sustain prohibition, just, by extravagant penal
repression and by sweeping the consequences underground. Politicians
will smirk and say, as they did in their youth, that they can
"handle" drugs.
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No such luxury is available to the political economies of Latin
America. They have been wrecked by Washington's demand that they
stop exporting drugs to fuel America's unregulated cocaine market.
It is like trying to stop traffic jams by imposing an oil ban in the
Gulf.
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Push has finally come to shove. Last week the Argentine supreme
court declared in a landmark ruling that it was "unconstitutional"
to prosecute citizens for having drugs for their personal use. It
asserted in ringing terms that "adults should be free to make
lifestyle decisions without the intervention of the state". This
classic statement of civil liberty comes not from some liberal
British home secretary or Tory ideologue. They would not dare. The
doctrine is adumbrated by a regime only 25 years from dictatorship.
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[snip]
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WEEKLY NEWS IN REVIEW
(Top)
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Domestic News- Policy
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COMMENT: (5-8)
(Top) |
As the reverberations of drug legalization for personal amounts in
Mexico and Argentina spread, there has been the question of how the
U.S. will react. A Canadian columnist suggests that the reaction
will remain muted, much as that might have seemed impossible a few
years ago.
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But, within the U.S., the federal drug war goes on as usual. The
current drug czar is making local appearances to announce a small
variation on the same old counterproductive strategies. A different
federal agency apologizes for linking Tecate and tortillas to drug
cartels working in public U.S. forests. And in Georgia, a judge
decides a marijuana arrest is not a solid foundation for the recall
of a local elected official.
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(5) U.S. TURNS BLIND EYE AS PARTNERS LEGALIZE DRUGS
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Pubdate: | Sun, 30 Aug 2009
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Source: | Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
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Copyright: | 2009 Times Colonist
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Author: | Colby Cosh, Times Colonist
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Say, are we still having that debate over whether the United States
constitutes an empire? I remember the idea seeming controversial a
few years back. In 2009, the whole idea of disagreeing with it seems
quaint.
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But maybe things will look different in a few years. Empires do not
rise and fall; they expand and contract, relax and relent. In an
extraordinary turn of events, Caesar has temporarily turned a blind
eye to the policing of morals in the provinces, allowing startling
drug reforms in two major "partner" states.
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This month, the Mexican government decriminalized the possession of
very small amounts of illicit drugs. Not just marijuana, which is
subject to a possession limit of five grams, but the whole kaboodle:
Cocaine, methamphetamine, LSD, even heroin.
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In general the U. S. media treated this as a counter-intuitive move
made in the midst of a full-scale war between drug cartels and the
Mexican state.
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But it is precisely the bloodiness of that war that has Mexico
moving away from ideological prohibitionism.
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[snip]
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(6) MADIGAN, FED DRUG CZAR ADDRESS METH PROBLEMS WITH LOCAL
(Top)OFFICIALS
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Pubdate: | Wed, 02 Sep 2009
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Source: | Marion Daily Republican (IL)
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Copyright: | 2009 Marion Daily Republican
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Author: | Matt Hawkins, Staff Writer, The Associated Press contributed
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Carterville, Ill. - Hours after launching an anti-methamphetamine
advertising campaign Tuesday in St. Louis, federal drug czar Gil
Kerlikowske joined Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and other
officials for a meth roundtable at John A. Logan College.
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The $9 million media blitz will target the states with the worst
meth problems - Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma, Minnesota,
Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky and Nebraska in the Midwest. Alaska,
Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Wyoming, Arizona and New Mexico also
will be targeted.
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"When meth first reared its head across the nation, Washington D.C.
didn't listen to the problem," Kerlikowske said. "Meth is still
lower than other drugs, but if you're in a small town devastated by
meth, you don't give a darn about the national numbers."
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[snip]
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(7) AGENCY RETRACTS LATINO WARNING
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Sat, 29 Aug 2009
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Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA)
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Copyright: | 2009 Los Angeles Times
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An advocate for Latino rights says she was appalled to learn that
the U.S. Forest Service is warning the public that campers who eat
tortillas, drink Tecate beer and play Spanish music could be armed
marijuana growers.
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Polly Baca, co-chairwoman of the Colorado Latino Forum, said the
warning is profiling and discriminatory, and could put Latino
campers in danger.
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The agency quickly retracted the warning, issued Wednesday amid an
investigation into how much marijuana was being cultivated in
Colorado's national forests.
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[snip]
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(8) HORGAN RECALL EFFORT DIES IN COURT
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Fri, 28 Aug 2009
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Source: | Citizen, The (GA)
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Copyright: | 2009 Fayette Publishing, Inc.
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Author: | John Munford, Staff Writer
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The effort to remove Fayette County Commissioner Robert Horgan from
office was dealt a legal death blow in LaGrange this morning.
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Superior Court Judge A. Quillian Baldwin ruled that Horgan's May 23
arrest for possession of marijuana was not connected to his position
in office and therefore the recall petition was insufficient.
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That ruling officially kills the recall effort undertaken by Robert
Ross of Peachtree City and a committee that was formed to recall
Horgan from office.
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But Horgan's political career is not out of the woods yet. Judge
Baldwin suggested that when the criminal case goes forward, Horgan
could be forced to resign as a condition of his probation.
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Law Enforcement & Prisons
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COMMENT: (9-12)
(Top) |
Not a whole lot of big stories about law enforcement and prisons
this week, but several small stories illuminate the folly of the
drug war. In Arizona, an attorney publicly states that prosecuting
an inmate with 56 years left on his sentence for using marijuana in
prison is a waste of time and resources. In Georgia, a prosecutor
made a "business decision" to keep only half the cash confiscated
from a man convicted of no crimes. A close look at a young police
officer in Tennessee who went undercover for a year. And, in Cyprus,
prison officials are upset that some prisoners are smuggling drug
tests behind bars.
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(9) PRISONER PROSECUTION WASTES TAX MONEY
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 27 Aug 2009
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Source: | East Valley Tribune (AZ)
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Copyright: | 2009 East Valley Tribune.
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I currently represent a client charged with possession of marijuana.
By itself, that's not unusual. What is unusual, however, is that the
state claims he had weed in prison. He just finished serving his
18th year, and he's got a little over 56 years left to go. He's
middle-aged.
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Why would the state choose to prosecute such a case? What else can
they do to him? He's going to enjoy his field trips to court. If he
goes to trial, it's going to feel good to wear street clothes and
take the restraints off, even if it's just for a little while. What
kind of plea is a "lifer" going to want to take?
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The prosecutor knows all of this because I told him. He doesn't seem
to care.
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Dockets are already too full. Everyone in the system is already
overworked. When I hear about budget cuts, I wonder how much of the
budget goes to meaningless prosecutions. Win or lose, the practical
effect of my client's case is going to be the same: It won't matter.
We will all just be a little bit busier for the next few months.
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[snip]
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(10) MAN WINS BACK SUSPECTED DRUG MONEY IN RARE FIGHT
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Sun, 30 Aug 2009
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Source: | Athens Banner-Herald (GA)
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Copyright: | 2009 Athens Newspapers Inc
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Property Seizures by Prosecutors
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An Athens man won a rare victory this month when he cut a deal to
get back half of more than $10,000 in suspected drug money that
police seized from him in December.
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An attorney argued the money was legitimate - that nearly all of it
came from the man's mother after she sold property in East Athens -
and police found the money during an illegal search.
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Faced with a potentially long and costly court battle, the
prosecutor decided to cut his losses and negotiate a deal that
allowed the man and his mother to keep $5,152, said the attorney,
Edward Tolley.
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"The district attorney has to invest his time in these cases, and so
for him to expend the amount of hours that would be needed to fight
our claim would not be a good business decision," Tolley said.
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[snip]
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(11) A YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY TAKES A TOLL ON UNDERCOVER MEMPHIS
(Top)OFFICER
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Pubdate: | Sun, 30 Aug 2009
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Source: | Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
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Copyright: | 2009 The Commercial Appeal
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Author: | Kristina Goetz, Memphis Commercial Appeal
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She 'Was Always On Edge' In Her Role As A Junkie
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April Leatherwood no longer goes by the name Summer Smith.
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Summer's brown, greasy hair has been cut and bleached, highlighted
to April's honey blond. Summer's glasses have been removed to reveal
April's 20/20 vision.
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And Summer's feet -- once covered by the same filthy pair of socks
for an entire year -- now slide into April's black flip-flops with a
fresh pedicure and red toenail polish.
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The physical transformation is complete -- a signal that one life is
over and another can resume.
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[snip]
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In a year's time, her work resulted in more than 280 arrests -- from
low-level drug peddlers to big-name dealers.
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"Not only is she there to buy drugs, but she's there to listen and
gather intel," said Det. Paul Sherman, coordinator of the undercover
operations unit. "Every day she's not buying drugs. Sometimes she's
just hanging out with these people and listening to ... who broke in
that store, who did that armed robbery, who did that drive-by
shooting."
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Leatherwood, paid roughly $45,000 a year, was given a different
Social Security number and junkies' clothes. She roamed the streets
of Memphis in the same foul-smelling shirt. She didn't shower, brush
her teeth or shave her legs. She stood outside neighborhood corner
stores, smoking, befriending crack addicts so they'd take her to
their dealers.
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"No matter how much I would try to make myself feel like I was one
of them, no matter how dirty I got, no matter how much I did the
things they did or talked the way they talked or looked the way they
looked, still in the back of your head you know you're not one of
them," she said.
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[snip]
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(12) INMATES USED DRUGS TESTING KIT TO OUTWIT PRISON AUTHORITIES
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Sat, 29 Aug 2009
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Source: | Cyprus Mail, The (Cyprus)
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Copyright: | Cyprus Mail 2009
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Author: | Alexia Saoulli, Staff Writer
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THE CENTRAL Prison authorities launched an investigation this week
after three drugs tests were found in an inmate's prison cell.
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Apparently the tests had been used by unknown convicts to carry out
experiments on their own urine samples. Prison officials suspect the
idea behind these experiments was to give convicts a better
understanding of how the tests worked so that they could dupe prison
authorities regarding their drug use.
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The find was yesterday confirmed by a source inside the prisons.
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According to the source the tests were found three or four days ago
in the cell of an inmate who had only recently been incarcerated and
had denied the tests were his.
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The source explained the tests were used to screen inmates for drugs
in their urine.
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By law prison authorities had the right to order convicts to take a
drugs test, he said.
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Inmates who refused to give a urine sample were punished twice as
much as inmates who consented to the test and came back positive for
drugs, he added.
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"Sometimes inmates try and trick the test. They'll get a urine
sample from an inmate who doesn't use drugs and put it in a bag and
then place it in their genitals. When they're asked to give a sample
they pretend to give their own urine but they are actually filling
it with the clean sample. If they aren't properly checked before
giving the test they get away with it," he said.
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In this case it appeared the inmates were trying out a new method of
evasion.
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"It seems they were trying to see what sort of drugs the test picks
up on and how many days they have so that the drugs don't show up in
their urine. They make cocktails of drugs you see, combining Valium
and other drugs, and they probably wanted to see what could and
couldn't be picked up by the test," the source said.
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[snip]
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Cannabis & Hemp
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COMMENT: (13-16)
(Top) |
The Australian, British and Canadian media have finally taken notice
of a study released last June that cast doubt on there being a causal
relationship between cannabis and schizophrenia.
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Cannabis news junkies have long been aware that cannabinoids mitigate
brain damage from strokes and oxygen deprivation, but a new, lightly
reported study suggests that cannabis may prevent alcohol- related
brain damage as well.
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Los Angeles medicinal cannabis dispensaries are organizing and
flexing their political muscle in defense of their increasingly
robust industry.
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In Colorado, the absurdities of cannabis prohibition are revealing
themselves as the state attempts to reconcile their medicinal
cannabis policies with conflicting, "zero tolerance" federal laws.
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(13) SCHIZOPHRENIA LINK TO CANNABIS DENIED
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 27 Aug 2009
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Source: | Sentinel, The (UK)
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Copyright: | 2009 Northcliffe Electronic Publishing Ltd. |
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A STUDY by North Staffordshire academics has rejected a link between
smoking cannabis and an increase in mental illness.
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The research found there were no rises in cases of schizophrenia or
psychoses diagnosed in the UK over nine years, during which the use of
the drug had grown substantially.
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Pro-cannabis campaigners seized on the results as supporting the
legalising of cannabis, and claimed the report had been suppressed.
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But the leading expert behind the study said it could be too low-key
to re-ignite the debate on whether restrictions should be removed from
soft drugs.
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From their base at the Harplands Psychiatric Hospital in Hartshill,
the four experts reviewed the notes of hundreds of thousands of
patients at 183 GP practices throughout the country to look for any
changing rate in cases of schizophrenia.
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The work had been set up to see if earlier forecasts from other
experts had been borne out, that the mental disorder would soar
through the growing popularity of cannabis.
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Published in the Schizophrenia Research journal, a paper on the study
said: "A recent review concluded that cannabis use increases the risk
of psychotic outcomes.
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"Furthermore an accepted model of the association between cannabis and
schizophrenia indicated its incidence would increase from 1990
onwards.
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"We examined trends in the annual psychosis incidence and prevalence
as measured by diagnosed cases from 1996 to 2005 and found it to be
either stable or declining.
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"The casual models linking cannabis with schizophrenia and other
psychoses are therefore not supported by our study."
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[snip]
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(14) BUDS MAY BLUNT BOOZE'S ABUSE OF BRAIN
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 03 Sep 2009
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Source: | Auburn Plainsman, The (Auburn U, AL Edu)
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Copyright: | 2009 The Auburn Plainsman
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Author: | Max Newfield, Staff Writer
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The results of a University of California San Diego study claim
adolescents who use marijuana may be less susceptible to brain damage
from binge drinking.
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"I was definitely surprised by the results," said Susan Tapert, a
professor of psychiatry at the University of California San Diego, and
one of the main researchers in the study.
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The study's goal was to research the capacity of the adolescent brain
to process information efficiently after exposure to drugs and
alcohol.
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Between 2007 and 2009, researchers studied adolescents ages 16 to 19.
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The subjects were divided into three groups: binge drinkers, binge
drinkers who also used marijuana and a control group who rarely or
never used alcohol or drugs.
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Binge drinking is defined as having five or more drinks in one sitting
for men and four or more drinks in one sitting for women.
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The researchers were surprised to find the results of the study
deviated from what they had hypothesized, Tapert said.
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"We found that the damage to their white matter was right in the
middle (of the results)," Tapert said, about the subjects who
frequently used marijuana and alcohol. "Obviously, we expected them to
have the highest level of damage (of all the test participants)."
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There are many possibilities the adolescents who only used alcohol
showed more brain damage than those who used alcohol and marijuana,
Tapert said.
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"This was only one study done at one time," Tapert said. "Maybe the
kids who used marijuana were healthier than those who only used
alcohol, or maybe one group was more candid than the other."
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Tapert also said she would not rule out that marijuana could possibly
have protective properties, but she said more evidence is needed.
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[snip]
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(15) POT SHOPS MOBILIZE TO FIGHT LA'S CRACKDOWN
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Sat, 29 Aug 2009
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Source: | Daily Breeze (Torrance, CA)
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Copyright: | 2009 Los Angeles Newspaper group
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Author: | Tony Castro, Staff Writer
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Los Angeles' booming cottage industry of medical marijuana vendors is
mobilizing to fight the city's three-month crackdown that threatens to
shutter hundreds of dispensaries.
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Vendors say they're prepared to take their battle to court to fulfill
the promise of Proposition 215 -- the 1996 voter-approved measure that
legalized marijuana for medicinal use. Attorney Stewart Richlin, who
represents more than 100 dispensaries, said he believes dispensaries
that have been or are about to be closed are entitled to monetary
damages. An alternative would be a court injunction allowing them to
reopen or stay open.
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"State law (permits), without equivocation, the cultivation,
transportation and distribution of medical marijuana," Richlin said,
"and these cities now need to be forced by a judge and court to comply
with the law.
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"These are not criminals. They are patients and centers treating
patients."
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But city officials say they are pressing ahead with the crackdown
launched in June, when regulators began reviewing applications for
permits to operate the dispensaries.
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They say a majority of the dispensaries are lucrative cash businesses
that require customers to provide little or no proof of medical need.
And because the dispensaries have mushroomed throughout the city, they
are now attracting crime and violence.
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[snip]
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(16) CLEAR THE HAZE ON MEDICAL POT
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Mon, 31 Aug 2009
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Copyright: | 2009 The Denver Post Corp
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Conflicting Federal and State Laws Make It Difficult, If Not
Impossible, for Some to Use Doctor-Prescribed Marijuana.
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Though Coloradans voted to legalize marijuana for medicinal use nine
years ago, certified medical-marijuana users, many of whom are
battling chronic pain, are being evicted from federal housing.
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That's because federal law categorizes marijuana as an illegal drug.
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Two Colorado men are fighting such evictions in court and similar
battles are taking place in 13 other states that allow medical-
marijuana use, according to The Post's Nancy Lofholm.
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Given earlier court rulings, it's doubtful those battles will prevail
for the evicted. That's why we think elected officials in Washington
should correct the conflict between state and national law.
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"It's safe to say this is a growing problem. We're going to encounter
it more," said Brian Vicente, an advocate for medical-marijuana users.
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To get a more poignant take on the situation, consider Bill Hewitt,
one of the Colorado men fighting his eviction.
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"It's disgusting," Hewitt told Lofholm. "Most disabled can't afford a
house, so they get assistance. These people should not be thrown in
the street because they use a medication that alleviates pain."
|
Hewitt suffers from muscular dystrophy. He claims smoking marijuana
has replaced prescription painkillers that produced negative side
effects.
|
Pot, he says, allowed him to toss tranquilizers, muscle relaxers,
sleeping pills and other drugs in the trash. Hard -- but legal --
drugs such as morphine and Oxycontin also are painkillers that
medical-marijuana advocates claim can be shelved in favor of pot.
|
[snip]
|
If use of relatively inexpensive marijuana cuts a need for those
prescription medications, isn't that better for everyone?
|
[snip]
|
|
|
International News
|
COMMENT: (17-20)
(Top) |
As violence continues to increase around Mexico, President Felipe
Calderon's administration is still claiming that it is making
headway against drug cartels. An new report from Calderon's party
suggest that the cartels are the ones really getting hurt by the
policy. Some residents aren't so sure. In a similar story, the
nature of the drug war seems to be changing in Afghanistan. A new
report from the U.N. suggests that the new generation of drug lords
in Afghanistan aren't just making money for ideology's sake; they
are making money for money's sake.
|
In Cyprus, it seems police might have something more serious to
focus on than those "legal high" ads on the Internet. Finally in
Niagara Falls, Canada, stoners won't be flocking to highway 420 on
April 20 any more as a local politician continues to work for a name
change.
|
|
(17) CALDERON REPORTS GAINS IN DRUG FIGHT
(Top) |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA)
|
---|
Copyright: | 2009 Los Angeles Times
|
---|
Author: | Ken Ellingwood, Reporting from Mexico City
|
---|
|
A Written Copy of the State of the Nation Address Is Given to a New
Mexican Congress Likely to Show Its Clout.
|
The Mexican government on Tuesday proclaimed that it was making
progress in its war against drug traffickers, in a state of the
nation report delivered to a new Congress expected to challenge
President Felipe Calderon during his remaining three years in
office.
|
The Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which ruled the
country for seven decades until 2000, is back in control of the
Chamber of Deputies, which plays a key role in budget decisions that
will be high on the agenda in coming months.
|
The PRI defeated Calderon's National Action Party, or PAN, during
July congressional elections amid broad public dissatisfaction over
the sagging economy and misgivings about the drug war. The PAN
retains the largest number of seats in the 128-member Senate.
|
After the afternoon opening ceremony, Interior Minister Fernando
Gomez Mont handed Congress a written version of the president's
annual report cataloging what the administration views as its
accomplishments during the previous 12 months.
|
The report, or informe, says the administration has made strides in
its 2 3/4 -year-old drug war, which has killed more than 11,000
people since Calderon became president. It says the government has
hit trafficking groups hard with major seizures of narcotics,
weapons and cash and more than 24,000 arrests through June.
|
The offensive "has weakened the structures of organized crime and
achieved record numbers in terms of seizures," the report says.
"This has strengthened the rule of law and advanced the recovery of
public security."
|
But many Mexicans are disturbed by the rising death toll.
Spectacular slayings, including beheadings and bodies left in piles,
have created a sense among many residents that crime and violence in
Mexico have spun out of control.
|
[snip]
|
|
|
(18) U.N. SEES AFGHAN DRUG CARTELS EMERGING
(Top) |
Source: | New York Times (NY)
|
---|
Copyright: | 2009 The New York Times Company
|
---|
Author: | Richard A. Oppel Jr.
|
---|
|
KABUL, Afghanistan -- Though the Afghan opium harvest has declined
for the second consecutive year, a new United Nations report says,
there is growing evidence that some Afghan insurgent forces are
becoming "narco-cartels" -- similar to anti-government guerrilla
groups in Colombia -- that view drug profits as more important than
ideology.
|
Afghanistan's multibillion-dollar illicit narcotics industry
finances much of the country's insurgency, and the influence of drug
money is a major reason the Afghan government is considered among
the most corrupt in the world.
|
Afghanistan's production of opium, the raw material for heroin,
declined by 10 percent this year, and the amount of land used to
cultivate opium fell by 22 percent, according to a report from the
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime that is to be formally
released Wednesday.
|
The smaller harvest, largely attributed to market forces and
heightened interdiction efforts, is a rare bit of good news for the
United States and the coalition of Western governments whose troops
and taxpayers are supporting what even American commanders describe
as a deteriorating situation as the war approaches its ninth year.
|
[snip]
|
|
|
(19) POLICE SET THEIR SIGHTS ON 'LEGAL HIGHS'
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Wed, 02 Sep 2009
|
---|
Source: | Cyprus Mail, The (Cyprus)
|
---|
Copyright: | Cyprus Mail 2009
|
---|
Author: | George Psyllides, Staff Writer
|
---|
|
AUTHORITIES are taking a closer look at the sale of herbal drug
alternatives through Cyprus-based Internet websites, police said
yesterday.
|
At least one of two websites makes these herbal incense mixtures
available in Cyprus with names such as Skunk - a clear reference to
the illegal potent strain of cannabis.
|
These are part of a reportedly growing market of so-called "legal
highs", some of which are banned in several countries but not in
Cyprus.
|
Police however want to get a hold of a sample to test it and
determine the ingredients, Drug Law Enforcement Unit Commander
Philipos Vrontos told the Cyprus Mail.
|
The website says Skunk is "an aromatic herbal blend" that releases a
sweet fruity aroma when burned.
|
A legal highs UK-based website is not so modest, advertising Skunk
as "by far the strongest MJ alternative available."
|
[snip]
|
|
|
(20) RESIDENTS CAN VOTE ON NEW NAME FOR HWY. 420
(Top) |
Pubdate: | Wed, 02 Sep 2009
|
---|
Source: | Niagara Falls Review, The (CN ON)
|
---|
Copyright: | 2009 Osprey Media Group Inc.
|
---|
|
City residents will get a chance to select the new name for Highway
420, the provincial highway that runs between Stanley Avenue and the
Queen Elizabeth Way.
|
Niagara Falls council voted Monday to narrow the list to three names
and to get the public's opinion, especially from the Royal Canadian
Legions and other veterans groups.
|
"We're all going to be driving this highway. Why not let everyone be
a part of what the name is going to be," said Coun. Victor
Pietrangelo, who launched a search for a new name for the highway in
March.
|
[snip]
|
Pietrangelo said his motivation for changing the name was to
perpetuate the arenas' "memorial" designation, but he was also aware
changing the name could end the association the highway has with the
movement to legalize marijuana. Because pot-smokers consider 4:20
p.m., the best time of day to toke up, the area near the highway has
been the site of an annual pro-marijuana rally in April.
|
[snip]
|
|
|
HOT OFF THE 'NET
(Top)
|
MASSACRE AT MEXICO DRUG REHAB CENTER - AP VIDEO
|
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=038Y5kf9YHA
|
|
SGT. NORTHCUTT'S POST-IRAQ NIGHTMARE: GETTING ARRESTED FOR GROWING POT
|
By Fred Gardner, O'Shaughnessy's
|
Phillip Northcutt started legally cultivating medical marijuana to
deal with PTSD from fighting in the Iraq. It wasn't long before the
police and the courts caught up with him.
|
http://drugsense.org/url/6MyeoQVS
|
|
DRUG TRUTH NETWORK
|
Century of Lies - 08/30/09 - Paul Wright
|
Paul Wright, editor of Prison Legal News + Abolitionists Moment
|
http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2556
|
Cultural Baggage Radio Show - 08/30/09 - Ethan Nadelmann
|
Ethan Nadelmann, Dir of Drug Policy Alliance re progress in the 100
year drug war + "Johnny Appleweed" by Brian Ashley Jones
|
http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2555
|
|
CRUEL TREATMENT OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA PATIENT
|
An Okanagan care home resident with full body paralysis was confined
to his bed against his will after his wheelchair was confiscated for a
week - all because he smokes medical marijuana to relieve his Multiple
Sclerosis.
|
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZEofSOQYJU
|
|
A RADICAL SOLUTION TO END THE DRUG WAR: LEGALIZE EVERYTHING
|
One cop straight out of The Wire crunches the numbers with
Esquire.com's political columnist to discover that America's
prohibition of narcotics may be costing more lives than Mexico's - and
nearly enough dollars for universal health care. So why not repeal our
drug laws? Because cops are making money off them, too.
|
http://drugsense.org/url/qtsKqojd
|
|
OBAMA, IGNORING LOCAL OUTRAGE
|
Set to Expand U.S. Military Presence in Colombia
|
By Moira Birss
|
Obama continues to defend the expansion of U.S. military operations in
Latin America, but against what threat?
|
http://drugsense.org/url/vbqBTsxu
|
|
A PROTEST/MEMORIAL FOR MARILYN HOLSTEN
|
Marilyn Holsten was a medicinal marijuana patient who was evicted from
social housing for smoking her medicine. While awaiting that fate she
died on August 14, 2009. A group gathered on Wednesday to remember her
and to protest against the insane treatment of cannabis users.
|
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ou4UfnuQDkw
|
|
CANADIAN MDMA/PTSD STUDY POISED TO BEGIN
|
Two Vancouver therapists have become the first Canadians to be
permitted to give ecstasy to patients in a scientific trial aimed at
finding new ways to help people with post-traumatic stress disorder.
|
http://www.maps.org/news-letters/v19n2/v19n2_4.pdf
|
|
WHAT YOU CAN DO THIS WEEK
(Top)
|
WRITE A LETTER
|
Decriminalization - A Better Approach? - A DrugSense Focus Alert
|
http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0412.html
|
|
ASK THE DRUG CZAR A QUESTION
|
Crafting the Obama Drug Strategy
|
September 10, 2009: 6-7 pm (EDT)
|
Online event. Registration required, and free of charge.
|
In this online discussion, the Drug Czar will briefly outline what he
has been hearing in his meetings around the nation, with most of the
hour dedicated to Q&A dialogue with the audience. Moderating the
discussion will be Steve Goldsmith, Dan Paul Professor of Government
and Director of the Innovations in American Government Program at HKS,
as well as former two-term Mayor of Indianapolis.
|
http://www.innovations.harvard.edu/spotlight.html?id=2399
|
|
LETTER OF THE WEEK
(Top)
|
NOTHING POSITIVE FROM WAR AGAINST MARIJUANA
|
By Michael Honohan
|
You will be hard pressed to find any statistic directly and
unequivocally linking marijuana use to a single death. Yet how many
people must die, how many young people must end up in prison, and
how many thousand acres of forest land must burn before Americans
stop supporting the billions spent on the war against marijuana?
|
Michael Honohan, Marietta
|
Pubdate: | Wed, 26 Aug 2009
|
---|
Source: | Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
|
---|
|
|
LETTER WRITER OF THE MONTH - AUGUST
(Top)
|
DrugSense recognizes Bruce Codere from Fox Creek, Alberta for his
eight letters published during August, bringing his career total
that we know of to 37. You may read his published letters here
|
http://www.mapinc.org/writers/Bruce+Codere
|
|
FEATURE ARTICLE
(Top)
|
U.S. Drug War Priorities Need Re-Evaluation
|
By Mary Jane Borden
|
On August 26, 2001, syndicated columnist David Broder penned the
Op-Ed, "U.S. Drug War Priorities in Need of Re-Evaluation"
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1590/a07.html , which appeared
in the Columbus Dispatch among a number of Midwest newspapers. Just
eight days later, FBI agents joined a raid on the Rainbow Farm in
southern Michigan and killed the well-known marijuana reform
activists, Tom Crosslin and Rollie Rohm.
|
Reacting to this tragedy, I wrote the following LTE to the Columbus
|
Dear Editor,
|
"Shots heard round the world" emanated last week from Michigan and
should be considered a response to David Broder's column, "U.S. Drug
War Priorities in Need of Re-evaluation." (Columbus Dispatch, Sunday
August 26, 2001). These shots were fired by the FBI and Michigan
State Police killing long-time marijuana activists, Tom Crosslin and
Rollie Rohm. Granted, agents reported that the duo in separate
incidences aimed their rifles at police and that the two set their
Rainbow Farm buildings ablaze and fired at news helicopters.
However, the actions taken by the two men very much resemble what
would happen if you cornered an angry dog. Quite likely he will
bite.
|
Why might Mr. Crosslin and Mr. Rohm have felt cornered? The
government was about to take away everything they held dear: Mr.
Crosslin's Rainbow Farm where pro-marijuana concerts were held on a
regular basis and Mr. Rohm's 13-year old son. Both were to occur
because government agents had observed the use and sale of marijuana
and other drugs on the premises.
|
Here's where Mr. Broder's article and the Rainbow Farm intersect.
The U.S. drug-war priorities do indeed need re-evaluation. The First
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution grants all of us the right to
"peaceably assemble." Like most events involving marijuana,
gatherings at the Rainbow Farm were almost always peaceful. And as
for drugs, which aren't mentioned in the Bill of Rights, I don't
believe that the Cleveland Browns or Cincinnati Bengals stadium
owners have faced the possibility of losing their property or family
because "drugs" (namely, alcohol which kills more than 10 times the
number people annually than all illegal drugs combined) were either
consumed or sold on the premises even though we've many times
witnessed the violence that results when rabid fans have had too
much to drink.
|
That anything as peaceful as a "Rainbow Farm" should come under such
governmental scrutiny that the end result is death should certainly
serve as a wake-up call. It cries out for re-evaluation.
|
( signed ) Mary Jane Borden
|
The letter was never sent. Why? Within another eight days, on
September 11, 2001, terrorists hijacked four airliners, flying two
of them into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon, and one
into a Pennsylvania cornfield. A total of 2,993 people were killed
in this violent attack. Who among us will ever forget it?
|
The 9/11 Commission Report states that, "On July 2 [2001] FBI
Counterterrorism Division sent a message to federal agencies and
state and local law enforcement agencies summarizing information
regarding threats from Bin Ladin. It warned that there was an
increased volume of threat reporting, indicating a potential for
attacks against U.S. targets abroad from groups 'aligned with or
sympathetic to 'Usama Bin Ladin.'" (p. 258) The report also
concluded, "In sum, the domestic agencies never mobilized in
response to the threat. They did not have direction, and did not
have a plan to institute." (p. 265)
|
In January 2002, Washington Post Staff Writer, Peter Carlson,
composed an account of the Rainbow Farm tragedy stating, "Outside
[the Rainbow Farm grounds], the state police had brought in an
armored personnel carrier borrowed from the Michigan National Guard.
On Sunday, the FBI arrived, more than 50 strong, summoned to the
scene because the helicopter shooting was a federal crime." (Was the
Rainbow Farm Another Waco?
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n130/a05.html ).
|
One has to wonder: Increased volume of threat reporting. Potential
for attacks against U.S. targets from groups aligned with Bin Ladin.
No direction and no plan. The First Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution right to peaceably assemble. Armored personnel carrier.
Fifty FBI agents. That anything as peaceful as a "Rainbow Farm"
should come under such governmental scrutiny that the end result is
death should certainly serve as a wake-up call. 2,993 9/11 victims
and 2 marijuana activists dead. September 2001 indeed served a
wake-up call. And, U.S. drug war priorities are still in need of
re-evaluation.
|
For more information concerning the Rainbow Farm, please visit its
memorial website at http://www.rainbowfarmcamp.com . Note on the
'Pictures' link that Tommy Chong among other notables regularly
appeared there. Tom and Rollie would be so proud that Michigan is
now a medical marijuana state.
|
Mary Jane Borden is a writer, artist, and activist in drug policy
from Westerville, Ohio. She serves as Business Manager/Fundraising
Specialist for DrugSense.
|
|
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
(Top)
|
"To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind for it."
- Michel de Montaigne
|
|
DS Weekly is one of the many free educational services DrugSense
offers our members. Watch this feature to learn more about what
DrugSense can do for you.
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Policy and Law Enforcement/Prison content selection and analysis by
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content selection and analysis by Stephen Young, Cannabis/Hemp
content selection and analysis, Hot Off The Net selection and Layout
by Matt Elrod (). Analysis comments represent
the personal views of editors, not necessarily the views of
DrugSense.
|
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