Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2001
Subject: # 245 Prominent Columnist Slams Medical Marijuana Busts
Prominent Columnist Slams Medical Marijuana Busts
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DrugSense FOCUS Alert #245 Tuesday November 13, 2001
Since the DEA raided the Los Angeles Cannabis Resource Center last
month, the action has been universally condemned in newspaper
editorials. Now, widely published moderate columnist David Broder has
jumped in, asking important questions about why the bust happened,
particularly as federal law enforcement officials face real threats
from terrorism.
Broder’s column has been printed in at least 19 newspapers, including
prominent ones like the Washington Post. This is an excellent
opportunity to let a variety of newspaper editors and readers see that
people really care about this story. Please write a letter to some or
all of the newspapers below to explain why the DEA crackdown on
voter-approved medical marijuana is wrong on so many levels.
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Contact Info:
All of the newspapers shown below printed the column, using the titles
shown below. All were printed on Sunday, 11 November 2001 unless
otherwise noted.
Please note: If you wish to send a LTE to more than one, or even all,
of the newspapers it is best to send each LTE by itself to each
newspaper, with a reference to the title shown below as well as the
date of publication. Most newspapers will not even consider publishing
a LTE if they suspect that it has been sent to other newspapers.
Newspaper: Washington Post (DC)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: DEA Marijuana Madness
Newspaper: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: Nothing Better To Do Than Tear Up Marijuana Plants
Date published: Fri, 09 Nov 2001
Newspaper: Herald-Times, The (IN)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: DEA priorities in question
Newspaper: Lawrence Journal-World (KS)
Contact: http://www.ljworld.com/site/submit_letter
Title: Marijuana Raid Is Wrong Priority
Date published: Mon, 12 Nov 2001
Newspaper: Wichita Eagle (KS)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: Marijuana Raid Raises Questions About DEA’s Priorities
Newspaper: Boston Globe (MA)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: A war of priorities
Date published: Mon, 12 Nov 2001
Newspaper: Brainerd Daily Dispatch (MN)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: DEA’s Odd Priorities
Date published: Sat, 10 Nov 2001
Newspaper: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: Pinched, DEA Still Goes After Pot Clinic
Date published: Sat, 10 Nov 2001
Newspaper: Daily Gazette (NY)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: End War Vs Medical Marijuana
Newspaper: Post-Star, The (NY)
Contact: http://www.poststar.com/comments/elet_form.shtml
Title: There Are More Important Battles Than Medical Marijuana
Newspaper: Beacon Journal, The (OH)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: What are DEA bosses smoking?
Newspaper: Columbus Dispatch (OH)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: DEA Raid Seems Beyond Reason
Newspaper: Oregonian, The (OR)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: Raid On Pot Lab Bad Rx In Time Of War
Newspaper: Sun News (SC)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: Time Wasted On Medicinal Marijuana
Newspaper: Oak Ridger (TN)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: A misguided drug fight?
Date published: Mon, 12 Nov 2001
Newspaper: Austin American-Statesman (TX)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: An old battle hardly worthy of attention now
Newspaper: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: An Unneeded Diversion Of Forces
Newspaper: Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: DEA Sets Sights On Odd Target
Newspaper: Seattle Times (WA)
Contact: [email protected]
Title: Strange bust suggests skewed DEA priorities
Additional newspapers most likely have published this column.
Hopefully MAP NewsHawks will report more. You may wish to check
throughout the week for additional newspapers. To do so simply click
this link and look for new newspapers towards the top of the list that
appears:
http://www.mapinc.org/author/David+Broder
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ARTICLE
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1897/a05.html
Newshawk: http://www.cannabisnews.com/
Pubdate: Sun, 11 Nov 2001
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Page: B07
Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company
Contact: [email protected]
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: David S. Broder
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?194 (Hutchinson, Asa)
DEA MARIJUANA MADNESS
Asa Hutchinson, the former Republican representative from Arkansas now
serving as head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, has a
reputation as a straight shooter. When he was up for confirmation a
few months ago, even Democrats who had strongly opposed his views as a
manager of the impeachment proceedings against Bill Clinton testified
in support of his nomination.
The other morning, Hutchinson was the guest at one of the breakfast
interviews arranged by Godfrey Sperling Jr. of the Christian Science
Monitor. Asked what the events of Sept. 11 had done to the war on
drugs, Hutchinson readily admitted that the diversion of government
resources to the anti-terrorism campaign had left his agency stretched
thin.
A significant number of FBI agents who had been working drug cases
have been pulled off to assist in the dragnet for suspected
terrorists, he said. Coast Guard vessels that had been patrolling the
Caribbean to intercept drug smugglers are now protecting harbors.
Customs agents are focusing on bioterrorism.
Hutchinson assured reporters that he agreed with the new priorities,
but acknowledged that the DEA is struggling to “pick up the slack.”
All of which makes it very strange, in my view, that on Oct. 25 about
30 DEA agents spent six hours in a raid on the Los Angeles Cannabis
Resource Center, a source of marijuana for patients with doctors’
prescriptions for its use as a painkiller.
There was nothing illegal about the raid. The agents had a search
warrant signed by a visiting federal judge from Florida. Scott Imler,
the president of the center, told me the agents “were very polite.
They did not pull guns or put anyone on the floor or handcuff anyone,
or physically or verbally abuse anyone. They just gathered us together
and went about collecting stuff.”
They took marijuana plants, processed marijuana, 3,000 medical records
and all the business documents on the site. The next day, Imler said,
they seized the organization’s bank accounts, effectively shutting
down its normal operations.
In turn, Imler and his staff did not try to conceal anything; in fact,
they opened the safe and allowed the agents to take away the contents.
This was no clandestine operation.
Five years ago, when California voters overwhelmingly approved a
medical marijuana initiative financed by George Soros and two other
multimillionaires, the Los Angeles County sheriff, Sherman Block, and
officials of West Hollywood encouraged Imler and his associates to set
up operations, even finding them a building they could use.
John Duran, the center’s attorney and a city councilman, said the
organization has worked hand-in-glove with local officials, acceding
to their requests that patients’ status be verified every three months
and that they carry identity cards attesting to their eligibility for
marijuana possession.
“We’ve had nothing to hide for five years,” Duran said. Indeed, DEA
agents visited the center on Sept. 17 and were given a tour of the
premises and a full explanation of its operations.
The authority for the raid rests on a Supreme Court decision last May
that the passage of medical marijuana initiatives in California and
seven other states does not override federal law classifying marijuana
as an illegal drug.
The question raised by Imler, Duran, civil liberties attorneys and
even some conservative editorial pages is why such a raid would
command the resources of the DEA at a time when it is clearly being
stretched to the limits.
When I asked Hutchinson, he replied that carrying out the federal
marijuana ban “is our responsibility, but not a high priority.” He
acknowledged that he prefers to work with elected officials and local
law enforcement, rather than opposing them, as in this case, but said
that “when there is a gap” between state and federal law, his job is
to enforce the congressional statutes.
That answer does not satisfy local officials. At the time of the raid,
960 people — most of them with AIDS, the rest with cancer, Lou
Gehrig’s disease and other serious illnesses — were alleviating pain
and nausea with marijuana from Imler’s center. No arrest warrants have
been issued since the raid, and a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s
office told me it will be “some time” before any prosecutions are
decided. But the center has closed its dispensary because, as Imler
said, “we do not want to distribute black market products.” Now, Duran
added, “we have 960 patients out in the parks, looking for drug
dealers to get their marijuana, which is exactly what the city didn’t
want.”
No one has alleged — let alone proved — that anyone obtained
marijuana without a medical prescription. Why in the world is the Bush
administration fighting this battle, when there are so many more
important wars to be won?
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SAMPLE LETTER
Dear Editor,
On behalf of the patients, caregivers, physicians, and voters in
California who utilize and support our state’s Compassionate Use Act
of 1996, I offer thanks for David S. Broder’s column questioning the
Bush Administration’s escalating war on medical marijuana (DEA
Marijuana Madness, November 11).
Many of us view these actions as little different from the time in our
early history when British troops were sent to take control over our
Forefathers who chose to exercise their God-given right to
self-govern. It is unsettling to see this constitutionally-protected
right so blatantly ignored (see Ninth and Tenth Amendments, Bill of
Rights).
Indeed, it is even more so a shame to see resources wasted on denying
the suffering access to beneficial medicine while real threats to our
safety are of such compelling concern to the citizenry.
Richard L. Root Communications Director American Medical Marijuana
Association www.drugsense.org/amma
contact info
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it at least somewhat so that the paper does not receive numerous copies
of the same letter and so that the original author receives credit for
his/her work.
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Prepared by Richard Lake and Stephen Young – http://www.maximizingharm.com
Focus Alert Specialists