• Cannabis & Hemp

    Could marijuana save California?

    In the 60s hippies fled to the backwoods of northern California to grow pot. There they have been joined by growers of ‘medical marijuana’ – available with a doctor’s recommendation – as well as by Mexican drug cartels. With cannabis now its largest cash crop, the state will soon vote on whether to legalise it fully – and even Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is thinking the enormous tax revenues might just solve his budget deficit…

    Jim Hill in his greenhouse growing medical marijuanaJim Hill in his greenhouse where he and his wife Trelanie grow medical marijuana. Photograph: Sarah Baldik for the Observer

    ‘When I see that, it’s like looking at a shed full of cows. I see a whole lot of work,” says Jim Hill, opening the little gate into his humid greenhouse in which a forest of marijuana grows, and from which a pungent, heady scent exudes at gale force. Not work as in hard labour, emphasises Hill – though there is a bit of that – but expertise growing some of the most potent weed on the planet.

    Nearby there are vineyards and horses graze the sun-stroked farmland, but this verdant hillside near the town of Potter Valley in northern California lies in an area called the Emerald Triangle: three counties bordered by mountains to the east and the Pacific to the west that connect the lyrical terrain north of San Francisco with the wilderness of the Oregon state line. This breathtakingly beautiful corner of earth is the marijuana capital of the western hemisphere thanks to three conspiring factors: its perfect climate; the pervading culture; and topography – this is a maze of mountain dirt roads, locked access gates, isolated villages, secluded slopes and wooded glades, far from prying eyes.

    Jim Hill, however, is a respectable figure – neither old stoner nor criminal – and he is not afraid to show off his working practices. “You’re just going to have to smell of weed for the rest of the week,” he jokes as we clamber through his greenhouse. “Squeeze this,” he enthuses, “take a sniff, feel the nice, rich oily texture…”

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n347.a02.html

  • Letter of the Week

    Demand Supplied; Drug Lords Winning

    LETTER OF THE WEEK

    DEMAND SUPPLIED; DRUG LORDS WINNING

    Regarding Jim Kennedy’s April 6 letter, “War on drugs showing no progress,” there is an obvious demand for drugs.

    The black market will sell as much as possible for the highest price possible.  This has created an endless international stream that has captured most of the attention and resources of our law enforcement, judicial system, and penal institutions.  Investigating, arresting, prosecuting, and incarcerating people for drug offenses that don’t involve victims is a waste of time and taxpayer money.  Mere possession or use of a drug should not be a criminal offense.

    Actually, incarcerating young people with long sentences can be more damaging than the use of the drug.  Outlawing of drugs has not made them magically go away, yet more than a half-million Americans are incarcerated for non-violent drug offenses.  The “war on drugs” has waged for more than 40 years with no success.  All we have managed to do is make drug lords richer, ourselves poorer, and our prisons fuller.

    Sandra Gadsberry

    Vancouver

    Pubdate: Fri, 30 Apr 2010

    Source: Columbian, The (WA)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n000/a009.html

  • Letter Writer of the Month

    LETTER WRITER OF THE MONTH

    DrugSense recognizes Robert Sharpe for his 19 letters published during April, bringing the total number of published letters archived by MAP to 2,295.  Robert writes as a volunteer policy analyst for Common Sense for Drug Policy www.csdp.org .  Robert spends about an hour a day after work, which is unrelated to drug policy, sending out letters. Where appropriate Robert references specific Drug War Facts www.drugwarfacts.org and the Schaffer Library of Drug Policy items www.druglibrary.org/schaffer . When writing to a student newspaper he often points readers to www.schoolsnotprisons.com the website for Students for Sensible Drug Policy.

    Robert’s tips for letter writing success are at http://www.mapinc.org/resource/tips.htm

    You may read Robert’s published letters at:

    http://www.mapinc.org/writer/Robert+Sharpe

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    Detroiters May Vote on Legal Marijuana, Proposal Heads for Ballot

    Newshawk: A Reformer’s Guide to Direct Democracy www.drugsense.org/caip#take
    Pubdate: Thu, 6 May 2010
    Source: Detroit Free Press (MI)
    Page: Front Page, top of page, continued on page 4A
    Webpage: http://mapinc.org/url/gLAwqk7h
    Copyright: 2010 Detroit Free Press
    Contact: http://www.freep.com/article/99999999/opinion04/50926009
    Author: Bill Laitner, Free Press Staff Writer
    Cited: Coalition for a Safer Detroit http://www.saferdetroit.net/

    DETROITERS MAY VOTE ON LEGAL MARIJUANA

    Proposal Heads for Spot on Nov. Ballot

    A Detroiter who helped lead the drive to allow medical marijuana in Michigan is pushing for something bound to be equally controversial: legalizing pot in the city of Detroit.

    “You’ve done a great job,” meeting the detailed filing requirements, City Clerk Janice Winfrey said Wednesday as Tim Beck handed over more than 6,100 petition signatures.

    Beck, 58, spent five weeks overseeing the collection of many more than the 3,700 signatures needed to get Detroit’s November ballot to include his proposal. It would legalize possession of up to 1 ounce of pot on private property by adults 21 and older.

    City officials must certify the petition signatures in the next 10 days, and then the City Council has 30 days to pass the proposal or send it to voters this fall, Elections Director Daniel Baxter said.

    “We’re quite sure we’re in conformity with state law and the city charter,” said Beck, a veteran of successful drives to approve medical marijuana in five Michigan cities and ultimately statewide.

    If his proposal passes, Detroit would follow Denver in legalizing possession of pot.

    “It’s a good year for this because it’s also on the ballot in California,” said Beck, a medical marijuana user. California voters this fall could vote to treat marijuana like alcohol.

    Continues:  http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n340.a07.html

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    US CA: Effort to Free Bryan Epis Continues

    Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)
    Webpage: http://www.newsreview.com/chico/content?oid=1419870
    Copyright: 2010 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
    Contact: [email protected]
    Author: Robert Speer
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bryan+Epis

    Back in the Slammer

    EFFORT TO FREE BRYAN EPIS CONTINUES

    For a time Bryan Epis was a hero among medical-marijuana activists. Now he’s more like a martyr to the cause.

    That’s because, after an epic legal battle lasting since his arrest for marijuana cultivation nearly 13 years ago, in June 1997, the Chico man is now back in prison, ordered in February to serve out his original 10-year sentence. More precisely, he’s in the Sacramento County Jail, waiting transfer to a state prison.

    To his longtime girlfriend, Monica Focht, and his 16-year-old daughter, Ashley, it seems terribly unfair that, at a time when anyone can go online and find the addresses of hundreds of collectives and dispensaries selling marijuana up and down the state, he’s in custody facing several more years of confinement for growing medical marijuana.

    And they’re at a loss to understand why he’s being held in the notoriously grungy county jail. He’d been on probation and bail for more than five years and never missed a court date, so he clearly wasn’t a flight risk. Why, they wonder, wasn’t he just ordered to report directly to federal prison, as most nonviolent federal offenders are, rather than put in jail?

    And they’re still trying to get him set free. Money is a big problem. Epis and his family have spent more than $200,000 on his defense, and his current lawyer wants cash on the barrelhead. He is preparing a habeas corpus writ and also a pardon petition to be sent to President Obama; his current fee is $35,000.

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n340.a06.html

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    D.C. Council Approves Medical Marijuana

    Pubdate: Wed, 5 May 2010
    Source: Washington Post (DC)
    Copyright: 2010 The Washington Post Company
    Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/mUgeOPdZ
    Author: Lena H. Sun, Washington Post Staff Writer
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis – Medicinal – U.S.)

    D.C. COUNCIL APPROVES MEDICAL MARIJUANA, POSING CHALLENGES FOR DOCTORS

    For doctors such as Pradeep Chopra, long accustomed to prescribing
    carefully tested medications by the exact milligram, medical marijuana
    presents a particular conundrum.

    On Tuesday, the D.C. Council gave final approval to a bill
    establishing a legal medical marijuana program. If Congress signs off,
    District doctors — like their counterparts in 14 states, including
    Rhode Island, where Chopra works — will be allowed to add pot to the
    therapies they can recommend to certain patients, who will then eat
    it, smoke it or vaporize it until they decide they are, well, high
    enough.

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n340.a05.html

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    US CA: City Gives Notice to Pot Stores

    Pubdate: Wed, 5 May 2010
    Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
    Copyright: 2010 Los Angeles Times
    Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/bc7El3Yo
    Author: John Hoeffel
    Referenced: The list of dispensaries notified http://www.latimes.com/media/acrobat/2010-05/53619517.pdf
    Referenced: An example letter http://www.mapinc.org/images/LAletter.jpg
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis – California)
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis – Medicinal – U.S.)

    CITY GIVES NOTICE TO POT STORES

    L.A. Sends Letters to 439 Dispensaries Giving Operators Until June 7 to Shut Down

    Los Angeles city prosecutors began notifying 439 medical marijuana dispensaries Tuesday that they must shut down by June 7, when the city’s ordinance to regulate the stores takes effect. It’s the first step in what could be a lengthy and expensive legal battle to regain control over pot sales.

    The letters, which were sent to both dispensary operators and property owners, warn that violations of the city’s laws are a misdemeanor and could lead to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine. Collectives that stay open after the deadline could also face civil penalties of $2,500 a day.

    “We’re hopeful that the fact that we’ve given them more than 30 days to comply that a significant number of them will cease operating,” said Asha Greenberg, the assistant city attorney who has handled most of the efforts to close dispensaries.

    Continues:  http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n340.a02.html

  • Drug Policy

    Editorial: A Reminder About American Values

    Newshawk: Please Write a LTE www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides
    Pubdate: Wed, 5 May 2010
    Source: New York Times (NY)
    Copyright: 2010 The New York Times Company
    Contact: [email protected]

    A REMINDER ABOUT AMERICAN VALUES

    Gov. David Paterson of New York made a brave — and startling — move on Monday to create a board to consider pardons for immigrant New Yorkers who are on a fast-track to deportation because of old or minor criminal convictions. He said he wanted to inject fairness into an “embarrassingly and wrongly inflexible” system that expels immigrants without discretion, without considering the circumstances of a person’s life or family, or even holding hearings to consider the possibility that deportation might be unwise or unjust.

    Mr. Paterson’s decision is a response to the government’s aggressive enforcement of immigration laws that have greatly broadened the definition of “aggravated felonies” for which noncitizens are subject to mandatory deportation.

    The category used to apply just to serious crimes like murder and drug trafficking, but it has come to include a vast array of nonviolent, even trivial misdemeanors. Under the law, minor drug offenses or even shoplifting can count as “aggravated felonies,” and this stringent view can be applied retroactively. Immigrants can be deported for decades-old convictions of crimes that were not “aggravated felonies” back then.

    The harsh laws have been coupled with harsh enforcement; the Obama administration has arrested and deported tens of thousands of legal immigrants with a zeal that has gone to extremes.

    In one case, now before the United States Supreme Court, the government maintains that a Texas man’s two misdemeanor convictions — one for less than two ounces of marijuana and one for a single Xanax pill without a prescription — make him a “drug trafficker” subject to mandatory deportation with no right to a hearing in which a judge could consider the absurdity of the case.

    Mr. Paterson has shown courage and common sense at a time when the national debate about immigration shows little of either. His move was unconnected to the radicalism in Arizona, which just passed a law making criminals of every undocumented person within its borders, and greatly empowering the police to arrest people they suspect are here illegally.

    But it inevitably calls to mind the bad example of Arizona. “In New York, we believe in rehabilitation,” Mr. Paterson said, adding that his five-member board would consider pardons judiciously, distinguishing minor offenders from dangerous criminals. His action repudiates the growing belief that only tougher and more rigid enforcement should be applied to all immigrants who run afoul of the law, with expulsion as the first and last goal.

    This is not how the United States, in its best moments, deals with newcomers. We’re grateful for the reminder from the governor of New York.

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    US NY: High Minded

    Newshawk: NY Patients First http://www.nypatientsfirst.org/
    Pubdate: Tue, 4 May 2010
    Source: Metroland (Albany, NY)
    Page: Feature cover article
    Copyright: 2010 Lou Communications, Inc.
    Contact: [email protected]
    Author: Ali Hibbs
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis – Medicinal – U.S.)

    HIGH MINDED

    With Advocates Energized and the Tide of Public and Scientific Opinion Turning in Their Favor, New York State Considers Legislation to Legalize Medical Marijuana

    It was snowing on the evening of March 9, 2001, as Dave Lawson was driving his band’s GM Astro to a gig in Vermont. Carrying the instruments and one other band member, Lawson was going a cautious 40 miles in Troy when another vehicle pulled into the intersection directly in front of him. Unable to stop on the slick road, Lawson says that he hit the car on the passenger side. Everything that happened directly after that is fuzzy. Mostly what Lawson remembers are the years of rehabilitation and persistent pain that followed.

    “The bass guitar came flying up from the back of the vehicle. It hit the back of my head, fractured my skull and forced my face into the steering wheel so that, at the point of impact, I hit at 120 mph. The bone that separates the eye from the temple basically disintegrated. I fractured my sternum, both clavicles, C5 and C6 in my spine and all of my ribs,” Lawson said. “My left arm came out of the socket and went back in the wrong way. I should have died.”

    The accident, which was found to be the other driver’s fault, left Lawson with some brain damage and chronic pain caused by damage to his nerves.

    “I could barely talk,” he recalls. “I felt like I was relearning the language. I had to think about making my limbs move. I had to think about what I actually had to do to get out of bed.” The painkillers he was given did little to dull the worst pain, according to Lawson, but they did dull his mental faculties so that communication and recovery became even more difficult. “Aspirin is it. That’s as much pain medication as I can take, otherwise it’s like I’ve taken a rufee,” he says, referring to the notorious date-rape drug.

    The pain was still debilitating seven months after his accident when, “all of the sudden, one day I had a flash,” Lawson says. He remembered a day about a year earlier when he had been helping to make marijuana brownies for a friend who had skin cancer and used the cannabis plant to deal with the side effects of his treatment. As he handled the mixture of marijuana and butter that went into the batch, his hands went numb. Lawson, who has arthritis from decades of playing the guitar, suddenly felt no pain. “I think there’s a reason that I had that memory when I did.” He pauses. “And I’m glad that I did.”

    “At the time, I happened to have some [cannabis-infused] oil that had been given to me. I put some on my shoulder and for the first time in seven months, I felt relief.”

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n339.a08.html