FEATURE: WHAT ABOUT THE CLINTON AND BUSH ERA MEDICAL
MARIJUANA PRISONERS AND DEFENDANTS?
Whether the
Obama administration has ushered in a new era when it comes to
the federal government and medical marijuana is arguable. One
thing that isn't is that victims of Clinton and Bush era raids
remain behind bars or facing prosecution. There are beginning to
be moves afoot to right that lingering wrong.
FEATURE: FEDERAL NEEDLE EXCHANGE FUNDING BAN BATTLE
CONTINUES
The House
has passed a measure that would end the federal ban on funding
needle exchange programs, but it includes a provision barring
them from operating within a thousand feet or schools, parks,
and other public places. Advocates are working to ensure that a
good bill comes out of the House-Senate conference committee at
the end of the appropriations process.
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LAW ENFORCEMENT: THIS WEEK'S CORRUPT COPS
STORIES
Cops busted
for testilying, a deputy arrested for demanding a bribe from a
pot grower, a jail guard arrested for smuggling pot into the
prison, and a Michigan town still doesn't know who stole drug
buy money from the police department.
SENTENCING: NEW YORK'S ROCKEFELLER DRUG LAW REFORMS
NOW IN EFFECT
As many as
1,500 Rockefeller drug law prisoners could walk out of prison
early after reforms passed in April went into effect this week.
But that still leaves 12,000 more behind bars in the Empire
State.
WEEKLY: BLOGGING @ THE SPEAKEASY
"Drug
Czar's Office Reevaluating Marijuana Policy: 'We're trying to
base stuff on the facts,'" "Washington Post Punches Marijuana
Prohibition in the Teeth," "Irony Alert: Drug Czar Complains
About Media Bias," "A Lesson in Etiquette for Drug Policy
Activists," "1000 Feet from Everywhere," "Hearings on
Massachusetts 'Tax and Regulate' Bill in Boston Next Week," "New
York Rockefeller Drug Law Reforms Go Into Effect
Today."
When Attorney General Eric Holder announced
back in March that he would not use Justice Department resources
to go after medical marijuana patients and providers in states
where it is legal unless they were violating both state and
federal laws, he ushered in a new era in the battle over medical
marijuana. Since then, the number of DEA raids on providers has
dwindled -- if not quite down to zero, still a dramatic
improvement over the last years of the Bush administration.
Naulls family
(courtesy green-aid.com)
Still, while the pace of raids and prosecutions has declined,
the raids continue. There have been at least a dozen raids where
federal law enforcement was present since the Obama
administration took power.
But even in this arguably new era, there is left-over
business to take care of from the Bush days, and some from the
Clinton days. Medical marijuana providers convicted under
federal drug laws remain imprisoned. Medical marijuana providers
raided, but not yet charged, have the specter of federal
prosecution hanging over them. Medical marijuana providers
arrested on federal drug charges remain subject to prosecution.
And hold-over US Attorneys from the Bush era continue to
prosecute them. Another Bush administration hold-over, Michelle
Leonhart, remains in charge at DEA.
Some of the victims of the federal campaign are well known,
such as "Guru of Ganja" Ed Rosenthal, who was prosecuted over a
permitted grow in Oakland; Dr. Mollie Fry and her partner, Dale
Shafer, who were sentenced to serve time in federal prison; Eddy
Lepp; and Bryan Epis, the first medical marijuana provider
prosecuted by the feds, who served two years of a mandatory
minimum 10-year prison sentence before being released on appeal.
(Epis has created petitions seeking justice for himself and
other medical marijuana martyrs; you can view them here.)
Others are lesser known, but equally deserving of justice --
Ronnie
Naulls, for example. Naulls operated a permitted dispensary
in Corona, California and paid his taxes, but still got raided
and arrested under federal law. Authorities turned his three
children over to California Child Protection Services, and his
wife was forced to plead guilty to a felony child endangerment
count or face federal charges because the couple had marijuana
in their home. The couple got their kids back, but Naulls faces
a preliminary hearing next week.
Eddy Lepp, at
sandiegomarijuana.com event
(myspace.com/williamwwest
Or Dustin
Costa. A medical marijuana patient and provider and head of
the Merced Patients Groups, Costa was arrested on state charges
by Merced County sheriff's deputies in March 2004. After a year
and a half of state court proceedings, the Merced District
Attorney turned his case over to the feds. Costa was convicted
of federal charges of cultivation, possession with intent to
distribute, and possession of a firearm. He's now three years
into a 13-year sentence, which he is serving at the federal
prison in Big Springs, Texas.
"We have seen a continuation of the prosecutions that began
under Bush," said ASA spokesman Kris Hermes. "This is
unfortunate given that they've signaled a change in federal
policy. Nor is there any evidence they will pardon or commute
sentences or stop prosecuting those people indicted under Bush
but who have not yet completed the prosecutorial process."
"What needs to be done is that the Justice Department should
review all those cases in light of current policy and rethink
the pending prosecutions of those people who would have been
left alone based on the policy now being enforced," said Bruce
Mirken, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project. "I am
sure there are at least some whose actions appear legal under
state law. It would be nice to see those folks left alone and no
further tax dollars wasted persecuting them. It would also be
nice to see the use of presidential pardon power in those cases
who would not be prosecuted now have already been sentenced and
are sitting in federal prison."
But Mirken isn't holding his breath. "I wish I thought that
was going to happen immediately, but Obama's saving his
political capital for other stuff," he said.
One key to seeing real change from the federal government is
getting real change in the federal government. With Bush
appointees still in place at DEA and in the US Attorney
positions, the Bush era prosecutions continue, and so do the
raids.
"Obama is really behind on that," said Dale Gieringer,
director of California
NORML. "As I recall, Bush appointed Asa Hutchinson DEA
director in August 2001, and here we are in October of Obama's
first year and there's still a Bush appointee there. I recall
very specifically that we saw the first raids orchestrated by US
Attorneys within a couple of weeks of 9/11. That's when they
went after Dr. Molly Fry and the Los Angeles Cannabis Resource
Center. It only took until September of his first year for Bush
to have an aggressive new team in place, but so far under Obama,
we have nobody new at DEA and no new US Attorneys. In Northern
California, the US Attorney is still the same guy who was
appointed by Reagan. The rate of change is disappointing,"
Gieringer said.
July 2005
protest in Washington after suicide of Steve McWilliams, San
Diego medical marijuana provider who was facing federal
prosecution
"The fact that a new head of DEA and new US Attorneys have
not been appointed may present a problem in establishing a new
policy on medical marijuana," said Hermes. "In at least a half
dozen cases currently being prosecuted, the federal judges have
asked for clarification on the administration's new policy
before they proceed. That federal judges are balking at these
continuing prosecutions in light of the supposed new policy from
the Obama administration ought to be a concern to the
administration. But what they're getting in response from the
administration is not hopeful. The Department of Justice is
saying it sees no reason to discontinue these cases or move them
to state court."
State court is where these medical marijuana cases belong,
said the ASA spokesman. "Our position is that the federal
government doesn't need to prosecute any medical marijuana cases
in federal court," said Hermes. "If they think there is a
violation of state law, they should leave it up to the state
courts to adjudicate that. As long as they're in federal court,
the government won't be debating whether the defendants were in
compliance with state law -- they don't even have to address
that, and they won't, because it would hinder their chances of
obtaining convictions. There is no role for the Justice
Department in prosecuting state law violation medical marijuana
cases in federal court," Hermes argued.
For those already convicted, it's too late for state court.
The only relief they are even remotely likely to see is a
presidential pardon or commutation.
"I have this goal of getting Eddy Lepp out before his
sentence expires," said Gieringer. "But to get out prison, you
have to apply for a pardon. My understanding is it's sort of up
to the prisoners and their attorneys to get that together. I
don't know that anyone has started on that project yet."
Not yet, but it looks like one is in the works. "We're
looking at mounting a campaign to win pardons for those people
currently serving federal sentences," said Hermes, noting that
some of them are doing as many as 20 years.
But don't count on the Obama administration to take the
initiative, said Gieringer. "We're in a period of benign
neglect," he said. "Obama is weaker now and less interested in
these issues. He's not inclined to do anything, unlike Bush, who
was forceful and assertive in the wrong directions. Now, there's
a different dynamic going on. We're going to have to push as
hard as we can, and hopefully we can get Obama's attention."
In the meantime, some nonviolent medical marijuana patients
and providers rot in federal prison, others are having to
continue to fight their federal prosecutions, and even more --
those raided but never (not yet) charged -- possibly face the
same fate. We won't be to a new era until we take care of this
old business.
Years of effort by harm reductionists,
public health authorities, HIV/AIDS researchers and activists,
and drug law reformers to undo the more than 20-year-old ban on
federal funding for needle exchange programs (NEPs) may come to
fruition this year, but there are significant obstacles to
overcome. Still, advocates of the reform are cautiously
optimistic.
Since 1988, the US government has prevented local and state
public health authorities from using federal funds for NEPs,
which studies have shown to be effective in reducing HIV
infection rates among injection drug users (IDUs) and their
sexual partners, promoting public health and safety by taking
syringes off the streets, and protecting law enforcement
personnel from injuries. NEPS have been endorsed by the World
Health Organization, the American Medical Association, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention Director Thomas Frieden, and
former Surgeons General Everett Koop and David Satcher, among
many others.
Chicago map demonstrating the impact of the
1000-foot rule -- click for larger copies and more
maps of Chicago and San Francisco (courtesy
Dr.Russell Barbour, Center for Interdisciplinary
Research on AIDS, Yale School of
Medicine)
Injection drug use accounts for up to 16% of the 56,000 new
HIV infections in the US every year -- or nearly 9,000 people.
IDUs represent 20% of the more than 1 million people living with
HIV/AIDS in the US and the majority of the 3.2 million Americans
living with hepatitis C infection.
Still, those numbers could have been higher. In a 2008 study,
the CDC concluded that the incidence of HIV among injection drug
users had decreased by 80% in the past 20 years, in part due to
needle exchange programs. There are today an estimated 185 NEPs
operating in 36 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico. But they rely on local or private funds, and many of them
are failing to meet demand because of lack of funding. While the
CDC says that its public health policy goal is 100% needle
exchange, current estimates are that only 3.2% of needles used
by drug users in urban areas are exchanged for clean ones.
The federal funding ban was first removed in a July 10 vote
of the House Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services,
Education, and Related Agencies. A week later, the full
Appropriations Committee approved the bill after voting down an
amendment proposed by US Rep. Chet Edwards (D-TX) that would
have reinstated the funding ban.
But the Appropriations Committee did approve an amendment
dictating that federally funded NEPs could not operate "within
1,000 feet of a public or private day care center, elementary
school, vocational school, secondary school, college, junior
college, or university, or any public swimming pool, park,
playground, video arcade, or youth center, or an event sponsored
by any such entity."
A floor amendment by Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN) to reinstate the
funding ban also was defeated, clearing the way for repeal of
the ban to pass the House. But the thousand-foot language
remains in the appropriations bill approved by the House, and
it's extremely objectionable to reform advocates. The Senate
committee working on the issue did not include ending the
funding ban, but reform advocates are pinning their hopes on
both ending the ban and killing the thousand-foot restriction on
the end-game House-Senate appropriations conference
committee.
"The Senate has taken up their version of the bill in
committee, but hasn't had a full vote," explained Daniel
Raymond, policy director for the Harm Reduction
Coalition. "At the committee level, the Senate chose not to
take any action on the ban. At this point, there is a conflict
between the House and the Senate." HRC is lobbying
the Senate to repeal the ban, without the restrictions.
"We commend the full House for recognizing that NEPs are
essential, effective tools that work in our fight against HIV
and hepatitis transmission," said Kevin Robert Frost, chief
executive of the Foundation for AIDS Research. "And while the
compromise in the bill isn't perfect, we are hopeful that a
final bill will reach President Obama's desk without
limitations."
"We urge Congress to recognize both the benefit and
cost-savings of syringe exchange programs, and the research that
NEPs do not have detrimental impact on communities," said
Marjorie Hill of Gay Men's Health Crisis, which has just
released yet another study
demonstrating NEPs' effectiveness in decreasing the transmission
of blood-borne diseases. "For too long, we have allowed ideology
to drive public health policy. It is time to remove the federal
funds ban for syringe exchange and remove the harmful 1,000 feet
restriction," added Hill.
"The House bill, as it stands, still puts ideology before
science by limiting how federal funds can be used for NEPs,"
Frost said. "But we have time to fix the legislation, and I'm
hopeful that the full US Congress will realize the importance of
allowing local elected and public health officials to make their
own decisions about how to address their HIV and hepatitis
epidemics."
"I believe that the president, the Senate, and the House all
want to do the right thing and they're trying to figure out how
to do it," said Bill McColl of AIDS Action. "If they
follow their own rhetoric about science- and evidence-based
HIV/AIDS prevention policy, then they will remove the
thousand-foot restriction," he said.
"The thousand-foot provision is a backdoor means of
reinstating the funding ban," McColl continued. "There is almost
no urban environment in which it would allow needle exchanges to
operate. There are no currently existing needle exchanges that
would be able to get federal funding, so it just doesn't make
sense to change the policy that way. Drug policy groups have
gone and literally shown Congress maps of what would be
excluded. They've got letters from mayors and police saying this
is not a workable provision. Again, Congress and the president
know what the science is."
In addition to eliminating federally-funded needle exchanges
in vast swathes of the urban landscape, the thousand-foot rule
would have other insidious effects, said McColl. "Having that
rule would have undesirable side effects, in that it would
separate needle exchange from other public health services. Our
AIDS program does testing in areas with lots of drug use --
that's where we need to be testing, and that's where we want the
population to have clean syringes. With federal funding
available and with the thousand-foot rule, prevention services
will be driven away from needle exchanges."
Alice Bell, prevention project coordinator for Prevention Point Pittsburgh,
already lives with geographical restrictions. "We have a local
regulation that specifies 1,500 feet from schools only, not all
the other restrictions in the current language of the federal
bill. We have to move our main needle exchange site because the
building we're in is being sold, and we're having trouble
finding a good place. Any federal restrictions would make it
even tougher," she said.
Bell wants the federal funding ban ended, but worries that
the thousand-foot rule would put a crimp in her efforts. "We
still want it. We need the federal funding. Our program is
expanding, but we can't really expand our exchange service
because we don't have money for needles. The toughest thing is
always getting money for needles. Ending the federal funding ban
would make a huge difference to us."
Federal funding becomes even more significant when coupled
with economic hard times and budget problems at the state and
local level, Bell noted. "We're mostly funded through
foundations and private donations, and we've begun getting some
state and county money for overdose prevention and HIV
prevention, but the needle exchange -- the core of what we do --
is the toughest to get funded."
"The Senate will most likely go along with the House in
conference committee," said Drug Policy Alliance
director of national affairs Bill Piper. "They will probably
take a bunch of appropriations bills and put them in a massive
omnibus spending bill. It is far from clear that there will be a
ban in what comes out of the Congress."
But the thousand-foot rule has to go, he said. "A lot of
groups have been lobbying really hard on the thousand-foot
issue," Piper noted. "It would be an effective ban is many
cities. Here in DC, for example, the only place you could do a
needle exchange program would be down at the docks on the
Potomac. The strategy is to convince the conference committee to
either take that out or come up with something better."
Advocates are lobbying hard right now, said the Harm
Reduction Coalition's Raymond. "Right now, we're doing a push to
make sure the Senate is educated about the issue and ask the
leadership to get on board with House's action to address the
ban," he said. "The House version has the thousand-foot
restriction, so we're also making the arguments about why that's
not workable and needs to be redone. We've been circulating maps
showing its impact to House members who are focused on the
issue. This restriction goes far beyond any reasonable desire to
balance public health with other interests. When that provision
was thrown in at the last minute, its effects hadn't really been
thought out," he argued.
"We keep up the work in reaching out to Congress on both
House and Senate side," said Raymond, "and we're also asking the
White House to show some leadership and urge the Senate to
address the federal ban. We don't want this issue to get lost in
the shuffle, we're calling on everyone in the community to make
our voices heard and reaching out to our elected officials."
It may take awhile to get settled, said Piper. "The entire
appropriations process is messed up, and a lot of will depend on
if, when, and how the Senate deals with health care," he
explained. "Supposedly, they will get the appropriations bills
done by the end of October, but I think that's a fantasy. Last
year, they didn't even do this year's appropriations bills until
March."
Still, AIDS Action's McColl maintains a positive outlook. "I
think the members who will be called on to vote on this
understand the issues," he said. "I have a pretty good feeling
about this. I'm hopeful this is the year."
Mexican drug trafficking organizations make billions each
year trafficking illegal drugs into the United States, profiting
enormously from the prohibitionist drug policies of the US
government. Since Mexican president Felipe Calderon took office
in December 2006 and called the armed forces into the fight
against the so-called cartels, prohibition-related violence has
killed over 12,000 people, with a death toll of over 5,000 so
far in 2009. The increasing militarization of the drug war and
the arrest of several high-profile drug traffickers have failed
to stem the flow of drugs -- or the violence -- whatsoever. The
Merida initiative, which provides $1.4 billion over three years
for the US to assist the Mexican government with training,
equipment and intelligence, has so far failed to make a
difference. Here are a few of the latest developments in
Mexico's drug war:
shrine to San
Malverde, patron saint of the narcos (and others), Culiacán --
plaque thanking God, the Virgin of Guadalupe, and San Malverde
for keeping the roads cleans -- from ''the indigenous people
from Angostura to Arizona''
Wednesday, September 30
In Tijuana, three
municipal policemen were killed after being attacked by
suspected cartel gunmen. The three men were riding in two pickup
trucks when they were ambushed. Two others were wounded. In the
past, Tijuana-based drug trafficking organizations have targeted
members of the policemen at random, in what is thought to
possibly be an attempt to force high-ranking police officials to
resign.
Thursday, October 1
According to a tally being kept up by El Universal September
has (so far) been the most violent month of 2009 in Mexico.
Some 757 drug-trafficking related homicides were committed in
2009. Of these, 360 occurred in Chihuahua (which includes Ciudad
Juarez), 112 in Sinaloa, 74 in Durango, and 55 in Guerrero, with
smaller numbers in other areas of Mexico. On the last day of
September, 22 people were killed across the country, including
several policemen. 12 of these killings occurred in Ciudad
Juarez.
Friday, October 2
A federal investigation found that guns
purchased in the Houston area were used in at least 55
murders on the Mexican side of the border. All the killings were
linked to one particular cell of the Gulf Cartel, and the dead
included Mexican police, civilians, and drug traffickers. The
federal government contends that Houston is the top spot in the
US for the purchase of weapons later used in drug-related
murders in Mexico.
During one 24 hour period, nine
policemen were murdered in several incidents across the
country. Among these were two in Guerrero, were two policemen
were ambushed. One of them was found dead by the roadside, while
another was kidnapped (and his squad car taken) and later found
dead. In Sonora, a policeman was kidnapped by a group of armed
men and later found dead in an empty lot. In addition to the
killings of the policemen across the country, 13 people were
killed in Ciudad Juarez and 7 in other parts of the country.
Saturday, October 3
Mexican authorities seized
a record 37 tons of precursor chemical used in the
production of methamphetamine. The drug seizure was the result
of two separate raids. Twenty tons were intercepted at the
Pacific port of Manzanillo, and 17 tons were taken at a customs
post in Nuevo Laredo, on the border with Texas.
While public safety and law enforcement officers were meeting
in Guanajuato to discuss ways to fight organized crime, 10
people were gunned down in various parts of the state. Local
officials believe that at least seven of the killings can be
linked together, and all ten are thought to be part of a turf
battle between different drug trafficking groups fighting over
the area.
Monday, October 5
In Ciudad Juarez, period five
men were killed when gunmen burst into a bar and opened
fire. Four people were gunned down at the same bar six months
ago.
Tuesday, October 6
Seven men
were killed after being attacked by a group of armed men
near the Guatemalan border in the state of Chiapas. Large
quantities of cocaine are thought to transit through the
Guatemalan-Mexican border on their way to the US border from
South America.
At Mexico City International Airport, a woman
was arrested carrying seven kilos of cocaine. The woman, a
Mexican citizen, was caught after being searched by airport
security personnel. She was also carrying nearly 15,000 pesos
and $525 -- a total of less than $650.
Total body count for the week: 226
Total body count for the year: 5,637
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Cops busted for testilying, a deputy
arrested for demanding a bribe from a pot grower, a jail guard
arrested for smuggling pot into the prison, and a Michigan town
still doesn't know who stole drug buy money from the police
department. Let's get to it:
If we can't
keep drugs out of the prisons, how can we keep them out of the
country?
In Los Angeles, three
LAPD officers were charged Wednesday with lying under oath
in a drug possession case that was dismissed last year after a
videotape contradicted their testimony. Officers Richard Amio
and Even Samuel testified that they chased a man into an
apartment building and saw him throw away a black object. They
testified that Samuel picked it up and found $260 worth of
powder and crack cocaine in it. But videotape from the apartment
building showed the officers searching for more than 20 minutes
before producing their "evidence." A third officer, Manuel
Ortiz, also testified about the case at a preliminary hearing.
The judge in the drug possession case dropped the charges
against the defendant at prosecutors' request. The three
officers all face perjury and conspiracy charges.
In Lebanon, Ohio, a
Lebanon Correctional Institution guard was arrested last
Friday on charges he was trying to bring drugs into the
prison. Guard Dennis O'Rourke, 25, was arrested by state
troopers as he met his contact to pick up marijuana. He is
charged with attempting to convey drugs onto the grounds of a
detention facility, a third-degree felony, and child
endangerment, a first-degree misdemeanor, because he had his
two-year-old daughter with him during the drug transaction.
In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, a
Broward County sheriff's deputy was arrested last Friday for
accepting money from a marijuana grower not to arrest him.
Deputy Manuel Silva, a nine-year department veteran, allegedly
showed up at the grow house last week in plain clothes, but
carrying a badge and a gun. He was arrested after picking up an
unspecified amount of cash. Silva went down after the grower
told someone else about the incident, who in turn went to the
authorities. He is now charged with burglary, armed extortion,
and drug possession -- he happened to be carrying some oxycodone
not prescribed to him when he was arrested. No word on what
happened to the grower.
In Troy, Michigan, Troy
police still can't find $40,000 that went missing from a police
safe in January. The money was earmarked for narcotics
investigations. The Oakland County Sheriff's Department has not
closed its investigation, but admits it is at a standstill. The
Troy police say they have changed policies and procedures
regarding funds and restricted the amount of cash on hand for
special investigations.
As many as 1,500 low-level, nonviolent drug
offenders will be able to apply for release or shorter sentences
under reforms to New York's draconian Rockefeller drug laws that
went into effect Wednesday. The partial reforms also mean
increased judicial discretion in sentencing, allowing judges to
send some offenders to treatment instead of prison.
June 2003
''Countdown to Fairness'' rally, NYC
(15yearstolife.com)
The reforms were signed into law in April by Gov. David
Paterson (D) after he and the state legislature came to
agreement on the issue. They build on earlier partial reforms
passed in 2004 that addressed the lengthy sentences assigned to
more serious drug offenders.
"Under the Rockefeller Drug Laws, we did not treat the people
who were addicted. We locked them up," Paterson said Wednesday
at the Brooklyn Court House. "Families were broken, money was
wasted, and we continued to wrestle with a statewide drug
problem. The reforms that take effect today address those
problems. By returning judicial discretion to the courtroom, we
are reuniting families and fighting criminal activity and
addiction in our communities," he said.
Because the reforms eliminate some mandatory minimum
sentences and allow judges to order eligible defendants to
treatment or diversion over prosecutorial objections, the State
District Attorneys Association opposed the reforms. But they
were championed by a formidable Drop the Rock coalition of
drug policy, criminal justice, social justice, and other groups
calling for repeal of the Rockefeller laws, as well as by the
now Democrat-controlled legislature and statehouse.
"As someone who spent 12 years behind bars on Rockefeller
charges and another 12 fighting the inhumane laws, I am thrilled
that the law has been changed," said Anthony Papa, author of 15 Years to Life. "But,
Rockefeller will only be real when those who are behind bars are
allowed to come home and those who need help get treatment
instead of a jail cell."
"New Yorkers fought for decades to reform the draconian
Rockefeller drug laws, and we finally succeeded this year," said
Gabriel Sayegh of the Drug
Policy Alliance. "Now we need to make Rockefeller reform
work. Today marks another step towards our state moving in new
direction on drug policy, one based on public health and safety.
Thankfully, legal and human service agencies are stepping up to
implement reform."
"Rockefeller Drug Law reform symbolizes a critical time in
our history, where we acknowledge the individual stories and
personal struggles of those who have been most affected by such
a harsh and racist sentencing scheme," said Shreya Mandal,
mitigation specialist for the Legal Aid Society. "These
reforms will allow people to reclaim their dignity as we shift
from a punitive criminal justice model to a much needed holistic
public health model. Now it is time to see this reform through
by empowering formerly incarcerated individuals with
comprehensive re-entry planning." The Legal Aid Society is
already working on 270 cases that should qualify for early
release, according to the Associated
Press.
But there is still work to be done getting drug offenders out
of prison. While as many as 1,500 could get out early, they will
leave behind another 12,000 or so, according to the most
recent figures from the state Department of Corrections.
That's more than 20% of all New York state prisoners.
Last November, voters in Massachusetts
approved an initiative decriminalizing the possession of up to
an ounce of marijuana. Now, one activist is pushing the envelope
with a legalization bill. It is set for a hearing next Wednesday
at the statehouse.
Get to the
State House, Bay Staters
The brainchild of Northampton attorney and former DRCNet and
NORML board member Dick Evans, H. 2929 and its companion
bill, SB 1801, would regulate the commercial cultivation of
marijuana and impose an excise tax. Under the bill, marijuana
would be sold by licensed vendors in one-ounce boxes bearing the
identity of the grower, the grade, and a tax stamp proving that
taxes have been paid. Anyone 21 or older could buy or possess
marijuana. Commercial cultivators, processors, distributors, and
retailers would all be licensed. The bill permits licensed
direct sales from farmers to consumers, and it allows for
unlicensed, unregulated non-commercial cultivation.
With no sponsors in the legislature, the bill is unlikely to
go anywhere this year. But even getting a hearing on the issue
is a step forward.
As Evans told the crowd at a rally earlier this year: "Sooner
or later, our country will come to its senses about marijuana,
and later is now sooner. With Question 2, Massachusetts voters
went to the polls and said enough, enough, enough arrests, we
have to decriminalize. Now, we can talk about things we couldn't
talk about before, we can talk about the futility of arresting
people for marijuana, we can now have a serious discussion about
prohibition. The debate has begun, and the burden of proof has
shifted; the defenders of prohibition are on the defense. People
are starting to look at the tax revenue from tax and regulated
marijuana."
And now Evans has provided an opportunity for the legislature
to start looking at it, too. He would like to see a lot of
people show up for the hearing, he said. "We need to fill up the
statehouse with people, so bring yourselves down there, and
bring your parents with you," he implored.
The hearing is Wednesday, October 14, at 10:00am in Room B2
at the State House. Click
here for directions.
Long-time marijuana legalization advocate
Dana Beal was one of three men arrested October 1 in Ashland,
Nebraska, after they were pulled over in a traffic stop and
police seized 150 pounds of marijuana. He and the other two men,
Christopher Ryan of Ohio and James Statzer of Michigan, are
being held in the Saunders County Jail, with bail set at
$500,000 for Beal and $100,000 for Ryan and Statzer.
Dana
Beal
Beal's supporters have begun a fundraising drive to raise the
$50,000 cash bail needed to free him and to pay his legal
expenses. They have set up resources online, including the Free
Dana Beal Facebook
page, web page,
and blog.
Beal and company have been charged with possession of
marijuana with intent to distribute. It's not clear what the
penalties for that offense are under Nebraska law, but
possession of more than a pound can earn up to five years in
prison and sale of any amount is punishable by a one-year
mandatory minimum sentence and up to 20 years.
Beal, an erstwhile Yippie activist from the 1970s and
permanent fixture on the counterculture scene, heads the New
York City-based organization Cures Not Wars, which
advocates for the use of ibogaine as a treatment for drug
dependence. But he is more widely known for acting as an
information clearing house for the annual legalization rallies
held each May in more than 200 cities around the planet known as
the Global
Marijuana March or Million Marijuana March.
The men were traveling from California, where they had
attended the annual conference of the National Organization for the Reform
of Marijuana Laws (NORML) the previous week. According to local media
reports, police stopped the van in which they were riding
for "driving erratically," and when the police officer
approached the vehicle, he saw "several bags of marijuana in
plain view." He then called for assistance, and police then
found multiple duffel bags of marijuana, totaling 150 pounds,
throughout the vehicle.
Last year, Beal was arrested
in Illinois on money-laundering charges after police there
seized $150,000 in cash and a small amount of marijuana from his
vehicle. The money-laundering charges were later dropped, and
Beal pleaded guilty to misdemeanor marijuana possession. The
state of Illinois kept the money. The Chronicle hopes that Beal,
Ryan and Statzer will have similarly decent fortunes in the
Nebraska system this time.
The Texas district attorney accused of
participating in an
egregious asset forfeiture scheme in the East Texas town of
Tenaha now wants to use the very cash seized to pay for her
legal defense in a federal
civil rights lawsuit filed by victims of the practice. The
ACLU of Texas, which, along with
the national ACLU, is representing the plaintiffs in the case,
filed a brief
last Friday with the Texas Attorney General's office seeking to
block her from doing so.
Lynda Russell is the district attorney in Shelby County,
where Tenaha is located. She is accused of participating in a
scheme where Tenaha police pulled over mostly African-American
motorists without cause, asked them if they were carrying cash,
and if they were, threaten them with being immediately jailed
for money laundering or other serious crimes unless they signed
over their money to authorities.
Representing a number of victims, attorneys from the ACLU of
Texas and the ACLU Racial
Justice Project filed a civil lawsuit in federal court in
June 2008. According to the suit, more than 140 people, almost
all of whom were African-American, turned over their assets to
police without cause and under duress between June 2006 and June
2008. If a federal judge agrees that assets were in fact
illegally seized, they should be returned to their rightful
owners, whose civil rights were violated.
In one case, a mixed race couple, Jennifer Boatwright and
Ronald Henderson, were stopped by a Tenaha police officer in
April 2007. According to the lawsuit, they were stopped without
cause, detained for some time without cause, and asked if they
were carrying any cash. When they admitted they had slightly
more than $6,000, a district attorney's investigator then seized
it, threatening them with arrest for money laundering and the
loss of their children if they refused to sign off. There was
never any evidence they had committed a crime, and they were
never charged with a crime.
The town mayor, the DA, the DA's investigator, the town
marshal, and a town constable are all named in the lawsuit.
While they claim to have acted legally under Texas asset
forfeiture law, the lawsuit argues that "although they were
taken under color of state law, their actions constitute abuse
of authority." The suit argues that the racially discriminatory
pattern of stops and searches violated both the Fourth Amendment
proscription of warrantless searches and the Fourteenth
Amendment's due process clause.
While either the county or the state would normally be
expected to pony up for the DA's legal expenses for a lawsuit
filed as a result of her performance of her duties, neither has
done so. That's why Russell -- with a tin ear for irony --
requested that she be allowed to use the allegedly illegally
seized money stolen from motorists. She has asked the state
attorney general's office for an opinion on whether using the
funds for her defense violates the state's asset forfeiture
law.
"It would be completely inappropriate for the district
attorney to use assets which are the very subject of litigation
charging her with participating in allegedly illegal activity to
defend herself against these charges," said Lisa Graybill, legal
director at the ACLU of Texas. "Texas has a long history of
having its law enforcement officials unconstitutionally target
racial minorities in the flawed and failed war on drugs and it
is of paramount importance that those officials be held
accountable."
"The government must account for the misconduct of officials
who operate in its name," said Vanita Gupta, staff attorney with
the ACLU Racial Justice Program, who represented
African-American residents of Tulia, TX in high-profile
litigation challenging their wrongful convictions on drug
charges. "The state of Texas has seen egregious examples of
racial profiling that result from poor oversight of criminal
justice officials."
The ACLU of Texas is using the Tenaha case to push for asset
forfeiture reform in the Lone Star State. One such bill stalled
in the state legislature this year. "The misuse of asset
forfeiture laws by local officials is exacerbated by inadequate
oversight," said Matt Simpson, policy strategist for the group.
"The legislature must squarely address these reported civil
rights violations via reform of forfeiture laws that strengthen
protection against unconstitutional conduct and racial
profiling."
In a Wednesday
interview with the Associated Press, Russia's anti-drug
chief said US and NATO anti-drug efforts in Afghanistan were
"inadequate" and called for joint action to stem the flow of
Afghan heroin flooding into Russia and the former Soviet
republics.
anti-drug
artwork, Nejat Center, Kabul (photo by Phil Smith, fall
2005)
Viktor Ivanov told the AP that he had recently urged the
Obama administration to begin a program to eradicate opium
poppies by spraying them with herbicides from the air. Such a
program was argued for by former drug czar John Walters and
others during the Bush administration, but was rejected. Earlier
this year, the US announced it was shifting away from any
eradication and would focus instead on interdiction, destroying
drug-making facilities, and disrupting the drug trade.
Russia is burdened with rising heroin addiction rates fueled
by cheap Afghan heroin, and injection drug use has been a key
factor in spreading the HIV virus there. There are an estimated
2 to 2.5 million heroin addicts in Russia, with about 30,000
dying from overdoses each year.
Ivanov, a former KGB captain who served in Afghanistan during
the Soviet occupation in the 1980s, complained that by
abandoning eradication efforts in Afghanistan, the West was
dooming Russia to a wave of heroin addiction. He also said that
growing wheat and other legal crops isn't practical in the
middle of a war.
"As long as the situation remains tense and the confrontation
continues, no one will engage in agriculture," he said. "They
won't be able to cultivate grain even if they want to."
Ivanov noted that the US continues to fund a similar program
to eradicate Colombian coca plants. Manual eradication in
Afghanistan has failed and will continue to fail because the
West has left it to the Afghan government and local authorities
lack the clout (or sometimes the will) to effectively implement
it, he said.
Ivanov said he had discussed the matter with Obama drug czar
Gil Kerlikowske and State Department officials during a
September meeting and that both sides agreed to continue
discussions on aerial eradication. "I hope that our open-minded
dialogue will encourage the US to take more adequate measures,"
Ivanov said. "We are interested in cooperation."
What to do about marijuana cultivation and
consumption is an issue that continues to fester in the South
Pacific island republic of Fiji. Pot farmers have battled
police to protect their crops and complained
to their representatives about being harassed.
Kuata island,
Fiji (CIA World Fact Book)
Consumption is high, and good citizens worry about things
like pot-smoking
by elite athletes. And the Fijan police do what
prohibitionist police do: destroy crops and make marijuana
busts. Just a few weeks ago, police bragged about seizing $50 million
worth of weed from one popular growing region over the past
five years.
Now, in the latest marijuana policy flare-up, the head of the
Fiji Council of Social Services, a non-governmental
organization, has called
for the government to discuss legalizing marijuana. In a
statement last week thanking the government for taking a
dispassionate stance on whether to allow casinos on the islands,
council head Hassan Khan suggested the government apply that
same dispassionate stance -- without injecting religious fervor
-- toward discussing marijuana legalization. Marijuana sales
could provide revenue for Fiji, he said.
It already provides an income for many families on the
islands. A school principal bemoaning pot-smoking by students
said that marijuana farming supported most of his students'
families. "It's their livelihood, so the children will see it
from there," he said.
Khan's comments, as mild as they were, excited an
outraged reaction from at least one Fijian blogger.
"Bloggers, well now you have Hassan Khan, the Director for Human
Services openly advocating for the lawful sale of marijuana to
provide extra revenue for Fiji!" warned a blogger known as "Free
Fiji." "He should be ashamed of himself and resign! I ask Khan,
apart from his short sighted revenue making, what will it cost
the tax payers of Fiji in terms of social and cultural
denigration? Khan would not even dare saying the same thing in
India or Pakistan. I cannot help but suspect some sinister
motive to decimate the Fijian race and this kind of open
advocating of legalizing an illegal substance, which is illegal
in most part of the world is truly shocking. I like to challenge
you 'silent ones' do you continue to pretend all is okay in the
heartland, where people in positions of responsibilities openly
advocating the potential sale of marijuana or are you too stoned
out of your head to think clearly?"
And so go the cannabis culture wars in the South Pacific.
October 14, 1970: President Nixon
spearheads the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), legislation
establishing today's "schedules" as a means of classifying drugs
strictly by their medical value and potential for abuse. In
practice the science drug scheduling has often yielded to drug
war politics, however.
October 12, 1984: The Comprehensive Crime Control Act becomes
law, establishing federal "mandatory minimum" sentencing
guidelines eliminating judges' discretion when handing down
prison terms. Over the next two years drug sentences increase by
71% nationwide.
October 15, 1986: Assistant Attorney General Mark Richard
testifies before the Kerry Committee that he had attended a
meeting with 20 to 25 officials and that the DEA did not want to
provide any of the information the committee had requested on
the involvement of US-backed Nicaraguan Contra rebels in drug
trafficking.
October 13, 1999: In a series of raids named "Operation
Millennium," law enforcement in Mexico, Colombia, and Ecuador
arrest 31 persons for drug trafficking, including Colombian
cartel leader Fabio Ochoa. Ochoa is indicted in a Ft. Lauderdale
court for importing cocaine into the US, which requests his
extradition in December 1999.
October 13, 1999: Governor of New Mexico Gary Johnson is
quoted by the Boston Globe: "Make drugs a controlled substance
like alcohol. Legalize it, control it, regulate it, tax it. If
you legalize it, we might actually have a healthier
society."
October 9, 2000: PBS begins a special two-day program
entitled "Drug Wars." The series examines America's ceaseless
efforts over the past three decades to stop the flow of illegal
drugs into the country, and shows how the drug war wastes
hundreds of billions of dollars, alters the criminal justice
system, puts millions of people in jail, and allows organized
crime to thrive.
October 10, 2002: Drug Czar John Walters travels to Las
Vegas, Nevada and begins two days of making appearances around
the state illegally lobbying against Question 9, a proposal to
amend the state constitution by making the possession of three
ounces or less of marijuana legal for adults. The measure is
defeated at the polls the following month.
October 14, 2003: Supreme Court justices reject the Clinton
administration's request, continued by the Bush administration,
to consider whether the federal government can punish doctors
for recommending or even discussing the use of marijuana for
their patients. The decision by the High Court clears the way
for state laws allowing ill patients to smoke marijuana if a
doctor recommends it.
October 14, 2003: At Emory University Law School former
President Jimmy Carter says, "All three of my boys smoked pot. I
knew it. But I also knew if one was caught he would never go to
prison. But if any of my [black] neighbors got caught, they
would go to prison for ten, twelve years. No law school has had
the temerity to look at what is fundamentally wrong with our
legal system, which discriminates against the poor."
The Reform Conference, sponsored by our friends at the Drug Policy Alliance, is
the major biennial gathering of drug policy reformers of all
kinds. The last one, held in New Orleans in 2007, brought
together over 1,000 attendees representing 25 different
countries. This year attendees will have the opportunity to
spend three days interacting with people committed to finding
alternatives to the war on drugs while participating in sessions
given by leading experts from around the world. Click
here to register -- early bird rates are available through
October 9, and discounts are available for students and New
Mexico residents.
Some testimonials from the 2007 conference:
"The conference was a tremendous educational
experience. I established tons of contacts and look forward to a
future dedicated to fighting the drug war."
"Lots of great energy! This was my very first conference and
I would most definitely recommend it to any health care
professional desiring information on this subject. The speakers
were very educated on their subjects and readily available to
answer questions."
"This conference has been an incredible experience. The level
of knowledge and experience from the presenters has been
fantastic."
"I thought the conference was a wonderful collaboration of
minds and knowledge on the multiple aspects of drug policy. I
enjoyed having applicable speakers on both sides of the debate
of policy and drug reform."
"This conference exceeded my expectations in every way
possible. As a first year attendee I had no idea what I would
learn."
"Once again, thank you for the most exciting and informative
conference in the world."
Along with our weekly in-depth Chronicle
reporting, DRCNet also provides daily content in the way of
blogging in
the Stop the Drug War Speakeasy -- huge numbers of
people have been reading it recently -- as well as Latest News
links (upper right-hand corner of most web pages), event
listings (lower right-hand corner) and other info. Check out
DRCNet every day to stay on top of the drug reform game! Check
out the Speakeasy main page at
http://stopthedrugwar.org/speakeasy.
prohibition-era beer raid, Washington, DC (Library of
Congress)
Since last issue:
Scott Morgan writes: "Drug Czar's Office
Reevaluating Marijuana Policy: 'We're trying to base stuff on
the facts,'" "Washington Post Punches Marijuana Prohibition in
the Teeth," "Irony Alert: Drug Czar Complains About Media Bias,"
"A Lesson in Etiquette for Drug Policy Activists."
David Borden offers: "1000 Feet from Everywhere," "Hearings
on Massachusetts 'Tax and Regulate' Bill in Boston Next Week,"
"New York Rockefeller Drug Law Reforms Go Into Effect
Today."
David
Guard posts numerous press releases, action alerts and other
organizational announcements in the In the
Trenches blog.
Again, http://stopthedrugwar.org/speakeasy
is the online place to stay in the loop for the fight to stop
the war on drugs. Thanks for reading, and please join us on the
comment boards.
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