FEATURE: IN ACT OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE, HEMP FARMERS
PLANT HEMP SEEDS AT DEA HEADQUARTERS
The hemp
industry is growing weary of waiting for the right to grow hemp
in this country. It has filed lawsuits, it has a bill in
Congress, and it is asking the Obama administration to treat
hemp the same way it treats medical marijuana. But nothing is
happening, so now, the movement is turning up the heat with
civil disobedience.
LATIN AMERICA: MEXICO DRUG WAR
UPDATE
Ciudad
Juarez continues to earn the title of Mexico's drug war murder
capital, but there was plenty of prohibition-fueled killing to
go around this past week.
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CHRONICLE?
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Drug War Chronicle? If so, we need your feedback to evaluate our
work and make the case for Drug War Chronicle to funders. We
need donations too.
SENTENCING: SEN. DURBIN INTRODUCES BILL TO ELIMINATE
CRACK/POWDER COCAINE DISPARITY
Is this the
year we finally see an end to the infamous crack/powder cocaine
sentencing disparity? A bill to do just that has passed the
House Judiciary Committee, and now, Sen. Dick Durbin and nine
cosponsors have introduced companion legislation in the
Senate.
LAW ENFORCEMENT: THIS WEEK'S CORRUPT COPS
STORIES
A sheriff
shaking down motorists under the guise of asset forfeiture gets
a slap on the wrist, and so does a narc who stole the cash from
a drug raid. A drug investigation nets two New Jersey cops --
among others -- and another Florida deputy goes down for
extorting a pot grower. And sometimes, a cop may not be as
corrupt as she first seems.
MEDICAL MARIJUANA: WISCONSIN BILL TO BE
FILED
Medical
marijuana patients and supporters in Wisconsin have been pushing
for action in the legislature this year. Now, a bill is set to
be introduced.
AFRICA: LIBERIA INSTITUTES DRACONIAN NEW DRUG
SENTENCES
West Africa
has become an important transshipment point for cocaine headed
from South America to Europe. They also grow a lot of marijuana
there. Now, the Liberian government wants to crack down, and
it's reading from the old US drug war playbook.
WEEKLY: BLOGGING @ THE SPEAKEASY
"Why Does
PayPal Have a Problem With Medical Marijuana?," "Awesome:
Protesters Plant Hemp at DEA Headquarters, Get Arrested,"
"What's the Actual Value of a Marijuana Plant?" "Where NOT to
Hide Your Stash," "Oakland Cannabis Tax on Lehrer News Hour Last
Night," "Senators Sponsor Bill to Lower Crack Cocaine
Penalties," "Busy Night on the Medical Marijuana
Front."
1. Feature: In Act of Civil Disobedience,
Hemp Farmers Plant Hemp Seeds at DEA
Headquarters
Fresh from the Hemp Industries
Association (HIA) annual convention last weekend in
Washington, DC, a pair of real life farmers who want to be hemp
farmers joined with hemp industry figures and spokesmen to
travel across the Potomac River to DEA headquarters in
Arlington, Virginia, where, in an act of civil disobedience,
they took shovels to the lawn and planted hemp seeds. Within a
few minutes, they were arrested and charged with
trespassing.
Hoping to focus the attention of the Obama administration on
halting DEA interference, North Dakota farmer Wayne Hauge,
Vermont farmer Will Allen, HIA President Steve Levine,
hemp-based soap producer and Vote Hemp director David Bronner, Vote Hemp
communications director Adam Eidinger, and hemp clothing company
owner Isaac Nichelson were arrested in the action as another
dozen or so supporters and puzzled DEA employees looked on.
"Who has a permit?" demanded a DEA security official. "A
permit -- that's what we want from the DEA," Bronner
responded.
After being held a few hours, the Hemp Six were released late
Tuesday afternoon. On Wednesday, two pleaded guilty to
trespassing and were fined $240. The others are expecting to
face similar treatment.
Although products made with hemp -- everything from foods to
fabrics to paper to auto body panels -- are legal in the US,
under the DEA's strained interpretation of the Controlled
Substances Act, hemp is considered indistinguishable from
marijuana and cannot be planted in the US. According to the hemp
industry, it is currently importing about $360 million worth of
hemp products each year from countries where hemp production is
legal, including Canada, China, and several European
nations.
The DEA refused to comment on the action or the issue,
referring queries instead to the Department of Justice, which
also refused to comment beside pointing reporters to its filings
in the ongoing hemp lawsuit.
Currently, eight states -- Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland,
Montana, North Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia -- have
programs allowing for industrial hemp research or production,
but their implementation has been blocked by DEA bureaucratic
intransigence. This spring, however, President Obama instructed
federal agencies to respect state laws in a presidential directive on federal
preemption:
"Executive departments and agencies should be mindful that in
our federal system, the citizens of the several States have
distinctive circumstances and values, and that in many instances
it is appropriate for them to apply to themselves rules and
principles that reflect these circumstances and values," said
Obama. "As Justice Brandeis explained more than 70 years ago,
'it is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a
single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as a
laboratory and try novel social and economic experiments without
risk to the rest of the country.'"
police move in
(courtesy votehemp.com)
The hemp industry and hemp supporters see several paths
forward. Farmer Hauge is a plaintiff in a lawsuit challengingly
the DEA's interpretation of the Controlled Substances Act. That
case is now before the 8th US Circuit Court of Appeals in St.
Louis. US Reps. Ron Paul (R-TX) and Barney Frank (D-MA) are
sponsoring a bill that would allow farmers to plant hemp in
states where it is permitted, and the industry is urging
President Obama and the Justice Department to follow their own
example on medical marijuana and leave hemp farmers alone as
long as they are legal under state law.
But despite all their efforts, nothing is happening.
Tuesday's civil disobedience was designed to begin breaking up
the logjam.
"We're getting frustrated," said Bronner, president of Dr. Bronner's
Magic Soaps, which has been used hemp oil in its soaps since
1999. "This is supposed to be change with Obama, and things
aren't changing. We just had the DEA and local DA go nuts on the
dispensaries in San Diego where I live. We spent money on a
lobbying firm to get a statement from the Justice Department
along the lines of Holder's statement on medical marijuana, but
nothing is happening. This would be easy to do, but it's not
happening. We understand that Obama has a lot going on, but
we're getting increasingly disappointed and frustrated. We hope
this will help catalyze something in this administration."
"We're like the fired-up hempsters, we're keeping Jack
Herer's ideas alive," said Eidinger, still fired up a day after
his arrest Tuesday. "We're beginning a new chapter of hemp
activism, and there needs to be a lot more of this stuff. Civil
disobedience has to be part of a comprehensive campaign in the
courts, in Congress, and out on the streets, in front of DEA
offices all over the country."
"We've passed a law in Vermont that you can grow industrial
hemp," said Allen, the white-haired, pony-tailed proprietor of
the certified organic Cedar Circle Farm. "The only barrier now is
the DEA, so we're trying to convince them to back off on this
like they backed off on enforcing the medical marijuana law in
California. Here, we have a crop that isn't going to get anybody
high. We grow organic sunflower and canola, and we'd like to
have another oil crop in rotation at our location. It just makes
economic sense, and it's a states' rights thing. The DEA
shouldn't be involved in this; this isn't a drug."
"We want to get some attention for the cause and show the
distinction between industrial hemp and marijuana," said North
Dakota farmer Hauge, who is licensed by the state to grow hemp
and who is a plaintiff in the lawsuit against the DEA now before
the 8th US Circuit Court of Appeals. "It's not a drug; it's just
another crop that can be grown in rotation. If it wasn't for the
DEA, I would be harvesting my crop right now."
Getting himself arrested for hemp activism in Washington, DC,
was a totally new experience for Hauge, who is usually hunkered
down on a few hundred acres of North Dakota prairie just south
of the Canadian border and just east of the Montana state line.
"It was definitely a first for me," said Hauge. "I've never even
been stopped for anything."
"We need industrial hemp here in the US, we need to bring
jobs to this country," said Nichelson, founder, owner, and CEO
of Livity Outernational, a California-based
fashion and accessory company that mixes art and activism. "I'm
sick of making all our stuff in China cause that's the only
place I can get the raw materials. We sent the message that
there is a clear distinction between marijuana and industrial
hemp," Nicholson said. "We need the support of our president and
our law enforcement branches. They need to understand that the
US is missing out on a giant opportunity. The myth that hemp
causes any problems in society has been completely
dispelled."
Even DEA underlings -- if not their higher ups -- get it,
said Nicholson, recounting his exchange with one agency employee
on Monday. "One DEA official came out and said, 'What's the
connection between weed and hemp?' and we said, 'Exactly.'"
The action brought some much-needed media attention to the
issue, said Eidinger. "We got a really good article in the
Washington Post, the Washington Times wrote about it, too, CNN
used our video, NPR talked about the action, the Associated
Press picked it up, we had a number of TV stations do reports,
so we definitely reached a national audience," he recounted.
"And North Dakota media has covered this closely; I've been on
the phone with all the media in Bismarck."
It wasn't just civil disobedience in front of the cameras.
After the HIA convention ended, hempsters headed for Capitol
Hill, where dozens of people attended over 20 scheduled meetings
with representatives of their staffs to lobby for the Frank-Paul
hemp bill. Some unannounced, unscheduled meetings also took
place, Eidinger said.
If the hemp movement indeed adopts further civil disobedience
actions, it will have added another prong to its multi-prong
strategy of pressing for the end of the prohibition on
industrial hemp planting in the US. It might be time for other
segments of the drug reform movement to start thinking about
civil disobedience, too.
In a little more than two weeks, Maine
residents will go to the polls to vote on a measure that would
build on the state's decade-old existing medical marijuana law
by creating a system of dispensaries. Despite some grumbling
from the usual suspects and announced opposition from some
not-so-usual suspects, proponents of the measure say they are
confident it will win easily on November 3.
Establish a system of nonprofit dispensaries which would be
overseen and tightly regulated by the state;
Establish a voluntary identification card for medical
marijuana patients and caregivers;
Protect patients and caregivers from arrest, search and
seizure unless there is suspicion of abuse;
Create new protections for qualified patients and providers
in housing, education, employment and child custody;
Allow patients with Lou Gehrig's disease and Alzheimer's
disease access to medical marijuana;
Require the Department of Health and Human Services to
develop a procedure for expanding the list of conditions for
which marijuana can be used; and
Keeps current allowable marijuana quantities at 2.5 ounces
and six plants.
When voters go to the polls on November 3 to vote on Question
5, the Medical Marijuana Act, this is the question they will be
asked: "Do you want to change the medical marijuana laws to
allow treatment of more medical conditions and to create a
regulated system of distribution?"
"We feel the campaign is in really good shape right now,"
said Jonathan Leavitt, who is leading the charge for the
initiative.
The existing law needs reform to make it workable, Leavitt
said. "In the 10 years since the medical marijuana law went into
effect, it has barely been utilized because patients have not
had a legal means of obtaining their medicine except to grow
their own, and that's just not workable for a seriously ill
patient," he said. "With this measure, qualified patients will
have full access to their medicine through the establishment of
not-for-profit medical marijuana dispensaries."
The measure's language protecting patients from
discrimination in housing, employment, and child custody issues
is necessary because patients have suffered in the past, Leavitt
said. "This will provide a security blanket for qualified
patients by really putting in black and white the full legal
protections they need."
The child custody provision says that medical marijuana
patients cannot be denied visitation or custody of a minor child
unless their behavior is "unreasonably dangerous to the minor."
That provision drew criticism from the Maine Prosecutors
Association, which announced last month it is opposing the
measure, but is not putting money into doing so.
"This law reeks of paranoia that the entire criminal justice
system is not to be trusted," said association president Evert
Fowle, without a hint of irony. Medical marijuana patients
across the country, including Maine, have seen their children
seized or have lost custody battles solely because of their
medical marijuana use or production.
Physicians in Maine can be found on both sides of the
question. Dr. John Woytowicz, a family physician in Augusta,
told the Maine Public Broadcasting Network, "I don't
start with medical marijuana as the first choice for a medical
condition. It's part of a whole assessment of what can be done
for a given condition. And I put it very frankly to the patient
that I would like to explore all opportunities and this could be
one of the options as well. My experience is for the appropriate
patient, it can be a good option for them, and most people have
been benefitted by it with the minimal amount of side effects."
Mark Publicker, an addiction specialist with Mercy Recovery
Center in Westbrook, told MPBN, "I would advocate for limiting
access to marijuana and not to regard it as a medication."
The measure has drawn fire from one unexpected direction: the
Maine
Vocals, a group of longtime marijuana and medical marijuana
legalization activists. The Vocals and its offshoot, Maine
Citizens for Medical Marijuana, have announced they oppose the
initiative.
"I favor what we have now and working to make it better,"
said Maine Vocals founder Don Christen. "But this isn't the way.
They're just instilling the government into this program, and
the government doesn't want it to work," he said.
"The initiative puts DHS in charge of the distribution
centers and the overall medical marijuana law, and we're not
happy about that because that's the department that has been
taking people's children away," said Christen. "DHS is like law
enforcement when it comes to medical marijuana. We would like
instead to see it in a different department's hands, and with a
board of patients and doctors instead of politicians."
"When it came to administering the dispensaries, it was
either law enforcement or the Department of Human Services,"
Leavitt replied. "We thought DHS would be a better fit for
questions around the medicinal use of marijuana. DHS also has a
mandate to deal with child custody issues, so we included the
child custody language because we want it crystal clear that
patients will be protected, including around these issues."
Christen also took issue with the $5,000 fee required of
dispensary operators. "That's a bit ridiculous," he snorted.
"The cost will be prohibitive for a lot of people."
Leavitt responded that such fees had worked in other states
and that they were necessary to ensure the measure did not
impose a burden on taxpayers.
Christen also objected to the patient ID card system on both
philosophical and practical grounds. "After 9/11, Maine opted
out of the federal Real ID program," he said. "We don't believe
in making lists of everybody up here. And the ID card system
gives rights and privileges to those with cards that other
patients don't have."
About that, Christen is correct, but only to a point. To
enjoy the full protections of the measure, patients, caregivers,
and dispensary operators must register with the state and obtain
an ID card. Qualifying patients who do not obtain an ID card
could still be subject to arrest, but could present their status
as medical marijuana patients as an affirmative defense to
prosecution and move to have the charges dismissed. But those
same patients can be arrested today.
Christen also complained that the measure would bar people
who have marijuana felonies from acting as caregivers or
dispensary operators or employees. "Those who have marijuana
felonies, including myself, will be taken out of the picture,"
he said, noting that he himself had only gotten out of jail on a
marijuana charge 10 days ago.
"We say they haven't read the bill," Leavitt responded. "They
talk about how they are fearful they will be knocked out of the
loop because they are marijuana felons, but marijuana felons
would not be considered felons under this measure."
Actually, the language is a bit ambiguous. It says that
someone convicted of a "felony drug offense" cannot be
affiliated with a dispensary, but also says that doesn't apply
if the felony is more than 10 years old or if it was "an offense
that consisted of conduct that would have been permitted under
this chapter." Whether Christen would qualify might depend on
whether the medical
marijuana growing he was convicted for was found to be
consistent with the new law's cultivation provisions, and
perhaps with yet-to-be-written regulations.
Leavitt wasn't pleased with the not-so-friendly fire. "The
Maine Vocals just haven't done the work to get something on the
ballot, let alone passed," Leavitt said. "They're doing a great
disservice to patients by speaking out against us."
But even with the criticism from the Vocals, it appears that
Maine will be the next medical marijuana state to adopt the
dispensary system.
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 5,800 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:
Wednesday, October 7
Three men were killed in the state of Guerrero in different
parts of the city of Tecpan de Galeana. Police believe that
armed men travelling in two vehicles were involved in all three
incidents, which occurred the same night.
Thursday, October 8
A pregnant Guatemalan woman was killed along with her mother in Chiapas. The
two Guatemalan women were found dead on a farm outside the city
of Tuxla Chico. Additionally, five people were killed in
Guerrero, three in Durango, and three decapitated bodies were
found in Sinaloa. In the northern city of Monterrey, two people
were killed and a third was wounded after a firefight took place
inside a restaurant. Fifteen people were reported killed in
Ciudad Juarez during the same 24 hour period.
Friday, October 9
In Tijuana, the mutilated body of a state official was
found hanging from a bridge. The official, Rogelio Sanchez, was
kidnapped Wednesday, and was suspected by police of giving fake
drivers licenses to drug traffickers. Tijuana is currently the
scene of a violent turf war between the Arellano-Felix Cartel
and a breakaway faction led by Teodoro Garcia Simental.
In Guerrero, ten people were found executed, all bearing
signs that read "This is what is going to happen to thieves and
extortionists. Respectfully, the Boss of Bosses." Local
authorities offered no explanation for the notes. (The same
appellation was used in a September
12 killing in Acapulco.) Authorities were alerted to the
bodies -- many of whose heads were found bound in masking tape
-- by a series of anonymous phone calls. In recent months many
low-level criminals have been killed by vigilante groups thought
to be working with the support of drug traffickers or members of
the police.
In the state of Jalisco, four suspected cartel gunmen were
killed in an hours-long gun battle with the Mexican army. During
the battle, a police helicopter which had been called to the
scene was struck by gunfire. A helicopter gunship was also
called in. In the state of Chihuahua, a soldier was killed and
several wounded after being ambushed near the small hamlet of
Colonia LeBaron. The area has been heavily patrolled following
the July killing of an anti-crime activist and his neighbor.
Monday, October 12
In the waters of the port city of Mazatlan, four men were arrested after the ship in
which they were travelling was found to be carrying
approximately 500 kilos of cocaine. After catching sight of an
American naval vessel in the area, the men were seen began
throwing the drugs overboard, set fire to their ship, and jumped
into the water. American naval personnel rescued the men and
turned them over to Mexican military authorities.
Tuesday, October 13
In Ciudad Juarez, eight people were killed in drug-related
violence. Among them was a woman who was found beheaded. The
woman was in her late twenties and had a tattoo of Santa Muerte,
or "Saint Death", a symbol popular among Mexican criminals. In a
separate incident, four men were killed when gunmen attacked a
mechanics workshop, and three others were killed in other
shootings.
In Navolato, Sinaloa, a group of armed men kidnapped and killed the brother-in-law of a
brother of Vicente Carillo Fuentes, the reputed head of the
Juarez Cartel. The man, Jacobo Retamoza, 34, was the lawyer who
represented the La Guajira farm, where in November 2008 a group
of armed men dressed in military uniforms kidnapped 27 people.
He was driving on a highway when he was intercepted by a group
of heavily armed gunmen who spirited him away in a truck.
Several hours later he was found dead with multiple gunshot
wounds.
In Chiapas, a vast arsenal was discovered after the
arrest of four men, who ranged in ages from 21 to 41. The men
had in their possession 21 AR-15 rifles, 18 AK-47's, and five
pistols, one of which was jewel encrusted. Additionally, law
enforcement officers found 17, 212 rounds of ammunition, over
300 grenades, several blocks of TNT, a sniper rifle, nine
vehicles, and confiscated two race horses found on the
property.
Total body count for the week: 178
Total body count for the year: 5,815
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Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL) Thursday
introduced the Fair Sentencing Act of 2009, which would
eliminate the 100:1 sentencing disparity in federal crack and
powder cocaine cases. Under current laws, in place since the
crack hysteria of the mid-1980s, it takes 500 grams of powder
cocaine to earn a mandatory minimum five-year prison sentence,
but only five grams of crack to earn the same sentence.
Sen. Durbin at
May hearing on crack
sentencing
The Fair Sentencing Act would eliminate that disparity.
Companion legislation has already passed the House Judiciary
Committee. Ending the disparity is also supported by President
Obama.
Pressure to remedy the injustice of the sentencing disparity
has been building for years. The US Sentencing Commission has
reduced sentences for crack offenses and has argued for years
that the disparity needs to be eliminated. It has been joined by
a growing coalition of faith-based, drug reform, criminal
justice, and other interest groups. Now, finally, something is
moving in Congress.
"Drug use is a serious problem in America and we need tough
legislation to combat it," Durbin said in a statement Thursday taking a very mainstream
line. "But in addition to being tough, our drug laws must be
smart and fair. Our current cocaine laws are not," the statement
continued. "The sentencing disparity between crack and powder
cocaine has contributed to the imprisonment of African Americans
at six times the rate of whites and to the United States'
position as the world's leader in incarcerations. Congress has
talked about addressing this injustice for long enough; it's
time for us to act."
"Sen. Durbin's bill will not only restore judicial
discretion, which has been undermined by the statutory mandatory
minimum sentences that Congress enacted 23 years ago, but will
directly address racial disparities in our criminal justice
system and ensure that there is, in fact, 'justice for all',"
said Jasmine L. Tyler, deputy director of national affairs for
the Drug
Policy Alliance. "The House and Senate should move quickly
on this issue, 23 years is too long to wait for justice to be
served."
The act is cosponsored by Senate Judiciary Committee Chair
Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and six other Judiciary Committee members:
Sens. Arlen Specter (D-PA), Russell Feingold (D-VT), Ben Cardin
(D-MD), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Edward Kaufman (D-DE), and Al
Franken (D-NM). Also cosponsoring the bill are Sens. John Kerry
(D-MA) and Chris Dodd (D-CT). Some Republican senators have
expressed support for reforming the sentencing disparity, but
none have yet signed on as cosponsors.
"Today, the criminal justice system has unfair and biased
cocaine penalties that undermine the Constitution's promise of
equal treatment for all Americans," Leahy said. "To have faith
in our system Americans must have confidence that the laws of
this country, including our drug laws, are fair and administered
fairly. I believe the Fair Sentencing Act will move us one step
closer to reaching that goal. I commend Senator Durbin for his
leadership in fixing this decades-old injustice. We should do
what we can to restore public confidence in our criminal justice
system. Correcting biases in our criminal sentencing laws is a
step in that direction."
A sheriff shaking down motorists under the
guise of asset forfeiture gets a slap on the wrist, and so does
a narc who stole the cash from a drug raid. A drug investigation
nets two New Jersey cops -- among others -- and another Florida
deputy goes down for extorting a pot grower. And sometimes, a
cop may not be as corrupt as she first seems. Let's get to
it:
cash in the
evidence room -- who's
counting?
In Rochester, Minnesota, two of five charges against a Rochester police
officer charged with drug corruption were dismissed on October
8. Officer Vanessa Mason was accused in April of tipping off
drug dealers and taking money to deliver drugs, and was put on
administrative leave then. The two charges were dismissed after
a jailed Rochester man said he lied when he told investigators
he helped Mason transport drugs last year -- he said he felt
pressured by investigators. She still faces one felony count of
warning a subject of a surveillance operation and two
misdemeanor counts of misconduct by a police officer.
In Jersey City, New Jersey, a Hoboken police officer and a Jersey City police
officer were among 17 arrested over the past month in a
year-and-a-half long joint operation by the DEA and Jersey City
police against a local cocaine trafficking organization. Jersey
City Police Officer Mark Medal, 52, who was already suspended
for problems with a drug test, was charged with conspiracy to
possess cocaine, as was a ranking Hoboken Fire Department
official, Battalion Chief Henry Setkiewicz, 59. Both were
described as regular customers of the network, although it is
not clear if it was for personal use or to resell. Hoboken
Police Officer Ralph Gallo, 25, was charged with computer theft
-- criminal computer activity -- and official misconduct for
allegedly checking a license plate against a law enforcement
database for one of the network members. A Hoboken Parking
Utility employee, Monica Thorpe, 42, faces similar charges for
doing the same thing.
In Miami, another Broward County sheriff's deputy was
arrested last Friday in a drug extortion scheme against a
marijuana grower that saw Deputy Manuel Silva arrested Oct 2.
This week, it was Deputy Fausto "TJ" Tejero's turn. He is
accused of acting as Silva's accomplice in offering to ignore
the grow in return for cash payments. Tejero was at the scene
with Silva when Silva searched the grower's home, found the pot,
and offered silence for cash. He is charged with extortion,
attempted bribery, burglary and unlawful compensation and is
being held without bail.
In St. Louis, a
former St. Louis police detective was sentenced last Friday
to one year and one day in prison for stealing money seized
during a June 2008 drug raid along with two other officers.
Vincent Carr, 47, also has to pay back $28,000. He pleaded
guilty in February to conspiracy, wire fraud, making false
statements, and obstruction of justice. The two other police
detectives involved in the theft have also pleaded guilty. Leo
Listen was sentenced in September; Bobby Lee Garrett will be
sentenced next month.
In Muskogee, Oklahoma, the former McIntosh County sheriff and
undersheriff were sentenced September 23 to 27 months in
federal prison for stealing money from motorists under the guise
of asset forfeiture and keeping it for themselves. Former
Sheriff Terry Jones, 36, and Undersheriff Mykol Brookshire, 38,
pleaded guilty to "conspiracy under color of law to interfere
with interstate commerce" for repeatedly seizing money from
drivers under threat of arrest and then keeping either all or
part of it for themselves. They went down in May of this year
when the driver they pulled over and shook down turned out to be
a federal agent in a sting directed at them. They found six
bundles of cash, but when they called in the "bust," they only
reported five.
A long line of Massachusetts residents
lined up for an opportunity to tell their legislators to free
the weed as a marijuana legalization bill got its first hearing
before the legislature's Joint Revenue Committee Wednesday. The
bill, H 2929, the brainchild of Northampton
attorney Richard Evans, a former board member of
StoptheDrugWar.org and NORML, was filed at Evans' request by
Rep. Ellen Story (D-Amherst).
"Whether you like it or you hate it... it is undeniable in
2009 that marijuana has become inextricably embedded in our
culture," Evans told the committee. "It is ubiquitous and it is
ineradicable. Members should put on your green eye shades and
give close scrutiny to marijuana prohibition," he added, saying
that the state could reap revenues from legal marijuana
comparable to those gained by introducing casinos.
The bill would remove marijuana offenses from the criminal
code and allow for the licensed production and sale of
marijuana. Licenses would cost $2,000 a year. It would also
impose excise taxes on marijuana retails sales of up to $250 for
the highest THC-level weed. Less potent pot would be taxed at a
lower rate.
While lawmakers on the committee said little in either
support of or opposition to the bill, committee co-chair Rep.
Jay Kaufman (D-Lexington) said he was struck by one particular
facet of the arguments in favor of legalization. "This is
probably the only hearing this committee has ever had or will
ever have with this number of people asking to be taxed," he
said.
The move to legalize comes less than a year after
Massachusetts voters overwhelmingly approved an initiative to
decriminalize the possession of up to an ounce. But proponents
of the bill argued that decriminalization doesn't go far enough
and that it doesn't provide a place for users to legally obtain
marijuana.
That measure was opposed by most of the state's political
establishment, including Mayor Thomas Menino (D), the state's
district attorneys, and by Gov. Deval Patrick (D), who in his
'06 campaign said he was very
comfortable with the idea of legalizing marijuana, but would
veto a decrim bill because he doesn't consider it a priority.
But leaders expressed their commitment
to implement the measure after it passed.
The current bill is unlikely to go anywhere this year, but
now it has at least had a hearing. That's a start.
Wisconsin legislators will get another
crack at passing a medical marijuana bill. State Rep. Mark Pocan
(D-Madison) and Sen. Jon Erpenbach (D-Waunakee) announced
October 8 they were sponsoring LRB 2517, the Jacki Rickert
Medical Marijuana Act, named after the long-time Mondovi patient
and activist. They are currently looking for cosponsors.
IMMLY march
last week, Madison
Rickert famously led a 210-mile march in her wheelchair to
the state house in 1997 seeking to bring attention to her cause.
Since then, she and the group Is My Medicine Legal Yet (IMMLY) have worked
tirelessly to get a medical marijuana bill passed in the
Cheesehead State. A 2007 bill died in committee. This year,
IMMLY communications director Gary Storck and terminally ill
disabled veteran Mary Powers have been leading weekly
delegations of patients to the capitol to meet with and educate
lawmakers.
Under the proposed legislation, terminally or seriously ill
patients could obtain a doctor's recommendation to use
marijuana. Possession of either the recommendation or a state ID
issued by the Department of Human Services would protect
patients and caregivers from arrest and prosecution. Patients
and caregivers could grow up to 12 plants and possess up to
three ounces of marijuana. The bill also provides for a
dispensary system similar to the state-regulated one recently
set up in Rhode Island.
"It's a situation that makes a lot of sense and it's also a
situation dealing with compassion -- how can you not have
compassion for someone who says, 'look the nausea is really
upsetting, the chemo treatments are really tough and this is the
only way I can find a little bit of relief from the pain,'" said
Erpenbach at a press conference announcing the bill.
The legislators' action came a week after IMMLY led a
demonstration of hundreds of patients and supporters at the
state capitol in Madison. Now, with the bill circulating and
about to be filed, it will be time to return to the mundane art
of state house lobbying.
Demagogue
Rising: Western Australia Premier Colin
Barnett
Leading a Liberal-National Party coalition government,
Western Australia Premier Colin Barnett is introducing
legislation this week to roll back reforms to the state's
marijuana laws. Passed by an earlier Labor government in 2003,
the changes decriminalized the possession of up to 30 grams of
pot and allowed for the growing of up to two plants without fear
of arrest and prosecution.
In a media statement Sunday and another one Monday, the "tough on crime"
premier gave clear notice he was cracking down on pot and other
drug offenders, and was willing to extend police powers to do
so. He said he would introduce legislation to repeal the state's
Cannabis Control Act of 2003 and to amend the 1981 Misuse of
Drugs and Youthful Offender Act.
"The Liberal-National Government is committed to tackling
both the demand and supply sides of the illicit drug problem
through strong law enforcement policies, education and
rehabilitation," Barnett said. "Cannabis is not a harmless or
soft drug. Research continues to show that cannabis can lead to
a host of health and mental health problems including
schizophrenia, and can be a gateway to harder drugs," he
maintained, treating highly controversial and discredited claims
as if they were fact.
According to Premier Barnett, his legislation will:
Prosecute those in possession of more than 10g of
cannabis.
See subsequent offenses for possession being prosecuted as
criminal offences.
Prosecute people for cultivating even one or two cannabis
plants.
Extend the ban on the sale of pot-smoking implements to
minors to include everyone.
Increase the fine for selling smoking implements to $5,000
for sale to adults and $10,000 for sale to minors. Corporate
entities could be fined up to five times those amounts.
Barnett also wants to "reform" the Cannabis Infringement
Notice Scheme (CIN), or ticketing and fines for decriminalized
amounts, by replacing it with a Cannabis Intervention
Requirement Scheme (CIRS) that would require anyone ticketed to
attend "drug education" classes. It would also mandate that
anyone who failed to pay his fine would be prosecuted, something
that has not been the case under the current law.
Barnett's scheme would also allow for the criminal
prosecution for marijuana possession of juveniles after two
decrim tickets and adults after one. The current law has no such
measures.
There's more to come, Barnett promised. "The next steps will
be to amend legislation to enable courts to impose a harsher
sentence on dealers who sell or supply illicit drugs to
children, irrespective of the location of the sale or supply,"
he said. "Further amendments to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1981
will provide offenses for exposing children to harm or to the
danger of serious harm from the manufacture of illegal drugs,
such as amphetamines, or the unlawful cultivation of illegal
hydroponically-grown plants. The government will also move to
ban the sale of drug paraphernalia, including cocaine kits."
But, he said Monday, he's going to start by soon introducing
legislation to allow police to stop and search anyone without
probable cause. The police commissioner would designate certain
"stop and search" zones with advance public notice, especially
in entertainment areas.
"Police will have the right to go up to anyone they wish to
and introduce a stop and search power," Barnett said. "It will
not be an invasive search; it will be comparable to the sort of
search and screening that takes place for any citizen getting on
an aeroplane."
Under an anti-methamphetamine package
announced last week by the government of New Zealand, popular
cold and flu remedies containing pseudoephedrine will soon be
available only by prescription after a visit to the doctor's
office. The popular sinus treatment is also considered a
precursor chemical for manufacturing meth.
"We're asking New Zealanders to band together and to accept
using alternatives to treat their colds and flus to ensure New
Zealand no longer becomes one of the countries most heavily
affected by P [as the Kiwis refer to meth]," said Prime Minister
John Key as he announced the a series of moves to combat meth
use and production.
In addition to restricting access to precursor chemicals, the
government will spend more money on drug treatment programs,
create a 40-man police anti-meth task force, and charge police
with drafting a new anti-meth law enforcement strategy by next
month. The government said it would pay for the programs with
asset forfeiture funds.
The pseudoephedrine announcement in particular brought a mixed reaction from the public. Some,
especially those who had friends or family members who had had
problems with meth, were supportive. But others were "annoyed,"
asking why law-abiding people had to suffer for the actions of
drug users and some "voiced concern that it was a bit over the
top."
Unsurprisingly, New Zealand police were happy with the new
meth package. In a statement greeting the package's
announcement, Assistant Commissioner Viv Rickard praised the
"whole of government approach" as "more effective" in the battle
against meth, but, as always, the police wanted more.
"Police support the control of pseudoephedrine as it would
allow us to concentrate resources and work with Customs on
preventing the importation of precursors from overseas," Rickard
said. "Precursor control is a vital part of disrupting the
supply of methamphetamine, but no one action on its own will
solve the methamphetamine problem. Stronger legislation around
gangs, the ability to seize assets and profits of organized
criminals and enhanced treatment programs will all contribute
reducing the supply of methamphetamine and making our
communities safer."
The West African nation of Liberia, still
struggling to emerge from years of bloody civil war, is now
turning its attention to the war on drugs. Voice of America reported Wednesday that
Liberian lawmakers have approved tough new anti-drug measures
aimed not only at South American and Nigerian drug traffickers,
but also at the country's own marijuana farmers.
Liberia
Under the old law, drug trafficking offenses typically earned
between five and 10 years in prison, but now the minimum
sentence has quintupled. "If you are arrested and sent to court
and convicted, you could be sentenced to jail for not less than
25 years and not more than 60 years," James Jelah, head of the
Liberian DEA, told VOA.
Under the new law, drug offenders will no longer be eligible
for bail while awaiting trial. Police and prosecutors have also
been granted new asset forfeiture powers.
The hard line comes as Liberia and other weak West African
nations grapple with cocaine trafficking. The poorly policed
countries provide an enticing stopover point for South American
loads on their way to the European market.
But like neighboring countries, Liberia also has a
substantial -- and militant -- marijuana farming population.
"The DEA is trying to uproot the marijuana farms," Jelah said.
"And as a result, they were attacked by the townspeople. They
put a blockade. They attacked them. Some shot single-barrel guns
in the air. People came with machetes and sticks and they
started beating up the DEA men. These guys had to jump in the
bush."
In a country with 80% unemployment, marijuana production is a
lucrative economic activity. So is the retail drug trade. One
young Liberian told VOA the drug trade wasn't going away no
matter what the government did.
"I sell it to foreigners, and I also sell it to Liberians,"
he said. "This is a money-making business. I do not care how
much the government can do, this is our business. This is how we
survive. So we cannot just do without drugs."
But the Liberian government is reading from the US drug war
playbook.
October 22, 1982: The first publicly known
case of Contra cocaine shipments appears in government files in
a cable from the CIA's Directorate of Operations. The cable
passes on word that US law enforcement agencies are aware of
"links between (a US religious organization) and two Nicaraguan
counter-revolutionary groups [which] involve an exchange in (the
United States) of narcotics for arms." [The material in
parentheses was inserted by the CIA as part of its
declassification of the cable. The name of the religious group
remains secret.]
October 19, 1999: Taking a states' rights approach to medical
marijuana, candidate George W. Bush says, "I believe each state
can choose that decision as they so choose." As president, Bush
instead escalates prosecutions of medical marijuana providers by
the US Dept. of Justice and opposes states' rights arguments in
court proceedings.
October 17, 2002: Florida Governor Jeb Bush's daughter is
sentenced to 10 days in jail and led away in handcuffs after
being accused of having crack cocaine in her shoe while in drug
rehab. In a statement, the governor says he realizes his
daughter must face the consequences of her actions.
October 20, 2004: A groundbreaking coalition of black
professional organizations comes together to form the National
African American Drug Policy Coalition (NAADPC). NAADPC
"urgently seeks alternatives to misguided drug policies that
have led to mass incarceration."
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."
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prohibition-era beer raid, Washington, DC (Library of
Congress)
Since last issue:
Scott Morgan writes: "Why Does PayPal Have a
Problem With Medical Marijuana?," "Awesome: Protesters Plant
Hemp at DEA Headquarters, Get Arrested," "What's the Actual
Value of a Marijuana Plant?"
Phil Smith previews Chronicle articles, and advises: "Where
NOT to Hide Your Stash."
David Borden offers: "Oakland Cannabis Tax on Lehrer News
Hour Last Night," "Senators Sponsor Bill to Lower Crack Cocaine
Penalties," "Busy Night on the Medical Marijuana Front."
David
Guard posts numerous press releases, action alerts and other
organizational announcements in the In the
Trenches blog.
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