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Restore-Digest Wednesday, July
17 2002 Volume 2002 : Number 138
Today's Restore Hemp News The
Mix Is the Message V: Drug War Explosions
DEA Urges Dutch To Crack Down On Ecstasy Dealers... Canada: Federal justice minister admits to smoking marijuana in his youth CA: Medical Marijuana Proponents Protest Conviction Canada: Theft Makes Pot Grower Angry, Dopey ALERT: #246 USA Today Gives Hutchinson Free Ride In Netherlands MI: HEMP Operation Takes To The Air Canada: Marijuana Law Is Out Of Date Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 09:36:55 -0700 Subject:The Mix Is the Message V: Drug War Explosions Up TOC from Roger Dodger The Mix Is the Message V: Drug War Explosions Don Hazen, <http://www.alternet.org/>AlterNet July 12, 2002 There is nothing more crazymaking in American society than the crashing crosscurrents of the drug war. On the one hand there is a population that has gone on record numerous times supporting decriminalization of pot and legal use of medical marijuana. On the other hand there is a rabid federal drug apparatus that clashes with local law enforcement and ignores public opinion expressed in statewide votes. Instead we are getting aggressive raids and punitive prosecutions. Between the clashing of these two world views, there is no middle ground. Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court, led by Clarence Thomas, has extended the power of school districts to test and search students for drugs, underscoring once again, as <http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13564>Herman Schwartz writes in the Nation: "that for the Supreme Court, the rights of young people are shredded when they walk through the schoolhouse gates." The latest crushing blow dealt by the Feds came on July 12 in Sacramento, Calif., where Bryan James Epis, a 35-year-old electrical engineer, was convicted for conspiracy and manufacturing of pot. Epis says he smokes pot for his own chronic pain and was cultivating it for other sick patients. He faces a mandatory minimum prison sentence of 10 years. Epis has been involved in a cannabis buyers club in Chico, which opened after voters in California approved a 1996 initiative that allowed the use of pot on the recommendation of a doctor. The jury found that Epis was planning to increase the number of pot plants he was growing to 1,000 in 1999, and that his residence in Chico was within 1,000 feet of Chico High School, which could increase his penalty. According to Sacramento Bee reporter Denny Walsh, who has been covering the case closely, this is the first federal criminal case involving an organization like the Cannabis Club to reach a jury. "U.S. District Judge Frank C. Damrell Jr. granted prosecutor Samuel Wong's motion that Epis be jailed pending sentencing. Wong pointed out that the law under which Epis was found guilty mandates immediate incarceration, and the judge agreed." Organizers with the Drug Reform Coordination Network (DRC Net) suggest that the trial could be a harbinger of things to come as California medical marijuana advocates find themselves in an increasingly tense and heated conflict with the federal government. The Sacramento case was marked by accusations of obstruction of justice against Epis and Oakland Cannabis Co-op head Jeff Jones; Jones attempted to familiarize jurors with the concept of jury nullification, and Epis was accused by Judge Damrell of doing so. Damrell dismissed one batch of potential jurors before the trial could get underway because of pamphleteering around the courthouse, and had Jones briefly arrested. Epis returns to Damrell's court on Aug. 1 for a hearing on the obstruction of justice charge. The battle with the feds over pot will no doubt spread to other states that have passed medical pot laws or may soon do so. The newest wrinkle is that voters in Nevada, which until last year had the nation's strictest marijuana laws, will decide in November whether to let adults legally possess small amounts of pot. Under the proposal, marijuana would be sold in state-licensed shops. A distribution system also would be set up to provide low-cost pot for medical uses. Meanwhile, other persecuted medical pot advocates in the U.S. are seeking refugee status in Canada. Renee Boje, 32, is probably the most famous American fugitive in Canada. According to a report by <http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13578>Ross Crockford on AlterNet.org, Boje is currently under U.S. extradition to face charges for conspiracy to cultivate hundreds of cannabis plants at the Los Angeles home of Todd McCormick, a cancer patient and medical marijuana activist. If convicted, Boje faces the same mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years that Epis is likely to receive in Sacramento. The severity of the sentence, Crockford says, has made her the poster child for the increasing numbers of U.S. citizens heading north to take advantage of Canada's liberal pot laws. "There are hundreds of Americans here," Renee Boje says, "because they're being persecuted by their own government." There is a major difference between how medical marijuana laws are applied in Canada and the U.S. The Canadian federal government has granted permits to possess or grow marijuana to more than 800 Canadians who suffer from AIDS, cancer or multiple sclerosis. Yet although California voters passed Prop. 215, the Compassionate Use Act, in 1996, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has used federal law to raid and prosecute medical marijuana clubs across the state. In May last year, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the DEA's actions, ruling that "marijuana has no medical benefits," and this June the U.S. government obtained an injunction shutting down the few remaining California clubs. On the other side of the Atlantic, the British Labor Party, which controls the government, moved toward a far saner approach on the pot question, by in effect decriminalizing possession, even though English conservatives are nibbling around the edges of the policy change. British Home Secretary David Blunkett explained that the Blair government wished to distinguish "between drugs which kill and drugs that cause harm." Blunkett told the House of Commons that "cannabis possession remains a criminal offense," but in most cases users would not be arrested. The move would effectively extend the so-called "Lambeth experiment" (police in the south London borough of Lambeth do not arrest but merely cite cannabis offenders) to the entire nation. According to <http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13585>DRCNet, former British drug czar Keith Hellawell took Blunkett's pronouncement as a chance to resign with some notice. "This would virtually be the decriminalization of cannabis and this is, quite frankly, giving out the wrong message," he said in a press release. "Cannabis is simply not a sensible substance to take." What a mess. Saner countries like our neighbor Canada and our former colonial master, England, along with other European countries, are able to make rational judgments between dangerous drugs and benign ones. Here in the U.S. however, an hysterical anti-intellectualism (and a philosophy that views all drugs as equally bad,) continues to astound many Americans by its fundamental stupidity. Even though there have been signs of lightening up, the era of Ashcroft and Bush has ratcheted up the drug war several notches, flexing the government's power to ruin lives, break up families and fill up jails. Despite the voices of millions of Americans who oppose the drug war, the end is not in sight, and those committed to the battle had better dig in for the long haul. Don Hazen is the executive editor of AlterNet.org. <http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13589>http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13589------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 12:28:26 -0700 Subject:DEA Urges Dutch To Crack Down On Ecstasy Dealers... Up TOC from Andrew Seidenfeld http://www.usatoday.com/news/washdc/2002/07/15/usat-dutch-drugs.htm 07/15/2002 - Updated 11:01 AM ET U.S. urges Dutch to toughen drug policy By Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY By Todd Plitt, USA TODAY photo: United States Customs Inspector Cecile Sosa-Pete works with "Ginny" at Newark International Airport in New Jersey searching for drugs. AMSTERDAM =8B The United States' anti-drug chief and a Dutch police= commander were touring Amsterdam's red-light district recently when a man approached the U.S. law enforcement delegation. "Ecstasy? Viagra? Cocaina?" he whispered to a Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman. The Dutch cop shrugged. DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson grimaced. Drug dealers are bold here. Drugs, especially the club drug Ecstasy, are cheap and plentiful. Dutch police mostly look the other way, preferring to focus on property crimes and public nuisances. Read more below - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Graphic * Interactive guide to the latest illicit drugs (http://www.usatoday.com/graphics/news/gra/gdrugs/frame.htm pretty high tech, particularly informative is the Lingo for Users section) * See how Ecstasy affects the brain http://www.usatoday.com/graphics/news/gra/gserotonin/frame.htm------------------------------ ------------------------------------------- Photo gallery * See how drug smuggling has changed since Sept. 11 http://www.usatoday.com/news/gallery/drug-war/frame.htm------------------------------ ------------------------------------------- It's added up to a 100 million-pill-a-year problem for the USA, where authorities have become increasingly frustrated at how the Netherlands' laissez faire approach to drug enforcement has allowed Ecstasy labs to flourish here. The Netherlands has become the dominant supplier of the synthetic hallucinogenic drug that has exploded in popularity among U.S. teens and young adults. U.S. officials say about 80% of the 2 million Ecstasy pills flowing into the USA each week are manufactured on Dutch soil. U.S. Customs officers stationed in New York City-area airports, the most popular Ecstasy smuggling hubs, say they can make a bust every other day just by targeting passengers from flights that have passed through the Netherlands. The percentage of teens in the USA who use Ecstasy has more than doubled since 1995, a survey last year by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America showed. In a nationwide survey of 6,937 youths ages 12-18, 12% said they had used Ecstasy, up from 5% in 1995. It ranks behind only alcohol and marijuana in teen popularity. U.S. law enforcement officials want the Dutch to become less hospitable to Ecstasy's manufacturers and smugglers, but they have little power to make that happen. The Netherlands is a wealthy ally that cannot be pushed into tougher drug enforcement with the promise of U.S. aid or the threat of sanctions. Instead, U.S. officials are trying to politely persuade the Dutch to see it their way. Hutchinson, who visited the Netherlands for two days in June, hopes a more conservative Dutch parliament elected May 15 and increasing pressure from less permissive members of the European Union will prompt the Dutch to pursue dealers and manufacturers more aggressively. The Dutch have made significant busts since creating a synthetic-drug law enforcement division in 1997. In 2000, Dutch authorities dismantled 23 Ecstasy labs, the U.S. State Department says. Dutch officials say they intend to close more Ecstasy labs with five new anti-drug squads. The Dutch parliament recently approved a five-year, $35 million program aimed at reducing the Ecstasy supply, and the Dutch justice minister has suggested a registration system for pillmaking machines. U.S. officials appreciate the moves. But they say the Netherlands' underlying tolerance of drugs undermines the crackdowns. Penalties for dealing and manufacturing drugs are not stiff enough to discourage it, they say. "They have a permissive drug policy that has a natural way of attracting those who want to engage in illegal behavior, and they have a weak law enforcement structure," Hutchinson says. Ecstasy is illegal in the Netherlands. The Dutch, however, regard drug use primarily as a health issue rather than as a crime problem, so they focus their efforts on preventing drug use rather than law enforcement. Licensed shops in the Netherlands sell marijuana for individual use, and the government provides free needles and clean rooms where heroin addicts can shoot up. Addicts who become a nuisance are steered toward treatment. The large-scale dealers and manufacturers who are prosecuted rarely spend more than a year or two in prison. Dutch officials, when challenged on their priorities, refer to an insatiable U.S. demand for drugs. "What we are doing is fighting some basic rules of an economic market," says Steven van Hoogstraten, former director of drugs policy at the Dutch Justice Ministry. Manufacturers want to smuggle drugs to the market willing to pay the highest price, he says, alluding to the USA's black market. An Ecstasy pill typically sells for about 50 cents wholesale and $7 retail in the Netherlands; it brings about $15 in the typical U.S. nightclub. Drug prices in the Netherlands are the lowest in Western Europe, the United Nations Office for Drug Control Policy says. The Dutch police report that 40% of the Ecstasy they seized in 1999, about 1.5 million of 3.7 million tablets, was destined for the USA. Police data indicate that 8.1 million Ecstasy tablets seized worldwide in 2000 could be traced to the Netherlands, a State Department report says. Manufacturers in the Netherlands usually buy used pill presses from Asia, particularly India and Thailand. They import the chemicals from China, the largest producer of chemicals used to make Ecstasy. The Chinese say they produce the chemicals for making perfume, Dutch officials say. "There is no legitimate use for the chemical" in the Netherlands, says David Borah, the DEA attach=E9 based in The Hague. "So we know it's being used to make Ecstasy." Many smugglers who bring chemicals into the Netherlands find cover at Rotterdam's port, the world's busiest. About 40% of the 6.5 million containers that pass through the port each year contain chemicals. Loose European borders mean that smugglers can bring the chemicals and pill presses from Eastern Europe in tractor-trailers with little risk of inspection. Dutch customs officials X-ray 25,000 to 30,000 containers a year, less than 1% of the 6.5 million containers that pass through Rotterdam each year. They say they usually need advance intelligence and luck to find Ecstasy pills in containers the size of railroad cars. "Try to find a bag of 10,000 pills in a 40-foot container of tomatoes," says Kees Visscher of Dutch customs. Front Page News Money Sports Life Tech Weather Shop Terms of service Privacy Policy How to advertise About us =A9 Copyright 2002 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc. Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 14:29:56 -0700 Subject:Canada: Federal justice minister admits to smoking marijuana in his youth Up TOC Federal justice minister admits to smoking marijuana in his youth Canadian Press Tuesday, July 16, 2002 OTTAWA (CP) - Justice Minister Martin Cauchon acknowledged smoking marijuana in his youth Tuesday, a day after he suggested he's considering decriminalizing the illegal substance. "I'm 39 years old . . . yes, of course, I tried it," Cauchon said when asked after a cabinet meeting whether he has ever tried marijuana. "From my own experience, I can't tell you if it's harmful or not." Cauchon declined to answer further questions about his use of marijuana, saying only that he wants to see the findings of two parliamentary committees before making a decision about whether to decriminalize it. Prime Minister Jean Chretien said he has never tried to smoke dope. "I don't smoke cigarettes, and when I was young the word marijuana did not exist," he said outside the cabinet meeting Tuesday. "I didn't know. I learned about the word long after that. It was too late to try it." Cauchon is only the latest Canadian politician to admit to trying marijuana. Ontario Premier Ernie Eves, Alberta Premier Ralph Klein, former Canadian Alliance leader Stockwell Day, retiring federal NDP Leader Alexa McDonough, both the opposition leaders in Ontario, and others have acknowledged using the illegal weed, all of them saying they no longer indulge. A Commons committee and a Senate committee are each exploring changes to drug laws, including the possibility of decriminalizing marijuana.------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 18:32:51 -0700 Subject:CA: Medical Marijuana Proponents Protest Conviction Up TOC Newshawk: openi420 Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA) Copyright: 2002 Chico Community Publishing, Inc. Contact: chicoletters@newsreview.com Website: http://www.newsreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/559 Author: Chris Rizo, Capitol Correspondent MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROPONENTS PROTEST CONVICTION SACRAMENTO - Decrying last week's conviction of a Chico medical marijuana dispenser, dozens of activists protested outside the state Department of Justice's headquarters Monday, calling on government to keep its hands off their medicine. On Thursday, a jury of eight women and four men found Bryan James Epis guilty of federal charges of conspiring to grow more than 1,000 marijuana plants near a Chico school, for which the Chicoan now faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison. Epis, who plans to appeal the decision, is scheduled for sentencing on Aug. 26. In the meantime he remains in custody. Intensifying tensions between the federal government and local advocates who point to a 1996 voter-approved state law that allows the use of medically necessary marijuana, protesters Monday said they will continue pressuring state authorities to challenge the federal law that prohibits the use of cannabis for any purpose. "This man's only crime is obeying California law, and his motive was to reduce suffering of sick people," said Aundre Speciale of Americans for Safe Access, a grass-roots group of medical marijuana supporters. "What we want to know is what will Gov. Gray Davis and Attorney General Bill Lockyer do to protect patients and to secure Bryan Epis' freedom," Speciale continued. Epis, who says he uses marijuana for neck pain resulting from a near-fatal traffic crash, argued outside the courtroom he had the right to dispense marijuana to seriously ill patients under provisions of California's Compassionate Use Act. U.S. District Court Judge Frank C. Damrell, however, forbid Epis' attorney, the famous barrister J. Tony Serra, to use a medical marijuana defense to justify Epis' conduct of illegal cultivation, noting a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision which ruled such a defense is not valid. Don Duncan, a medical marijuana user who joined the protest from Berkeley, said Epis' conviction is largely the consequence of an uninformed jury, which was not allowed to consider the compassionate circumstances surrounding the case. "Had the jurors known that this was a medical marijuana case they would have acquitted," Duncan said. "The jury had no idea that the crime that they voted to convict on has a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence." Members of the Butte Alliance for Medical Marijuana said the case has had a chilling effect on north state medical marijuana users. "We have all gone to jail at some time for growing our own since Bryan's arrest," said Mike Rogers, now of Live Oak, who faced cultivating charges after being arrested in Cohasset in 1999. He was acquitted in Butte County Superior Court two years later after he presented a medical marijuana defense. Added Dinah Coffman, director of BAMM: "This has had a ripple effect. Now I have to try to grow my own medicine, and I have people trying to break into my yard to get it." The case against Epis, which is the first federal prosecution involving a cannabis buyers' club, endured a string of procedural challenges, including dismissal of the first jury pool after the potential panel was tainted by pro-medical marijuana protesters dispensing leaflets outside Sacramento's federal court building. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 19:42:55 -0700 Subject:Canada: Theft Makes Pot Grower Angry, Dopey Up TOC Newshawk: CannabisLink.ca (http://cannabislink.ca) Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Webpage: http://www.mapinc.org/cancom/D83EDAE2-EFFF-4DD7-A411-D2E8E7B9BC99 Copyright: 2002 Times Colonist Contact: letters@times-colonist.com Website: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 THEFT MAKES POT GROWER ANGRY, DOPEY It's straight out of Cheech and Chong. A Saanich dope grower faces charges after indignantly complaining to police that his marijuana grow operation had been stolen. The cannabis cultivator went out for a few hours on Sunday night. When he returned home about midnight, his indoor pot patch had been pilfered. He phoned police. But after the pot thinned, the plot thickened. The appropriately named Const. Doug Weidman (pronounced Weedman) went to the house in the 4000-block of Braefoot Road. He found the thief or thieves had left some marijuana behind. They arrested the 32-year-old resident for possession. "It's surprising what some people will report to police," said Const. Peter Lane. "It's kind of funny." The 32-year-old has been released on a promise to appear in court in about six weeks. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 23:13:57 -0700 From: webmaster@drugsense.org (DrugSense) Subject:ALERT: #246 USA Today Gives Hutchinson Free Ride In Netherlands Up TOC DrugSense FOCUS Alert # 246 July 16, 2002 USA Today Gives Hutchinson Free Ride In Netherlands *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE************************* DrugSense FOCUS Alert # 246 July 16, 2002 DEA head Asa Hutchinson recently traveled to the Netherlands. USA Today reported on the trip this week. The article not only lets Hutchinson make absurd criticisms about the Dutch system without any challenge, the reporter ignores a number of inconvenient facts, such as lower drug use rates in the Netherlands. The article states: "U.S. law enforcement officials want the Dutch to become less hospitable to Ecstasy's manufacturers and smugglers, but they have little power to make that happen. The Netherlands is a wealthy ally that cannot be pushed into tougher drug enforcement with the promise of U.S. aid or the threat of sanctions." Surely the reporter knows that pushing countries into "tougher drug enforcement" does not make a country "less hospitable" to drug manufacturers - in Colombia such tactics have dramatically increased drug production. Please write a letter to USA Today asking why the newspaper is only telling half the story on the Netherlands. Thanks for your effort and support. WRITE A LETTER TODAY It's not what others do it's what YOU do *************************************************************************** PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER OR TELL US WHAT YOU DID ( Letter, Phone, fax etc.) Please post a copy your letter or report your action to the sent letter list (sentlte@mapinc.org) if you are subscribed, or by E-mailing a copy directly to MGreer@mapinc.org if you are not subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list with so others can learn from your efforts and be motivated to follow suit. Subscribing to the Sent LTE list (sentlte@mapinc.org) will help you to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing efforts. To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form This is VERY IMPORTANT as it is one very effective way of gauging our impact and effectiveness. ************************************************************************ CONTACT INFO Source: USA Today (US) Contact: editor@usatoday.com ************************************************************************ ORIGINAL ARTICLE - ----------------- U.S. urges Dutch to toughen drug policy Webpage: http://www.usatoday.com/news/washdc/2002/07/15/usat-dutch-drugs.htm Pubdate: July 15, 2002 Source: USA Today (US) Copyright: 2002 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc Contact: editor@usatoday.com Website: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466 Author: Donna Leinwand, USA Today U.S. urges Dutch to toughen drug policy AMSTERDAM The United States' anti-drug chief and a Dutch police commander were touring Amsterdam's red-light district recently when a man approached the U.S. law enforcement delegation. "Ecstasy? Viagra? Cocaina?" he whispered to a Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman. The Dutch cop shrugged. DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson grimaced. Drug dealers are bold here. Drugs, especially the club drug Ecstasy, are cheap and plentiful. Dutch police mostly look the other way, preferring to focus on property crimes and public nuisances. It's added up to a 100 million-pill-a-year problem for the USA, where authorities have become increasingly frustrated at how the Netherlands' laissez faire approach to drug enforcement has allowed Ecstasy labs to flourish here. The Netherlands has become the dominant supplier of the synthetic hallucinogenic drug that has exploded in popularity among U.S. teens and young adults. U.S. officials say about 80% of the 2 million Ecstasy pills flowing into the USA each week are manufactured on Dutch soil. U.S. Customs officers stationed in New York City-area airports, the most popular Ecstasy smuggling hubs, say they can make a bust every other day just by targeting passengers from flights that have passed through the Netherlands. The percentage of teens in the USA who use Ecstasy has more than doubled since 1995, a survey last year by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America showed. In a nationwide survey of 6,937 youths ages 12-18, 12% said they had used Ecstasy, up from 5% in 1995. It ranks behind only alcohol and marijuana in teen popularity. U.S. law enforcement officials want the Dutch to become less hospitable to Ecstasy's manufacturers and smugglers, but they have little power to make that happen. The Netherlands is a wealthy ally that cannot be pushed into tougher drug enforcement with the promise of U.S. aid or the threat of sanctions. Instead, U.S. officials are trying to politely persuade the Dutch to see it their way. Hutchinson, who visited the Netherlands for two days in June, hopes a more conservative Dutch parliament elected May 15 and increasing pressure from less permissive members of the European Union will prompt the Dutch to pursue dealers and manufacturers more aggressively. The Dutch have made significant busts since creating a synthetic-drug law enforcement division in 1997. In 2000, Dutch authorities dismantled 23 Ecstasy labs, the U.S. State Department says. Dutch officials say they intend to close more Ecstasy labs with five new anti-drug squads. The Dutch parliament recently approved a five-year, $35 million program aimed at reducing the Ecstasy supply, and the Dutch justice minister has suggested a registration system for pillmaking machines. U.S. officials appreciate the moves. But they say the Netherlands' underlying tolerance of drugs undermines the crackdowns. Penalties for dealing and manufacturing drugs are not stiff enough to discourage it, they say. "They have a permissive drug policy that has a natural way of attracting those who want to engage in illegal behavior, and they have a weak law enforcement structure," Hutchinson says. Ecstasy is illegal in the Netherlands. The Dutch, however, regard drug use primarily as a health issue rather than as a crime problem, so they focus their efforts on preventing drug use rather than law enforcement. Licensed shops in the Netherlands sell marijuana for individual use, and the government provides free needles and clean rooms where heroin addicts can shoot up. Addicts who become a nuisance are steered toward treatment. The large-scale dealers and manufacturers who are prosecuted rarely spend more than a year or two in prison. Dutch officials, when challenged on their priorities, refer to an insatiable U.S. demand for drugs. "What we are doing is fighting some basic rules of an economic market," says Steven van Hoogstraten, former director of drugs policy at the Dutch Justice Minister has suggested a registration system for pillmaking machines. U.S. officials appreciate the moves. But they say the Netherlands' underlying tolerance of drugs undermines the crackdowns. Penalties for dealing and manufacturing drugs are not stiff enough to discourage it, they say. "They have a permissive drug policy that has a natural way of attracting those who want to engage in illegal behavior, and they have a weak law enforcement structure," Hutchinson says. Ecstasy is illegal in the Netherlands. The Dutch, however, regard drug use primarily as a health issue rather than as a crime problem, so they focus their efforts on preventing drug use rather than law enforcement. Licensed shops in the Netherlands sell marijuana for individual use, and the government provides free needles and clean rooms where heroin addicts can shoot up. Addicts who become a nuisance are steered toward treatment. The large-scale dealers and manufacturers who are prosecuted rarely spend more than a year or two in prison. Dutch officials, when challenged on their priorities, refer to an insatiable U.S. demand for drugs. "What we are doing is fighting some basic rules of an economic market," says Steven van Hoogstraten, former director of drugs policy at the Dutch Justice Ministry. Manufacturers want to smuggle drugs to the market willing to pay the highest price, he says, alluding to the USA's black market. An Ecstasy pill typically sells for about 50 cents wholesale and $7 retail in the Netherlands; it brings about $15 in the typical U.S. nightclub. Drug prices in the Netherlands are the lowest in Western Europe, the United Nations Office for Drug Control Policy says. The Dutch police report that 40% of the Ecstasy they seized in 1999, about 1.5 million of 3.7 million tablets, was destined for the USA. Police data indicate that 8.1 million Ecstasy tablets seized worldwide in 2000 could be traced to the Netherlands, a State Department report says. Manufacturers in the Netherlands usually buy used pill presses from Asia, particularly India and Thailand. They import the chemicals from China, the largest producer of chemicals used to make Ecstasy. The Chinese say they produce the chemicals for making perfume, Dutch officials say. "There is no legitimate use for the chemical" in the Netherlands, says David Borah, the DEA attach=E9 based in The Hague. "So we know it's being used to make Ecstasy." Many smugglers who bring chemicals into the Netherlands find cover at Rotterdam's port, the world's busiest. About 40% of the 6.5 million containers that pass through the port each year contain chemicals. Loose European borders mean that smugglers can bring the chemicals and pill presses from Eastern Europe in tractor-trailers with little risk of inspection. Dutch customs officials X-ray 25,000 to 30,000 containers a year, less than 1% of the 6.5 million containers that pass through Rotterdam each year. They say they usually need advance intelligence and luck to find Ecstasy pills in containers the size of railroad cars. "Try to find a bag of 10,000 pills in a 40-foot container of tomatoes," says Kees Visscher of Dutch customs. Front Page News Money Sports Life Tech Weather Shop Terms of service Privacy Policy How to advertise About us =A9 Copyright 2002 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc. Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 14:29:56 -0700 From: "D. Paul Stanford" Subject: Canada: Federal justice minister admits to smoking marijuana in his youth Federal justice minister admits to smoking marijuana in his youth Canadian Press Tuesday, July 16, 2002 OTTAWA (CP) - Justice Minister Martin Cauchon acknowledged smoking marijuana in his youth Tuesday, a day after he suggested he's considering decriminalizing the illegal substance. "I'm 39 years old . . . yes, of course, I tried it," Cauchon said when asked after a cabinet meeting whether he has ever tried marijuana. "From my own experience, I can't tell you if it's harmful or not." Cauchon declined to answer further questions about his use of marijuana, saying only that he wants to see the findings of two parliamentary committees before making a decision about whether to decriminalize it. Prime Minister Jean Chretien said he has never tried to smoke dope. "I don't smoke cigarettes, and when I was young the word marijuana did not exist," he said outside the cabinet meeting Tuesday. "I didn't know. I learned about the word long after that. It was too late to try it." Cauchon is only the latest Canadian politician to admit to trying marijuana. Ontario Premier Ernie Eves, Alberta Premier Ralph Klein, former Canadian Alliance leader Stockwell Day, retiring federal NDP Leader Alexa McDonough, both the opposition leaders in Ontario, and others have acknowledged using the illegal weed, all of them saying they no longer indulge. A Commons committee and a Senate committee are each exploring changes to drug laws, including the possibility of decriminalizing marijuana.------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 18:32:51 -0700 From: "D. Paul Stanford" Subject: CA: Medical Marijuana Proponents Protest Conviction Newshawk: openi420 Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA) Copyright: 2002 Chico Community Publishing, Inc. Contact: chicoletters@newsreview.com Website: http://www.newsreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/559 Author: Chris Rizo, Capitol Correspondent MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROPONENTS PROTEST CONVICTION SACRAMENTO - Decrying last week's conviction of a Chico medical marijuana dispenser, dozens of activists protested outside the state Department of Justice's headquarters Monday, calling on government to keep its hands off their medicine. On Thursday, a jury of eight women and four men found Bryan James Epis guilty of federal charges of conspiring to grow more than 1,000 marijuana plants near a Chico school, for which the Chicoan now faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison. Epis, who plans to appeal the decision, is scheduled for sentencing on Aug. 26. In the meantime he remains in custody. Intensifying tensions between the federal government and local advocates who point to a 1996 voter-approved state law that allows the use of medically necessary marijuana, protesters Monday said they will continue pressuring state authorities to challenge the federal law that prohibits the use of cannabis for any purpose. "This man's only crime is obeying California law, and his motive was to reduce suffering of sick people," said Aundre Speciale of Americans for Safe Access, a grass-roots group of medical marijuana supporters. "What we want to know is what will Gov. Gray Davis and Attorney General Bill Lockyer do to protect patients and to secure Bryan Epis' freedom," Speciale continued. Epis, who says he uses marijuana for neck pain resulting from a near-fatal traffic crash, argued outside the courtroom he had the right to dispense marijuana to seriously ill patients under provisions of California's Compassionate Use Act. U.S. District Court Judge Frank C. Damrell, however, forbid Epis' attorney, the famous barrister J. Tony Serra, to use a medical marijuana defense to justify Epis' conduct of illegal cultivation, noting a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision which ruled such a defense is not valid. Don Duncan, a medical marijuana user who joined the protest from Berkeley, said Epis' conviction is largely the consequence of an uninformed jury, which was not allowed to consider the compassionate circumstances surrounding the case. "Had the jurors known that this was a medical marijuana case they would have acquitted," Duncan said. "The jury had no idea that the crime that they voted to convict on has a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence." Members of the Butte Alliance for Medical Marijuana said the case has had a chilling effect on north state medical marijuana users. "We have all gone to jail at some time for growing our own since Bryan's arrest," said Mike Rogers, now of Live Oak, who faced cultivating charges after being arrested in Cohasset in 1999. He was acquitted in Butte County Superior Court two years later after he presented a medical marijuana defense. Added Dinah Coffman, director of BAMM: "This has had a ripple effect. Now I have to try to grow my own medicine, and I have people trying to break into my yard to get it." The case against Epis, which is the first federal prosecution involving a cannabis buyers' club, endured a string of procedural challenges, including dismissal of the first jury pool after the potential panel was tainted by pro-medical marijuana protesters dispensing leaflets outside Sacramento's federal court building. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 19:42:55 -0700 From: "D. Paul Stanford" Subject: Canada: Theft Makes Pot Grower Angry, Dopey Newshawk: CannabisLink.ca (http://cannabislink.ca) Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Webpage: http://www.mapinc.org/cancom/D83EDAE2-EFFF-4DD7-A411-D2E8E7B9BC99 Copyright: 2002 Times Colonist Contact: letters@times-colonist.com Website: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 THEFT MAKES POT GROWER ANGRY, DOPEY It's straight out of Cheech and Chong. A Saanich dope grower faces charges after indignantly complaining to police that his marijuana grow operation had been stolen. The cannabis cultivator went out for a few hours on Sunday night. When he returned home about midnight, his indoor pot patch had been pilfered. He phoned police. But after the pot thinned, the plot thickened. The appropriately named Const. Doug Weidman (pronounced Weedman) went to the house in the 4000-block of Braefoot Road. He found the thief or thieves had left some marijuana behind. They arrested the 32-year-old resident for possession. "It's surprising what some people will report to police," said Const. Peter Lane. "It's kind of funny." The 32-year-old has been released on a promise to appear in court in about six weeks. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 23:13:57 -0700 From: webmaster@drugsense.org (DrugSense) Subject: ALERT: #246 USA Today Gives Hutchinson Free Ride In Netherlands DrugSense FOCUS Alert # 246 July 16, 2002 USA Today Gives Hutchinson Free Ride In Netherlands *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE************************* DrugSense FOCUS Alert # 246 July 16, 2002 DEA head Asa Hutchinson recently traveled to the Netherlands. USA Today reported on the trip this week. The article not only lets Hutchinson make absurd criticisms about the Dutch system without any challenge, the reporter ignores a number of inconvenient facts, such as lower drug use rates in the Netherlands. The article states: "U.S. law enforcement officials want the Dutch to become less hospitable to Ecstasy's manufacturers and smugglers, but they have little power to make that happen. The Netherlands is a wealthy ally that cannot be pushed into tougher drug enforcement with the promise of U.S. aid or the threat of sanctions." Surely the reporter knows that pushing countries into "tougher drug enforcement" does not make a country "less hospitable" to drug manufacturers - in Colombia such tactics have dramatically increased drug production. Please write a letter to USA Today asking why the newspaper is only telling half the story on the Netherlands. Thanks for your effort and support. WRITE A LETTER TODAY It's not what others do it's what YOU do *************************************************************************** PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER OR TELL US WHAT YOU DID ( Letter, Phone, fax etc.) Please post a copy your letter or report your action to the sent letter list (sentlte@mapinc.org) if you are subscribed, or by E-mailing a copy directly to MGreer@mapinc.org if you are not subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list with so others can learn from your efforts and be motivated to follow suit. Subscribing to the Sent LTE list (sentlte@mapinc.org) will help you to review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing efforts. To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form This is VERY IMPORTANT as it is one very effective way of gauging our impact and effectiveness. ************************************************************************ CONTACT INFO Source: USA Today (US) Contact: editor@usatoday.com ************************************************************************ ORIGINAL ARTICLE - ----------------- U.S. urges Dutch to toughen drug policy Webpage: http://www.usatoday.com/news/washdc/2002/07/15/usat-dutch-drugs.htm Pubdate: July 15, 2002 Source: USA Today (US) Copyright: 2002 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc Contact: editor@usatoday.com Website: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466 Author: Donna Leinwand, USA Today U.S. urges Dutch to toughen drug policy AMSTERDAM The United States' anti-drug chief and a Dutch police commander were touring Amsterdam's red-light district recently when a man approached the U.S. law enforcement delegation. "Ecstasy? Viagra? Cocaina?" he whispered to a Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman. The Dutch cop shrugged. DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson grimaced. Drug dealers are bold here. Drugs, especially the club drug Ecstasy, are cheap and plentiful. Dutch police mostly look the other way, preferring to focus on property crimes and public nuisances. It's added up to a 100 million-pill-a-year problem for the USA, where authorities have become increasingly frustrated at how the Netherlands' laissez faire approach to drug enforcement has allowed Ecstasy labs to flourish here. The Netherlands has become the dominant supplier of the synthetic hallucinogenic drug that has exploded in popularity among U.S. teens and young adults. U.S. officials say about 80% of the 2 million Ecstasy pills flowing into the USA each week are manufactured on Dutch soil. U.S. Customs officers stationed in New York City-area airports, the most popular Ecstasy smuggling hubs, say they can make a bust every other day just by targeting passengers from flights that have passed through the Netherlands. The percentage of teens in the USA who use Ecstasy has more than doubled since 1995, a survey last year by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America showed. In a nationwide survey of 6,937 youths ages 12-18, 12% said they had used Ecstasy, up from 5% in 1995. It ranks behind only alcohol and marijuana in teen popularity. U.S. law enforcement officials want the Dutch to become less hospitable to Ecstasy's manufacturers and smugglers, but they have little power to make that happen. The Netherlands is a wealthy ally that cannot be pushed into tougher drug enforcement with the promise of U.S. aid or the threat of sanctions. Instead, U.S. officials are trying to politely persuade the Dutch to see it their way. Hutchinson, who visited the Netherlands for two days in June, hopes a more conservative Dutch parliament elected May 15 and increasing pressure from less permissive members of the European Union will prompt the Dutch to pursue dealers and manufacturers more aggressively. The Dutch have made significant busts since creating a synthetic-drug law enforcement division in 1997. In 2000, Dutch authorities dismantled 23 Ecstasy labs, the U.S. State Department says. Dutch officials say they intend to close more Ecstasy labs with five new anti-drug squads. The Dutch parliament recently approved a five-year, $35 million program aimed at reducing the Ecstasy supply, and the Dutch justice minister has suggested a registration system for pillmaking machines. U.S. officials appreciate the moves. But they say the Netherlands' underlying tolerance of drugs undermines the crackdowns. Penalties for dealing and manufacturing drugs are not stiff enough to discourage it, they say. "They have a permissive drug policy that has a natural way of attracting those who want to engage in illegal behavior, and they have a weak law enforcement structure," Hutchinson says. Ecstasy is illegal in the Netherlands. The Dutch, however, regard drug use primarily as a health issue rather than as a crime problem, so they focus their efforts on preventing drug use rather than law enforcement. Licensed shops in the Netherlands sell marijuana for individual use, and the government provides free needles and clean rooms where heroin addicts can shoot up. Addicts who become a nuisance are steered toward treatment. The large-scale dealers and manufacturers who are prosecuted rarely spend more than a year or two in prison. Dutch officials, when challenged on their priorities, refer to an insatiable U.S. demand for drugs. "What we are doing is fighting some basic rules of an economic market," says Steven van Hoogstraten, former director of drugs policy at the Dutch Justice Ministry. Manufacturers want to smuggle drugs to the market willing to pay the highest price, he says, alluding to the USA's black market. An Ecstasy pill typically sells for about 50 cents wholesale and $7 retail in the Netherlands; it brings about $15 in the typical U.S. nightclub. Drug prices in the Netherlands are the lowest in Western Europe, the United Nations Office for Drug Control Policy says. The Dutch police report that 40% of the Ecstasy they seized in 1999, about 1.5 million of 3.7 million tablets, was destined for the USA. Police data indicate that 8.1 million Ecstasy tablets seized worldwide in 2000 could be traced to the Netherlands, a State Department report says. Manufacturers in the Netherlands usually buy used pill presses from Asia, particularly India and Thailand. They import the chemicals from China, the largest producer of chemicals used to make Ecstasy. The Chinese say they produce the chemicals for making perfume, Dutch officials say. "There is no legitimate use for the chemical" in the Netherlands, says David Borah, the DEA attache based in The Hague. "So we know it's being used to make Ecstasy." Many smugglers who bring chemicals into the Netherlands find cover at Rotterdam's port, the world's busiest. About 40% of the 6.5 million containers that pass through the port each year contain chemicals. Loose European borders mean that smugglers can bring the chemicals and pill presses from Eastern Europe in tractor-trailers with little risk of inspection. Dutch customs officials X-ray 25,000 to 30,000 containers a year, less than 1% of the 6.5 million containers that pass through Rotterdam each year. They say they usually need advance intelligence and luck to find Ecstasy pills in containers the size of railroad cars. "Try to find a bag of 10,000 pills in a 40-foot container of tomatoes," says Kees Visscher of Dutch customs. ************************************************************************ ADDITIONAL INFO to help you in your letter writing efforts 3 Tips for Letter Writers http://www.mapinc.org/3tips.htm Letter Writers Style Guide http://www.mapinc.org/style.htm ************************************************************************ SAMPLE LETTER (SENT) To the Editors of USA TODAY: DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson should be seeking advice on drug policy from the Dutch, not giving it. ("U. S. Urges Dutch to Toughen Drug Policy" 7-15-02). The Dutch rate of recreational drug use and abuse is substantially lower than U. S. rates. See: http://www.drugwarfacts.org/thenethe.htm If we stop drugs like ecstasy from coming from the Netherlands the drugs will come from somewhere else. As long as Americans want drugs and we are willing to pay a substantial price for the drugs, someone will produce them and someone will get the drugs to the willing buyers. Guaranteed. Best regards, Kirk Muse IMPORTANT: Always remember to include your address and phone number. NOTE: If you choose to use this letter as a model please modify it at least somewhat so that the paper does not receive numerous copies of the same letter and so that the original author receives credit for his/her work. ************************************************************************ TARGET ANALYSIS USA Today With a U.S. circulation of over 2.3 million, the readership demographics are: Total Adult Readers 4.3 million. Male/Female 66/34%. Median Age 41 years. Attended College 80%. Median HH Income $71, 661. The average published letter would cost over $5,000 if purchased as an ad. The MAP published letter archive has 53 letters from USA Today. A recent sample shows they tend to be short - about 40% being under 100 words. The average published is 169 words, and the largest about 300 words. The published letters can be viewed here: http://www.mapinc.org/mapcgi/ltedex.pl?SOURCE=USA+Today ************************************************************************ TO SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, OR UPDATE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS: Please utilize the following URLs http://www.drugsense.org/hurry.htm http://www.drugsense.org/unsub.htm We wish to thank all our contributors, editors, Newshawks and letter writing activists. NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. REMINDER: Please help MAP find news articles. Details at http://www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm === NOW YOU CAN DONATE TO DRUGSENSE ONLINE AND IT'S TAX DEDUCTIBLE DrugSense provides many services to at no charge BUT THEY ARE NOT FREE TO PRODUCE. We incur many costs in creating our many and varied services. If you are able to help by contributing to the DrugSense effort visit our convenient donation web site at http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm - -OR- Mail in your contribution. Make checks payable to MAP Inc. send your contribution to: The Media Awareness Project (MAP) Inc. d/b/a DrugSense PO Box 651 Porterville, CA 93258 (800) 266 5759 MGreer@mapinc.org http://www.mapinc.org/ http://www.drugsense.org/ **************************** Just DO It!! ****************************** Prepared by Stephen Young - www.maximizingharm.com DrugSense FOCUS Alert Specialist ************************************************************************ === Please help us help reform. Send drug-related news to editor@mapinc.org See http://www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm for details === NOW YOU CAN DONATE TO DRUGSENSE ONLINE AND IT'S TAX DEDUCTIBLE DrugSense provides many services to at no charge BUT THEY ARE NOT FREE TO PRODUCE. We incur many costs in creating our many and varied services. If you are able to help by contributing to the DrugSense effort visit our convenient donation web site at http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm ********************* Just DO It!! ********************************** Mark Greer Executive Director DrugSense MGreer@mapinc.org http://www.drugsense.org/ http://www.mapinc.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 03:07:03 -0700 From: "D. Paul Stanford" Subject: MI: HEMP Operation Takes To The Air Newshawk: M & M Family Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Monroe Evening News (MI) Contact: tom@monroenews.com Copyright: 2002, The Monroe Evening News Website: http://www.monroenews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2302 HEMP OPERATION TAKES TO THE AIR State police spotted marijuana plants growing in Exeter Township Monday. Michigan State Police got a bird's-eye view of Monroe County Monday during an annual marijuana plant uprooting operation. Using a helicopter to see from above, undercover agents directed officers on the ground to plots of pot plants growing amid the county's crops. Lt. Luke Davis of the Office of Monroe Narcotics Investigations (OMNI) said 14 plants were found at Ferder and Scofield Rds. in a rural section of Exeter Township just west of Maybee. The MSP chopper flew above the county for about five hours Monday in the first of what could be several flights for Operation HEMP, or Help Eliminate Marijuana Plants. The program is designed to eradicate pot plants that people grow among corn. Normally suspects are not developed because it's difficult to prove who planted the weed. Moreover, HEMP is designed specifically for eradication. Marijuana is clearly seen by the naked eye from above because of its distinct green color. When crews in the chopper spot growing pot, they notify officers on the ground and direct them to the illegal plants. The location near Maybee was the only plot discovered Monday. The plants were young, about three feet tall, Lt. Davis said. Additional operations are expected later this year, he added. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 11:50:48 -0700 From: "D. Paul Stanford" Subject: Canada: Marijuana Law Is Out Of Date Newshawk: CannabisLink.ca http://cannabislink.ca/ Pubdate: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 Source: Kitchener-Waterloo Record (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 Kitchener-Waterloo Record Contact: letters@therecord.com Website: http://www.therecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/225 MARIJUANA LAW IS OUT OF DATE Justice Minister Martin Cauchon has started what should become a major debate about the best way for Canadians to handle the marijuana question. To his credit, Cauchon has avoided jumping to conclusions about exactly what new federal legislation should do with marijuana, but he has clearly indicated that he finds the current law unacceptable. As it now stands, simple possession of marijuana is a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment. Believing this to be too harsh, the government is considering some form of decriminalization, though possession would still be illegal. Presumably, growing marijuana for commercial purposes in homes would remain illegal, as it should be because it poses safety problems through the excessive use of electricity and residues left in the homes. Trafficking would also be illegal. The minister's interest in this subject comes -- perhaps not surprisingly - -- one week after the British government said it would make possession of marijuana a non-arrestable offence. There, police would arrest marijuana users only if they caused public problems or threatened to harm children. Other countries, such as Netherlands, have gone even further in liberalizing marijuana laws. The case against Canada's current law is strong. In terms of the physical impact it has upon people as a drug, marijuana is not so different from alcohol and tobacco. An article in the Canadian Medical Association Journal in May 2001 called marijuana an innocuous drug, with the exception of ingredients such as tars that make it similar to tobacco from a health perspective. Indeed, the government is not thinking of going as far as to make possession of marijuana legal. Cauchon wants to leave it as an illegal drug, but not one with heavy, criminal penalties attached to it. Such an approach makes sense. There is no good reason to make people who use marijuana recreationally as criminals. And by shifting the focus of police away from such users, the state could put more of its resources into its battle against trafficking and, indeed, more dangerous drugs. In the short term, Cauchon said the government will wait for the reports of two parliamentary committees that have been studying marijuana. He has also said the government will consult Canadians. On so controversial an issue, this is a fair strategy. Support for decriminalizing marijuana has come from Conservative Leader Joe Clark and Keith Martin, the Alliance member of Parliament who introduced a private member's bill on this subject. Perhaps the most interesting support comes from the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police. The chiefs are more concerned about police officers focusing their time on serious criminals. The real debate in the months ahead should be about the details of the forthcoming marijuana legislation, not on the principle of decriminalization. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom------------------------------ End of Restore-Digest V2002 #138 ******************************** Restore Hemp News Today Visit our sister site crrh.org
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