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Restore-Digest Thursday, August
8 2002 Volume 2002 : Number 159
Today's Restore Hemp News SD:
White Plume harvest, sells, hemp
Canada: Hashish Shipments Build Port Legend HI: Latest Green Harvest Report Under Review NV: Marijuana Ballot Issue - Police Back Legalization HI: Police To Return Pot - Again Nevada Voters Evenly Split on Pot Issue HI: Time To Say More Than Just "No" Canada: Son Expelled For Pot: Family Sues Durham School Board MPP's paid signature drive fails in DC DC initiative Date: Wed, 07 Aug 2002 09:30:50 -0700 Subject:SD: White Plume harvest, sells, hemp Up TOC Alex White Plume has become the first farmer within the borders of the United States to complete a cycle of planting, growth, harvest and delivery of industrial hemp since 1958. Rapid City Journal August 02, 2002 Manderson area family harvests hemp crop By Heidi Bell Gease, Journal Staff Writer MANDERSON -- The third time was a charm for Alex White Plume and his family as they quietly harvested their first crop of industrial hemp this week. "It really felt good," White Plume said Friday. "Just like a sense of relief." This was the third straight year the White Plume family planted hemp on their land near Manderson. Two years in a row, federal agents confiscated the plants before they could be harvested, although the U.S. government did not file any charges against any of the White Plumes, who planned to produce and sell hemp oil and other products from the plants. This time, family members beat government agents to the punch. They harvested most of the 3.5-acre crop Monday night. "They weren't that tall, but they were done pollinating," White Plume said. "So we took some out, we cut it and it's dried." The dried hemp already has been sold to Madison Hemp & Flax Co. of Lexington, Ky., which joined with the Kentucky Hemp Growers Cooperative Association to ship a trailer full of Canadian hemp to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation after the White Plumes' first crop was confiscated in 2000. That hemp was to be used for bricks in a hemp house. Industrial hemp is a form of the cannabis sativa plant, also known as marijuana. Unlike marijuana, hemp cannot be smoked to get high. But it can be used to make everything from rope to paper to cloth to soap to animal feed, and itrequires little water. White Plume said the seeds they planted contained little or no tetrahydrocannabinol, the ingredient in marijuana that produces a "high." Federal laws do not distinguish between hemp and marijuana, making it illegal to grow either one (although hemp can be legally imported). But in 1998, the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council voted to legalize hemp. Tribal members say that because the Oglala Sioux Tribe is a sovereign nation, its laws should apply on the reservation. The Kentucky buyers will visit the White Plumes on Wednesday, Aug. 14, to pick up the hemp. That same day, the public is invited to attend a harvest celebration and symbolic harvest of one small hemp plot. All are welcome, White Plume said, and thanksgiving ceremonies will begin about 10 a.m. He has already heard from people all over the country who are interested in attending. "I can't figure out how they hear about it," he said. "Somebody's spreading the word." This year's hemp crop was not as impressive as in years past, when plants grew to 12 or 13 feet tall. The drought kept this year's plants to half that size. But White Plume pointed out that tall prairie grasses grew only about a foot this year, so the hemp plants "still outgrew everything around." "I think they were meant to be here," he said. White Plume would not say how much hemp was harvested, but he said it was basically a symbolic amount. "This was a contract between our family and that company from Kentucky," he said. "We just wanted to keep our word that we could deliver. It took a long time, but we kept our word." There was at least one benefit to the raids of 2000 and 2001. When it came time to harvest this year's crop, the White Plumes knew what to do. "I used a Weed Eater," White Plume said. "I learned that from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the FBI." Questions or comments on this story? Call reporter Heidi Bell Gease at 394-8419, or e-mail her at heidi.bell@rapidcityjournal.com. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 07 Aug 2002 17:32:27 -0700 Subject:Canada: Hashish Shipments Build Port Legend Up TOC Newshawk: Join CMAP (http://www.mapinc.org/cmap/lists.htm) Pubdate: Wed, 07 Aug 2002 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Webpage: http://www.mapinc.org/cancom/A52ACB20-00B6-44DA-8A4B-DC3DBF03DF91 Copyright: 2002 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: letters@thegazette.southam.ca Website: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: George Kalogerakis, of the Montreal Gazette HASHISH SHIPMENTS BUILD PORT LEGEND For 25 per cent off the top, Gerald Matticks could get ship containers full of drugs safe and sound out of Montreal's port. Anyone willing to pay would bypass high-tech security, video cameras and paperwork. "It was systematic," prosecutor Robert Rouleau told a judge yesterday. "He was paid either in money or in product." With those words, what police have known for decades became unrefuted public knowledge - Matticks ran criminal activity in the port of Montreal. "With his consent and help," Quebec Court Judge Jean-Pierre Bonin added, "the containers would be delivered by different manoeuvres without danger to whom they belonged." Matticks's notoriety in the port even reached the ears of a Senate committee on security in airports and harbors. Their February report said a crime family had eyes everywhere in the port and could make containers disappear. The report didn't name him, but police knew who it was talking about. The report said the way the unions controlled who was hired led to the problem. Incidentally, both Matticks and his son Donald are members of the checkers' union. Checkers are the ones who ensure ship containers go to the proper place. One of the ways police say drugs get through is by a corrupt worker in another port putting an extra container on a ship, which is then unloaded in Montreal. No paperwork exists for the container so it can easily disappear once here. Evidence in court shows he brokered seven shipments of hashish totaling 33,363 kilograms, and one of 260 kilograms of cocaine. All in a little more than a year. Despite Matticks's contacts, a number were seized by police. If Matticks got his 25-per-cent share in drugs, he would then sell it to the Hells Angels, Rouleau added. At times, the biker gang owed him as much as $7 million. Rouleau said Matticks's sentence of 12 years, which started yesterday, was agreed to beforehand by the prosecution and defence. It avoids at least two trials of four months each. Since Matticks has already spent 18 months in jail awaiting trial, which counts as double, the total works out to 15 years. Police learned the intricacies of Matticks's port operation when his right-hand man became an informant last year to get a shorter sentence. They were able to charge Matticks with more crimes, as well as arrest much of his gang three weeks ago. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 07 Aug 2002 17:34:25 -0700 Subject:HI: Latest Green Harvest Report Under Review Up TOC Newshawk: The War on Drugs IS Terrorism Pubdate: Wed, 7 Aug 2002 Source: West Hawaii Today (HI) Contact: wht@aloha.net Copyright: 2002 West Hawaii Today Website: http://westhawaiitoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/644 Author: Tiffany Edwards Note: For more on medical cannabis and cannabis eradication in Hawaii go to http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii LATEST GREEN HARVEST REPORT UNDER REVIEW HILO - Councilmembers next week will take up a marijuana eradication mission report that states 14,425 plants were seized in June. Comparing that to the 3,133 plants seized in the May missions, Police Lt. Henry Tavares noted police have moved into what they consider to be the "peak season" for marijuana growing. Tavares, who leads the Hilo Vice section, said that season runs from June to September. More plants are eradicated during this time period because the height of the plants makes them easier to spot from the helicopter, he said. Law enforcement personnel are mandated by the councilmembers to keep the helicopters at an altitude of at least 1,000 feet. Among other conditions, the council requires them to submit monthly reports in return for accepting federal funds for the "Green Harvest" program. The report for the June 24 - 28 mission indicates all 14,425 plants were seized in East Hawaii, with a majority of them found in Puna subdivisions. In one day, 4,898 plants ranging from seedlings to 6 feet tall and spread out in 203 plots were recovered in that area. Police reported they received 12 calls regarding the June missions, including several complaints about low - flying helicopters. One person reportedly told police "this is a war zone and the government does not own the sky," the report states. Another claimed to be a Vietnam veteran who did not want the "post traumatic stress" of helicopters being near his home, according to the document. One man called police asking them to fly over his property and check for marijuana, after he encountered several people walking across the property, according to the report. One Fern Forest subdivision resident called to express appreciation for the eradication efforts in that neighborhood and to offer police a cup of coffee while they were there, the report indicates. __________________________________________________________________________ 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, 07 Aug 2002 17:35:17 -0700 Subject:NV: Marijuana Ballot Issue - Police Back Legalization Up TOC Newshawk: Krissy www.mpp.org Pubdate: Wed, 07 Aug 2002 Source: Las Vegas Review-Journal (NV) Copyright: 2002 Las Vegas Review-Journal Contact: letters@lvrj.com Website: http://www.lvrj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/233 Author: Jane Ann Morrison MARIJUANA BALLOT ISSUE - POLICE BACK LEGALIZATION MEASURE Board Of State Group Says Officers Have More Pressing Concerns Advocates of changing the Nevada Constitution to decriminalize possession of 3 ounces or less of marijuana landed a significant endorsement from an unlikely Source: police. Andy Anderson, president of the Nevada Conference of Police and Sheriffs, said Tuesday that the group's board voted 9-0 to support Question 9, the ballot question that would block the arrest or prosecution of people 21 or older found with 3 ounces or less of marijuana. NCOPS' rationale: Police should be working more serious crimes. "We're not endorsing marijuana, we're not saying marijuana is good. We're saying we should be spending our time protecting and serving the public," Anderson said. "It's not cops for pot." However, the victory by ballot measure proponents was muddied somewhat. One board member was confused and thought he was voting on medical marijuana use. Also, the largest organization within NCOPS disagrees with the endorsement. Mick Gillins, assistant executive director of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association, said he voted yes Monday under the belief he was supporting the use of marijuana for medical purposes. That was the Question 9 ballot question of 1998 and 2000. Gillins said while he initially misunderstood the ballot question, after discussing it again with Anderson, "I'm sticking with my vote." However, David Kallas, his boss at the PPA, said the PPA will not support the part of Question 9 that legalizes marijuana use for adults. The question also contains some language regarding the use of marijuana for medical purposes. "We don't have an issue with a proposal legalizing marijuana for medical purposes based on a doctor's prescription," Kallas said. NCOPS is an umbrella group representing police unions from Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, Henderson, the Clark County School District and other police officer organizations in Nevada. NCOPS represents more than 3,000 members, of which 2,100 are PPA members. "The bottom line is, we think we can use our resources better than making simple marijuana arrests," Anderson said. Anderson predicted the NCOPS endorsement will have a major impact to help the passage of the question, which will be on November's ballot. Current polls show that Nevadans are divided on this question, which is opposed by federal drug officials and the Clark County district attorney's office. Billy Rogers is point man for the question's backers, Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement, which is a subsidiary of the national Marijuana Policy Project. "This endorsement puts us over the top," he said, because it reinforces the message that police are spending too much time arresting people using small amounts of drugs. Rogers said his group spent $375,000 on the petition drive that qualified the ballot question and has raised about $150,000 so far for the campaign promoting the question. The NCOPS endorsement will be part of the group's ad campaign because officers are the most credible spokespersons on the issue, Rogers said. Both he and Kallas were surprised by the NCOPS endorsement. "A month ago, if you had told me we'd get this endorsement, I would not have thought it possible," Rogers said. Two candidates for sheriff both said they oppose Question 9. Capt. Randy Oaks said, "I am opposed to the legalization of even small amounts of marijuana, and while I empathize with the very few people who could benefit from its medicinal qualities, the experience in California is that it was largely abused and the people pushing this are not the people who need it for illness." Like Gillins, Oaks said he thought the Question 9 on this year's ballot was the medicinal marijuana question, which passed and is already in the Nevada Constitution. In the public's eyes, the two clearly have become intertwined, Oaks said, contending that leads to confusion. Deputy Chief Bill Young couldn't be reached Tuesday but told the Review-Journal editorial board on July 25 he opposes the new marijuana proposal because it "sends the wrong message to young people." He said the current way marijuana use is handled, with possession of 1 ounce being a misdemeanor that no one goes to jail for, is about right. However, he did add, "If older folks want to smoke (marijuana) in their own homes, I could care less." Young is endorsed by NCOPS, and Oaks said the pot question endorsement "speaks to the credibility of their endorsement." While federal drug officials have urged Nevadans to vote against Question 9, no group opposing it yet has organized formally. Gary Booker, the chief deputy district attorney in charge of the vehicular crimes unit, said that's about to change. A coalition of DUI and victims groups will be organizing to fight the ballot because of concern that the question will weaken DUI prosecutions. Booker said Nevada will be a laughingstock if the question passes. "Nobody else has mandated it's legal to smoke pot as a constitutional right," he said. "You amend your constitution to free slaves or enact women's rights or where there is a true constitutional evil. You don't change your constitution to allow people to smoke drugs." Booker said NCOPS was being "myopic" by taking the position that officers are wasting their time making drug arrests. He said this overlooks broader policy issues about drug use. Rogers pointed to the elements of the petition's language that would limit pot use. The question says the Legislature should write laws to provide penalties for driving dangerously while under the influence of marijuana, smoking pot in a vehicle or public place or distribution in a jail, prison or school. In 2000, the previous Question 9 approving marijuana for medical use passed with the support of 65 percent of voters. This new Question 9 must be approved by voters in 2002 and 2004 before taking effect. If the question is approved, Nevada, which had the strictest marijuana laws in the nation until 2001, would have the most lenient. Among the most lenient states, Ohio, New York, Maine, Mississippi and Nebraska now require police merely to issue citations for people possessing small amounts of marijuana. Offenders pay small fines, usually $100. Before 2001, possession of even small amounts in Nevada was a felony offense that could carry prison time but rarely did. After the medical use question passed, the Legislature decriminalized possession of 1 ounce or less in 2001. A recent Review-Journal and reviewjournal.com poll indicated Nevada voters are almost evenly split on the issue. The poll results concluded that 44 percent of Nevada voters surveyed support the initiative, 46 percent oppose it, while 10 percent are undecided. Cited: Marijuana Policy Project (www.mpp.org) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?162 (Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement) __________________________________________________________________________ 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: Wed, 07 Aug 2002 17:35:57 -0700 Subject:HI: Police To Return Pot - Again Up TOC Newshawk: The War on Drugs IS Terrorism Pubdate: Wed, 7 Aug 2002 Source: Hawaii Tribune Herald (HI) Contact: htrib@hawaiitribune-herald.com Copyright: 2002 Hawaii Tribune Herald Website: http://www.hilohawaiitribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/185 Author: Jason Armstrong Note: For more on medical cannabis and cannabis eradication in Hawaii go to http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii POLICE TO RETURN POT - AGAIN A Big Island man running for governor received court approval Tuesday to retrieve nearly an ounce of marijuana police seized from his wife last October. However, Jonathan Adler learned he must wait until Monday for the District Court to release the 27 grams of marijuana he plans to smoke as treatment for chronic pain. When that occurs, Adler will become the fourth Big Islander in the last month to recover medical marijuana police had confiscated. The pot Adler is seeking is his, yet prosecutors used it as evidence July 11 in convicting his wife, Nuansawat, of misdemeanor possession, resulting in a $25 fine. "We hold all evidence for 30 days for the appeal period," court clerk Pauline Tanaka told the Tribune - Herald after denying Adler's demand that the marijuana be returned. Monday will be the first business day following the mandatory waiting period, she said. News of the delay did not sit well with Adler, who came to the court with an order District Judge Jeffrey Choi signed earlier in the day authorizing the return of the marijuana. "I want my medicine now," Adler shouted in the crowded court office. Adler, 50, said the seized marijuana is "some of the best I ever produced," but added he is unsure it is still usable after being stored for nearly a year. He earlier went to the Hilo Police Station seeking his property, but was told that while the judge's order is valid, the marijuana is being held at the courthouse and he would have to go there. Wearing an aloha shirt he said he found Monday at the Keaau transfer station, Adler remained very excited throughout much of his roughly two - hour effort. "They're making me do so much legwork," he said. Adler said he suffered a head injury in a car accident, which has left him with frequent pain that makes him eligible under state law to use and grow limited amounts of marijuana. Nuansawat Adler produced a state - issued card authorizing her to act as a caregiver for her husband, who holds a similar card stating he can use marijuana as medicine. A vocal marijuana advocate and frequent candidate for elected office, Adler was arrested in 1998 after police found 89 marijuana plants growing on his property. During the course of the ensuing trial, Adler missed a court appearance, resulting in the issuance of a bench warrant for his arrest. Police arrested him last year at his Hawaiian Paradise Park home, he said. Nuansawat Adler said police later called to instruct her to bring her husband's medicine, which she delivered along with marijuana to the Hilo cellblock the following morning, at which time police arrested her for possession. Police last month returned 1.5 ounces of marijuana seized earlier in the month from three Kona residents registered with the state to possess the drug. Police involved with the case said it was the first time in Hawaii, and probably the nation, that law enforcement officials returned pot to its owner. Motivated by that case, Adler vowed to not give up until he obtains the marijuana police took from him. "You got to have some degree of tenacity to do what I do," he said. "It's not easy." __________________________________________________________________________ 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: Thu, 08 Aug 2002 07:40:16 -0700 Subject:Nevada Voters Evenly Split on Pot Issue Up TOC Newshawk: PLEASE HELP! Visit http://www.nrle.org/ Pubdate: Sun, 04 Aug 2002 Source: Reno Gazette-Journal (NV) Webpage: http://www.rgj.com/news/stories/html/2002/08/04/20879.php Copyright: 2002 Reno Gazette-Journal Contact: rgjmail@nevadanet.com Website: http://www.rgj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/363 Author: Steve Timko Note: GIF images of the poll are at http://www.mapinc.org/temp/13502.gif and http://www.rgj.com/news/files/2002/08/05/13502.gif.php Cited: Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement http://www.nrle.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?162 (Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement) NEVADA VOTERS EVENLY SPLIT ON POT ISSUE Nevada voters are evenly split on a ballot initiative that would legalize adult possession of 3 ounces or less of marijuana, a new poll shows. But in Reno and Washoe County, a clear majority of residents oppose the legalization of small amounts of marijuana, according to a Reno Gazette-Journal/News 4 poll. The poll of 600 likely voters was conducted in July by Rockville, Md.-based Research 2000. Statewide, 48 percent of Nevadans support the ballot question that takes marijuana beyond medical use approved two years ago; 48 percent oppose it. Four percent were not sure. Opposition rises to 58 percent in Washoe County and 54 percent in Reno, the poll shows. "We think it's good news," said Billy Rogers, spokesman for Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement, the group pushing the ballot measure. "Based on these results, I think it's likely we'll win this election." Washoe County District Attorney Richard Gammick, who strongly opposes the measure, expected the issue to have more support in Clark County than the rest of Nevada. "I expect conservatism runs a little more rampant in Washoe County and the cow counties than in Clark County," Gammick said. "All these people leave California to get away from that kind of stuff, and then when they get here, they want to bring all that stuff with them." Research 2000 President Del Ali said that, statewide, the issue appears to be a dead heat. There are also very few undecided voters, who traditionally tend to vote against ballot initiatives. Twelve percent of those polled strongly disapprove of the measure compared to 9 percent who strongly support it, noted Ali. Based on those numbers, he thinks the measure will be voted down. Initiative supporters have to spend a lot of money and time to get their campaign right, Ali said. "And they're going to have to give a real compelling reason why they want 3 ounces of marijuana made legal," he added. While the marijuana issue had no gender gap, Democrats supported it much more heavily than Republicans and independents, Ali said. Support Among Medical Pot Users In 1998 and 2000, Nevada voters approved licensing people who want to use marijuana for medical reasons. Rogers said his group believes law enforcement has better things to do than arrest people for having small amounts of marijuana in their home. The 3 ounces is often associated with medical marijuana use. The proposed law would forbid public use of marijuana and driving while under the influence of marijuana. It would require prison sentences for people who sell marijuana to children. "This protects responsible people and punishes irresponsible people," Rogers said. Gary Brown, a employee at Hippies pipe and incense shop in Sparks and the 14th person to receive a medical marijuana card in Nevada, said young people are telling him they are registering to vote just so they can support the marijuana question. "I wish the government would lighten up on us," Brown said. "I consider this to be truth in democracy. This is what this is about, people voting for something they feel is worth voting for." Brown said he was a Navy corpsman attached to the Marines in Vietnam in April 1967 when he was injured in an ambush and left 70 percent disabled. After Nevada law allowed marijuana use for medical reasons, Brown signed up for the license that says he has a medical need to use medical marijuana. As of July 8, the state had received 186 applications. After work, as he starts relaxing for bed, Brown will take a few puffs of marijuana to cope with the pain, he said. He said the marijuana is a substitute for prescribed medication that makes him groggy. While the latest initiative makes it legal for any adult to have up to 3 ounces of marijuana, Brown notes it also makes the state provide low-cost marijuana for people who have medical needs for it. People with the medical marijuana cards currently can grow up to seven plants at home, but it's still illegal in Nevada for them to buy marijuana. Brown wishes the proposal only allowed up to 2 ounces for adults because that might get a wider range of support than the proposed 3 ounces. "I think 2 ounces is great," Brown said. "It would have been an easier number to swallow." He's also glad the proposal limits the age to 21, like alcohol, because that will do a better job of keeping it out of the hands of children. "Eighteen is too young. I think 21 is still great," Brown said. "It is a gateway drug for the younger people," Brown said of marijuana. "But so is alcohol. Beer is a gateway drug and this state has one of the highest alcoholism rates in the nation." Officials Oppose Gammick said telephone calls he's getting show people are confused and believe the issue deals with medical marijuana only. It's to legalize up to 3 ounces for any adult, or as many as 90 marijuana cigarettes, Gammick said. "This is not a small amount of marijuana for personal use," the district attorney said. Drug Enforcement Administration Director Asa Hutchinson came to Nevada last month and said the initiative, if passed by voters, would encourage teens to experiment with drugs and put Nevada in conflict with federal law. Lisa Eggen of South Lake Tahoe said it is "about time" Nevada looked at making possession of smaller amounts of marijuana legal. "This is a state that has legalized prostitution and gives away alcohol, and yet marijuana possession, until very recently, was a felony," Eggen said. But Eggen was surprised the latest marijuana proposal has such strong support statewide. She thinks it might be economically driven as people look for something to offer in Nevada that can't be offered at Indian casinos. Douglas M. Morrin of Reno fears the latest proposal will mean more people on the streets driving dangerously while under the influence of marijuana. "My attitude is that I don't like drugs, period," Morrin said. "If they legalize 3 ounces, then they're going to carry 3 ounces all the time." Given the rapid growth of Nevada, particularly by people relocated from California, Morrin wasn't surprised by the support for the ballot question. "Ten years ago I would have said you couldn't have gotten that passed," Morrin said. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 08 Aug 2002 07:42:01 -0700 Subject:HI: Time To Say More Than Just "No" Up TOC Newshawk: The War on Drugs IS Terrorism Pubdate: Thu, 8 Aug 2002 Source: Maui Weekly (HI) Contact: info@mauiweekly.com Copyright: 2002, Maui Weekly Website: http://www.mauiweekly.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2345 Author: Louis Silverstein Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Note: For more on medical cannabis and cannabis eradication in Hawaii go to http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii TIME TO SAY MORE THAN JUST "NO" Our country seemingly remains hell-bent on continuing to waste billions of dollars year after year on the longest waged war in U.S. history. Prison systems are overflowing with drug users and low level drug dealers; incarceration of youth is given a higher priority than educating them; and a huge and costly governmental/ corporate complex is erected, ostensibly designed to wage a war against drugs, but, in reality, completely dependent on the continued presence of "the enemy" in order to justify its very existence. Our officially sanctioned policy of "Just Say No Or Say Nothing" serves not to prevent drug abuse, but rather to bar a necessary, all-informed-viewpoints-welcome, including divergent and alternative perspectives, public dialogue from taking place. The goal of such a discussion should be the formulation of an effective, intelligent, humane, protective of civil liberties and individual rights, national policy on drugs. I urge that such a dialogue recognize these facts: Current drug policy has created vicious and ever expanding criminal networks that corrupt society, including police forces, and cause far worse damage and destruction than the substances being regulated. It is the war against drugs, not the drugs themselves, which has turned drug dealing into an enormous profit making machine, resulting, as was the case with prohibition, in gangs and cartels killing each other, as well as innocent members of their communities, in the pursuit of the greenback dollar bill. The harmfulness of a drug has nothing do with its legality or illegality. Compare these facts: estimated U.S. deaths in the year 2001 attributed to tobacco: 400,000; alcohol: 110,000; prescription drugs:'100,000; aspirin and related painkillers: 7600; marijuana: 0. Drugs have always been associated with human populations and are here to stay, if only because the biological impulse to get high rivals the biological impulse for food, water and sex. Drug use must be distinguished from drug abuse. Drug abusers are those in bad relationships with drugs, whether legal or illegal. Preventing drug abuse is a viable goal. We can teach people how to satisfy their needs and desires without recourse to drugs. We can also teach people how to form good relationships with drugs so that if they choose to use drugs, they remain users and not abusers. As described in my recently published book," Deep Spirit & Great Heart: Living In Marijuana Consciousness," responsible, respectful and disciplined use of marijuana affords one the insight that it is a plant teacher possessing potential enormous beneficial and healing qualities, that heaven is not a place, but a state of consciousness, in which a joyous daily existence, awareness of eternal truths, sexual ecstasy, heightening of ecological awareness, and spiritual enlightenment can become a life reality. It is time for the silence to be broken, for the truth to be told. America needs to adopt a drug policy that heals not harms our county and its people. We must learn from our past mistakes. We can do better than destroying the village in order to save it. Louis Silverstein is a professor in Liberal Education at Columbia College of Chicago. His book "Deep Spirit & Great Heart: Living In Marijuana Conscious-ness" is available at The Hemp Store in Paia, Miracles Bookery in Makawao and online from www.amazon.com and www.bn.com . __________________________________________________________________________ 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: Thu, 08 Aug 2002 07:47:20 -0700 Subject: Canada: Son Expelled For Pot: Family Sues Durham School Board Newshawk: Steven Bacon Pubdate: Jul 17, 2002 Source: Oshawa This Week Copyright: 2002 Metroland Printing, Publishing, & Distributing, LTD Contact: newsroom@durhamregion.com Website: http://www.durhamregion.com Author: Mike Ruta Family Sues Durham School Board Lawsuit claims wrongful expulsion; asks for $250,000 in damages Mike Ruta, Staff Writer Jul 17, 2002 DURHAM -- An Uxbridge student and his parents are suing the Durham District School Board, five of its trustees and three staff members, seeking $250,000 in damages and the clearing of the pupil's record. At issue is the expulsion of the student, now 18, in January 2001. While he has since been readmitted, the defendants claim he was expelled based on unproven information from Durham Regional Police, and that the board bungled the expulsion hearing, violating the Education Act. Whitby trustees Elizabeth Roy and Doug Ross, Brock-Uxbridge Trustee Nancy Loraine, Oshawa Trustee Kathleen Hopper and Pickering Trustee Jennifer Bridge are named in the suit. As well, the statement of claim filed with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice lists education director Grant Yeo, Uxbridge schools superintendent Bev Freedman and Uxbridge Secondary School principal Peter Morris as defendants. The student and his parents cannot be identified because he was under 18 at the time of the incident. In an interview, the student's mother said the family has been through "hell". She did not deny police caught her son off school property with marijuana during a holiday break, but denies he sold drugs at the school, as Durham Regional Police and the board claim. Sergeant Paul Malik, Durham police spokesman, said Tuesday the teen was given a conditional discharge in the case. The parent said she realized something might be amiss when she read an Uxbridge Times-Journal story about a school board meeting in which a trustee alleged his colleagues violated the Education Act in conducting an illegal expulsion hearing. When she saw that the hearing took place on March 19, 2001, she realized they were talking about her son's case. The issue has been a contentious one amongst trustees. Five trustees formed a committee to conduct an expulsion hearing, and the entire board of trustees later ratified the decision, a course of action sanctioned by the board's lawyer. Two weeks later at a standing committee meeting, Scugog Trustee Martin Demmers argued his colleagues had no authority to form their own committee. Other trustees, including Pickering Trustee Paul Crawford and Oshawa Trustee Cynthia Steffen, supported Trustee Demmers' motion the board solicit a second legal opinion. That motion was defeated. Earlier this year, when board members feuded over a controversial legal bill incurred by some trustees, the trustees involved indicated they sought advice from a lawyer after rejecting the opinion of the board solicitor regarding an expulsion hearing. The parent confirmed some of the trustees involved in the legal bill, and their lawyer, had contacted her about her son's case. In the board's statement of defence, it claims neither the student nor his parents "took any steps in 2001, whatsoever, to appeal and/or review the decision of the trustees. "The defendants plead that the expulsion hearing was properly conducted and the plaintiff's remedies, arising therefrom, if anyone or more of them felt aggrieved, were to immediately appeal or seek judicial review of the decision and that by their failure to do so, they are now estopped by, amongst other things, their delay and laches from advancing any such claim in this honourable court." The statement says the student's arrest "was a continuation of an investigation that was conducted at the school, relating to (the student's) direct involvement in the distribution of narcotics on school property." Alan Farrer, the board's lawyer, said in an interview there are two parallel proceedings, a judicial review and a lawsuit, that will be dealt with at different times. He expected the review to take place sometime this year but estimated the trial likely would not be held this year. Mr. Farrer said it was not appropriate to get into details of the case. However, he acknowledged Mr. Morris was not present at the expulsion hearing. The family claims that's a violation of the Education Act, a claim rejected by Mr. Farrer. ===== peace:-)==U``` Steven ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 08 Aug 2002 07:51:50 -0700 Subject: MPP's paid signature drive fails in DC D.C. Marijuana Petitions Fall Short By Michael Vasquez Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, August 8, 2002; Page B04 The District's summer of disputed signatures spread to a new forum= yesterday as a local medical marijuana advocacy group found itself butting heads with the same agency that voted last month to keep Mayor Anthony A. Williams off the Democratic primary ballot when his nominating petitions were found to be plagued with irregularities. The D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics, though acknowledging the possibility that its staff members made mistakes in examining the signatures, told representatives from the Marijuana Policy Project that they had failed to gather enough valid signatures to put the issue before voters. The group has been working to place on the ballot an initiative that would decriminalize medical use of marijuana. For the marijuana initiative to make it onto the ballot, supporters are required to submit 17,455 signatures -- representing 5 percent of the city's registered voters. That total must include 5 percent of the voters in five= of the city's eight wards. Election board officials said the marijuana group= had fallen about 100 signatures short of meeting the requirement in one of the five wards. But Marijuana Policy Project Executive Director Robert Kampia said the board had thrown out several hundred valid signatures for no reason. The group= says it may appeal the board's decision in court. =A9 2002 The Washington Post Company CRRH is working to regulate and tax the sale of cannabis to adults like=20 alcohol, allow doctors to recommend cannabis through pharmacies and restore= =20 the unregulated production of industrial hemp. *Campaign for the Restoration and Regulation of Hemp* mail: CRRH ; P.O. Box 86741 ; Portland, OR 97286 USA email: crrh@crrh.org phone: (503) 235-4606 fax: (503) 235-0120 web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 08 Aug 2002 11:36:39 -0700 Subject: DC initiative FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AUGUST 7, 2002 D.C. Board of Elections Rejects Medical Marijuana Petitions Admits 1 Out of 7 Valid Signatures Were Ignored WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) is considering its legal options after the Washington, D.C., Board of Elections and Ethics (BOEE) refused to correct its erroneous omission of thousands of valid signatures for Initiative 63, the Medical Marijuana Initiative of 2002. "The Board has acted capriciously and unfairly," said MPP Executive Director Robert Kampia. "We presented clear evidence of massive errors by the Board's staff, but the Board refused to use its discretion to uphold the will of D.C. voters." Initiative petitions must contain valid signatures from five percent of the District's registered voters, and that total must include five percent of voters from at least five of the city's eight wards. There is no dispute that the more than 18,000 signatures accepted by the Board met the citywide requirement, but the BOEE claimed that MPP had presented enough valid signatures from only four of eight wards. In Ward 4, the board claimed MPP fell approximately 100 signatures short. But MPP's review of the Board's work found that massive numbers of valid signatures had been falsely ruled invalid. An analysis of nearly 4,000 allegedly bad signatures found that at least 15 percent were clearly valid. Kampia and MPP Director of Government Relations Steve Fox met with Registrar Kathy Fairley prior to the Board's deliberations and presented her with the results of the MPP's analysis. After reviewing a sample of petitions, Fairley agreed that a large number of perfectly good signatures had been erroneously disallowed -- and reported that finding to the board. But rather than owning up to the massive errors and extrapolating the results of MPP's analysis, BOEE Chairman Benjamin F. Wilson insisted that MPP must either verify each and every falsely invalidated signature -- a project that would cost the nonprofit group approximately 400 person-hours of staff time, on top of the 100 hours already spent identifying and correcting the Board's mistakes -- or trust the same staff that made the errors in the first place to re-check their work. "This is outrageous," Kampia said. "Whether out of malice or simple incompetence, the Board screwed up, and now they insist that our staff and members must shoulder the burden of fixing their mistakes. That's not acceptable. The Board of Elections and Ethics has fraudulently disenfranchised thousands of District voters and then refused to take responsibility for its actions. We didn't pick this fight, but we will win it." The Marijuana Policy Project works to minimize the harm associated with marijuana -- both the consumption of marijuana and the laws that are intended to prohibit such use. In association with Students for Sensible Drug Policy, MPP will hold its first national conference -- featuring a special appearance by comedian Bill Maher -- on November 8-10 in Anaheim, California. CRRH is working to regulate and tax the sale of cannabis to adults like alcohol, allow doctors to recommend cannabis through pharmacies and restore the unregulated production of industrial hemp. *Campaign for the Restoration and Regulation of Hemp* mail: CRRH ; P.O. Box 86741 ; Portland, OR 97286 USA email: crrh@crrh.org phone: (503) 235-4606 fax: (503) 235-0120 web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ End of Restore-Digest V2002 #159 ******************************** Restore Hemp News Today Visit our sister site crrh.org
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