------------------------------------------------------------------- NORML Weekly Press Release (Alaska legislature limits voter-approved medical marijuana law; Illinois adopts legislation to study hemp production; Australian Medical Association endorses medical marijuana trials, decriminalization for personal use; Marijuana-like drugs could treat schizophrenia, study suggests) From: NORMLFNDTN@aol.com Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 17:29:11 EDT Subject: NORML WPR 5/20/99 (II) To: undisclosed-recipients:; NORML Weekly Press Release 1001 Connecticut Ave., NW Ste. 710 Washington, DC 20036 202-483-8751 (p) 202-483-0057 (f) www.norml.org foundation@norml.org May 20, 1999 *** Alaska Legislature Limits Voter-Approved Medical Marijuana Law May 20, 1999, Juneau, Alaska: The Legislature approved a measure this week limiting legal protections for medical marijuana patients. The bill, S.B. 94, amends provisions of a November initiative that legalized the use of medical marijuana under a physician's supervision. Alaskans for Medical Rights spokesman David Finkelstein called the revised law unnecessary, but conceded it will still protect many bona fide medical marijuana patients from state prosecution. "While we opposed the involvement of the Legislature in the initiative process, the final version of S.B. 94 will still work for patients," he said. Finkelstein noted that grassroots opposition to the Senate bill persuaded legislators to eliminate some of its most restrictive provisions. Senate Bill 94 removes legal protections for medical marijuana patients who refuse to register with the state health department, or who possess greater amounts of marijuana than authorized by state law. The state's present medical marijuana law, approved by 58 percent of voters, affords a legal defense to non-registered patients and those who can demonstrate adequate need to possess large quantities of medical marijuana. The Department of Health and Social Services will approve regulations next month to begin licensing qualified medical marijuana patients. Senate Bill 94 includes a $58,000 appropriation to fund the confidential patient registry program. Provisions requiring physicians to certify that "there are no other legal treatments that can be tolerated by the patient that are as effective" as marijuana, and limiting the types of diseases that marijuana may legally treat, were eliminated from S.B. 94. The bill also includes language allowing nurse practitioners and physician's assistants to legally recommend marijuana to a patient. Governor Tony Knowles (D) is expected to sign the bill shortly. For more information, please contact either R. Keith Stroup, Esq. of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or David Finkelstein of Alaskans for Medical Rights @ (907) 277-2567. To download a copy of S.B. 94, please visit: http://www.legis.state.ak.us/basis21.htm. *** Illinois Adopts Legislation To Study Hemp Production May 20, 1999, Springfield, IL: The Illinois House approved a resolution yesterday allowing university researchers to study the economic viability of industrial hemp. The Senate had already approved a similar resolution, S.R. 49, on March 23, 1999. "Hemp is a profitable economic crop in Western Europe and Canada," NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. said. "There is no doubt that this study will find it potentially profitable for Illinois farmers as well." House Resolution 168 authorizes a 13-member task force to investigate hemp's economic potential as a cash crop, and identify legal obstacles to production. The committee will report its findings to the Legislature by January 1, 2000. A handful of Legislatures have approved state-sponsored hemp research studies since 1996. The most recent study, prepared by North Dakota State University, estimates that hemp could yield profits as high as $141 per acre to farmers. North Dakota became the first state to legalize domestic hemp production last month. For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751 or NORML board member Don Wirtshafter of The Ohio Hempery @ (740) 662-4367. To download a copy of the Illinois resolutions, please visit: http://www.legis.state.il.us/. *** Australian Medical Association Endorses Medical Marijuana Trials, Decriminalization For Personal Use May 20, 1999, Sidney, New South Wales: The government should make marijuana available as a medicine to seriously ill patients, and remove criminal penalties for the possession of small amounts of marijuana, the Australian Medical Association (AMA) declared recently. They said that drugs should be treated as a health issue, not as a criminal matter. "The Australian Medical Association is the latest group to join a worldwide coalition of health organizations calling for legal access to medical marijuana and an end to prohibition," NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St. Pierre said. The AMA's position statement regarding decriminalization states, "Prison sentences are ... inappropriate for offenses related to the use, or possession for personal use, of small amounts of cannabis." For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. To view a listing of health organizations supporting access to medical marijuana, please visit: http://www.norml.org/medical/mjorgs.html. To read the AMA's position statement, please visit: http://domino.ama.com.au. *** Marijuana-Like Drugs Could Treat Schizophrenia, Study Suggests May 20, 1999, Irvine, CA: A marijuana-like chemical produced naturally in the brain appears in higher levels in schizophrenics, a recent study of ten mentally ill patients revealed. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine, speculated that the body may be producing higher amounts of the chemical, called anandamide, to fight the disease, the Orange County Register reported. "Our findings of high levels of anandamide in these patients does indicate that [it] plays an important role in the development of the disease," Daniele Piomelli, an associate professor of pharmacology at UCI, said. He noted that "many schizophrenics smoke marijuana and claim it eases some of their symptoms." Previous research at UCI found that the brain's nerve cells use anandamide to modify the effects of the neurotransmitter dopamine, which is responsible for stimulating movement and other behavior. Scientists believe that excessive dopamine production causes some symptoms of schizophrenia, which affects one percent of the population. Current medication for schizophrenia block dopamine production, but are not always effective and have side effects. "The idea is to develop novel medicines that use marijuana as a model," Piomelli said. "We want to activate some of the cannabinoid receptors in the brain without producing the high. ... By understanding how the anandamide system works similarly to marijuana, we can explore ways to treat [schizophrenia and other] diseases more effectively." Piomelli's said he hopes to expand his study to 200 patients, but warned that anandamide's effects on schizophrenia are still not well understood. His findings will appear in next month's issue of the journal, Neuroreport. For more information, please contact Drs. Lester Grinspoon of Harvard Medical School @ (617) 277-3621 or John P. Morgan of the City University of New York (CUNY) Medical School @ (212) 650-8255. - END -
------------------------------------------------------------------- House rejects bill to make brandishing a gun while drunk an offense (The Associated Press says there is no such specific prohibition on the books, but Oregon legislators who voted against HB 3103 Wednesday contended it would only duplicate existing laws.) Newshawk: Portland NORML (http://www.pdxnorml.org/) Pubdate: Thu, May 20 1999 Source: The Associated Press (OR) Copyright: 1999 The Associated Press Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/ Author: Amalie Young, the Associated Press House rejects bill to make brandishing a gun while drunk an offense SALEM, Ore. (AP) -- The Oregon House rejected a bill to create the crime of brandishing a firearm in public while under the influence of intoxicants. While there is no specific prohibition against such conduct on the books, some lawmakers who voted against the bill contended it would only duplicate existing laws. "There's more than adequate laws out there," said Rep. Rob Patridge, R-Medford. "It was just feel-good legislation." Other lawmakers pushed a tougher version of the bill to make it illegal to even have a loaded gun on one's person or in one's car while drunk. That version also was rejected Wednesday. "Women have been intimidated, harassed and actually killed," said Rep. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene. "This puts more safeguards into the law." But when lawmakers refused to adopt the tougher version, Prozanski and others refused to vote for the original bill. "Do you want to move in the right direction or not move at all?" a frustrated Rep. Kevin Mannix asked lawmakers. The Salem Republican, who drafted the bill, said he thought it would easily pass because it clarified existing statutes. "I guarantee you there is no other bill on the books that says it's a crime to fire a gun while intoxicated," he said. At the same time, he opposed the tougher version, calling it a "dangerous step" because it was too broadly written. Mannix said he viewed Wednesday's House vote as a sign of backlash against bills that are seen as imposing further controls on purchase and possession of firearms. In the wake of the recent revival of a bill to require tighter control of sales at gun shows, he said some lawmakers may be trying to salvage their standing with the gun lobby by voting "no" on Wednesday. "They wanted to be able to say they voted against something," Mannix said. Ironically, he said, Oregon's main gun lobby groups haven't spoken out against the measure. Vocal advocates of gun rights, however, said they didn't want to support a bill that they said would overburden concealed weapon permit-holders and other law-abiding gun owners. "This isn't about domestic violence," said Rep. Juley Gianella, R-Aurora. "This is another attempt to restrict firearms." The bill number is HB3103.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Appeals court upholds Oregon jury statute (The Oregonian says a three-judge panel from the Oregon Court of Appeals on Wednesday upheld the constitutionality of a state law that excludes felons and unregistered voters from serving as jurors in criminal trials. The law is set to expire June 30 but next week the Oregon House of Representatives is expected to vote on eight constitutional amendments proposed by Rep. Kevin Mannix, R-Salem. If approved by voters, the amendments would increase the admissibility of evidence, expand police search-and-seizure powers, limit bail, enact certain rights for crime victims, restrict who can serve on juries, and make other changes. Most of what is included in the eight measures was contained in Measure 40, a constitutional amendment approved by voters in 1996 but overturned by the state Supreme Court in 1998.) Newshawk: Portland NORML (http://www.pdxnorml.org/) Pubdate: Thu, May 20, 1999 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 1999 The Oregonian Contact: letters@news.oregonian.com Address: 1320 SW Broadway, Portland, OR 97201 Fax: 503-294-4193 Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/ Author: Ashbel S. Green, the Oregonian Appeals court upholds Oregon jury statute * A panel rules that the law, which excludes felons and unregistered voters from juries, is constitutional The Oregon Court of Appeals on Wednesday upheld the constitutionality of a state law that excludes felons and unregistered voters from serving as jurors in criminal trials. "In sum, we discern no support for the proposition that a jury panel must include convicted felons and nonregistered voters to reflect a representative cross-section of the community," Judge Walter I. Edmonds Jr. wrote for the three-judge panel that unanimously decided the case. The law is set to expire June 30, but voters might be able to decide next fall whether to put it in the Oregon Constitution. Next week, the Oregon House is expected to vote on eight proposed constitutional amendments that, if approved by the voters, would increase the admissibility of evidence, expand police search-and-seizure powers, limit bail, enact certain rights for crime victims, restrict who can serve on juries, and make other changes to the criminal justice system. Rep. Kevin Mannix, R-Salem, the legislative shepherd of the eight measures, said the ruling would eliminate one argument that he expected to hear on the House floor. "I'm very pleased with the decision," Mannix said. Norm Frink, a chief deputy Multnomah County district attorney, said the purpose of the law is to keep people off juries if they commit serious crimes or choose not to participate in the political process. "Why should they get to decide the fate of crime victims' cases in the criminal justice system?" said Frink, an author of the proposed ballot measures. Rep. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, said the law is a bad policy because it tends to exclude African Americans, Latinos and other ethnic and religious groups who register to vote in fewer numbers. "I've never taken the position that you can't do it," Prozanski said. "I don't see a need to restrict (the jury pool) further." Most of what is included in the eight measures was contained in Measure 40, a constitutional amendment approved by about 60 percent of Oregon voters in 1996. Senate Bill 936, passed by the 1997 Legislature, implemented Measure 40 and enacted several of its provisions into state law, including the exclusion of unregistered voters from jury duty. In 1998, the Oregon Supreme Court overturned Measure 40 on procedural grounds, saying it violated the Oregon Constitution because it contained more than one constitutional amendment. In response, supporters asked the 1999 Legislature to refer the components of Measure 40 back to the ballot in eight different pieces. In the meantime, SB936 is on the books, although several portions are under challenge. The Supreme Court earlier this year overturned the part of SB936 that allowed prosecutors to demand a jury trial even when the criminal defendant wanted to have a trial before a judge. That is included in the one of the eight proposed constitutional amendments set to go before the House. You can reach Ashbel S. Green at 503-221-8202 or by e-mail at Tonygreen@news.oregonian.com.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Bill would privatize state's new prison (The Oregonian says a group of Republican state senators led by Eileen Qutub, R-Beaverton, who call the Oregon Department of Corrections a monopoly, is pushing SB 1247, which would require the next men's medium-security prison be built and operated by a private company. The Republican majority probably will allow the bill to clear both houses, but it faces strong resistance from Gov. John "Prisons" Kitzhaber and from labor unions representing the state's corrections employees.) Newshawk: Portland NORML (http://www.pdxnorml.org/) Pubdate: Thu, May 20, 1999 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 1999 The Oregonian Contact: letters@news.oregonian.com Address: 1320 SW Broadway, Portland, OR 97201 Fax: 503-294-4193 Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/ Author: Michelle Roberts, the Oregonian Bill would privatize state's new prison * Advocates say the legislation would create competition and hold the current corrections system more accountable Calling the Oregon Department of Corrections a monopoly, a group of Republican senators is pushing a bill that would require the next men's medium-security prison be built and operated by a private company. Sen. Eileen Qutub, R-Beaverton, the bill's chief sponsor, said privatization is needed to hold the Department of Corrections more accountable and to create competition in a prison system bruised by a construction audit released in March. The audit flagged more than $4 million in questionable payments made to contractors during the expansion of the Snake River Correctional Institution in Eastern Oregon. "There have been some audits that say the Department of Corrections needs lessons in contracting," Qutub said. "This isn't to say the DOC is bad, but I think they would find more efficiencies if they had more competition." But opponents of Senate Bill 1247 have attacked the idea, saying private prisons are unsafe for communities and for inmates because efficiency -- not safety -- is their primary goal. "I think it's bad public policy," said Rep. JoAnn Bowman, D-Portland. "Whenever we start developing a profit motive for corrections, we're headed down a bad path." Senate Bill 1247 passed 4-0 in the Senate Judiciary Committee this week, but the panel's three Democrats were absent for the vote. Lawmakers said the Republican majority probably will allow the bill to clear both houses, but it faces strong resistance from Gov. John Kitzhaber and from labor unions representing the state's corrections employees. "Our corrections workers do an extremely good job, and we think they do it in a cost-effective way," said Steve Marks, the governor's chief aide on prison issues. "We wouldn't be excited about doing anything that would threaten that good working relationship." Qutub said she was sold on the idea of private prisons when she learned they cost up to 25 percent less to operate than their state-run counterparts. She also cited a study that showed privately constructed facilities took less than half of the time to build for only 60 percent of the cost. The report was released by the Reason Public Policy Institute, a Los Angeles-based research center that promotes privatization. "This study cinched it for me," Qutub said. "And I think we can accrue more savings by ridding ourselves of a monopoly." Mary Botkin, a union representative for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said private prisons can operate at a lower cost because they skimp on training and wages for their corrections officers and support personnel. She said prison privatization would drive down wages for Oregon corrections employees, creating hardships for those who live in rural communities that depend on family-wage jobs. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Neil Bryant, R-Bend, said wages between state and private prison employees are comparable, but acknowledged that private employees probably would receive fewer fringe benefits. The nation's 120 private prisons, spread across 27 states, house about 120,000 inmates at all security levels. Oregon has shipped inmates out of state in the past to ease crowding at state facilities, but stopped the practice earlier this year. Opponents of private prisons have been quick to point to allegations of abuse and mismanagement. "It makes me very nervous to put another person's liberty in the hands of a company that has a duty to shareholders for a profit," said Alison Hardy, a staff attorney for the Oregon Law Center. And last week, a group of Oregon corrections workers calling themselves the Concerned Oregon Citizens Alliance took out a newspaper advertisement condemning private prisons and SB1247. "Don't let the politicians sell Oregon's Public Prison System to the lowest bidder," the advertisement stated. It urged readers to call their senators directly to oppose the bill and warned that "private prison firms have placed thousands of lives at risk in other states." The corrections workers' ad cited violent prison riots at private facilities in Ohio and brutality against inmates in Texas, and claimed that "inmates were returned to Oregon pregnant." The incidents in Texas and Ohio occurred, but corrections officials said no women prisoners were returned to Oregon pregnant. Two women inmates complained of sexual abuse by prison employees at a private prison in Arizona, said corrections spokeswoman Perrin Damon, but the department could not substantiate those allegations. Rather, the department confirmed sexual misconduct by inmates and prison employees, she said. Department of Corrections Director David S. Cook said he isn't offended by legislators' attempts make the department more accountable. "I agree with that concept, and raising the standards of all involved. Our experience (with private prisons) has been generally OK," he said, "but with enough negative experiences to sour us on the belief that a private company would deliver what they would commit to." You can reach Michelle Roberts at 503-294-5041 or by e-mail at Michelleroberts@news.oregonian.com. *** Senate Bill 1247 The issue: Would require the next medium-security men's prison in Oregon be built and operated by a private company. The status: Approved 4-0 by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The players: Supporters: Sen. Eileen Qutub, R-Beaverton, 986-1704; Sen. Neil Bryant, R-Bend, 986-1727. Opponents, Mary Botkin, American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, 239-9858. What's next: Sent to the Joint Ways and Means Committee for hearing.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Pot Lured Man To Fatal Meeting (According to the Herald, in Everett, Washington, search warrants filed by Snohomish County sheriff's detectives indicate that Joshua Glaser, 20, had $7,500 on him when he left for a meeting near Arlington so he could buy up to three pounds of pot. Two of the three people now charged in Glaser's death have allegedly admitted they planned the robbery, the search warrants say. Two adults face the death penalty, illustrating a second way in which marijuana prohibition kills.) Date: Tue, 25 May 1999 10:10:34 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US WA: Pot Lured Man To Fatal Meeting Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Portland NORML (http://www.pdxnorml.org/) Pubdate: Thu, May 20, 1999 Source: Herald, The (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: letters@heraldnet.com Website: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Author: Scott North, the Herald COURT PAPERS: POT LURED MAN TO FATAL MEETING A Snohomish man was lured to his death May 11 with promises of a $7,500 marijuana deal that instead turned into a lethal robbery, according to documents filed Wednesday in Snohomish County Superior Court. On the night that he died, Joshua Glaser, 20, told his brother, Chad Glaser, 18, that he was headed to a meeting near Arlington so he could buy up to three pounds of pot, according to search warrants filed by Snohomish County sheriff's detectives. Glaser told his brother he'd borrowed a handgun to take to the meeting. "I told him not to do it," Chad Glaser said in a sworn statement filed along with the search warrants. "But he insisted. I don't want him selling drugs, but he said it was a good way to make money." Glaser was killed during the meeting and his body left by Lake Armstrong near Arlington, according to court papers. Two of the people now charged in his death allegedly have admitted they planned the robbery, and one has acknowledged firing the fatal shot, the search warrants say. Matthew Martin Leon and Paul Thorsteinson, both 18 and from Seattle, and 16-year-old Nicholas Edward Anderson of Arlington all have been charged with aggravated murder. A single-page Everett District Court complaint alleges Glaser was killed with "premeditated intent" during a robbery, but contains no other specifics. Leon and Thorsteinson were arrested Friday after sheriff's detectives were told they were the people Glaser had planned on meeting for the marijuana deal, court papers show. Both allegedly have admitted planning to rob Glaser, and Thorsteinson allegedly has admitted firing the fatal shot. Anderson was arrested in Spokane, and detectives brought him to jail in Everett on Tuesday. The 16-year-old's role in the case is not clearly spelled out in court papers. All three suspects are being held at the county jail in Everett in lieu of $1 million bail. Although he is a juvenile, Anderson is being treated as an adult in the case because of the seriousness of the charge. If convicted of the charge, he faces a maximum punishment of life in prison without possibility of release. Leon and Thorsteinson could face the death penalty if convicted as charged and prosecutors decide to seek that punishment. Under state law, Anderson is too young for a death sentence.
------------------------------------------------------------------- A Breakthrough Against Schizophrenia? (A staff editorial in the Orange County Register finds potentially profound possibilities in the recently reported research of Daniele Poimelli at the University of California in Irvine, who discovered dramatically elevated levels of anandamide in the cerebrospinal fluid of schizophrenia patients. The higher levels could mean the body produces extra anandamide to cope with or to mediate excess dopamine production. Mr. Piomelli and his team discovered some time ago that anandamide "puts the brakes" on dopamine in the brain, and researchers have long believed that excessive dopamine activity is associated with schizophrenia. While the newspaper notes some patients report symptomatic relief from smoking marijuana, it conveys Mr. Piomelli's warning that "it is not uncommon" for schizophrenics who begin smoking marijuana to "continue in a heavy binge-like fashion until a psychotic episode comes on." Unfortunately, neither the newspaper nor Mr. Piomelli note psychotic episodes are symptomatic of the disease, not cannabis use, which may alleviate other symptoms for such patients. Neither says what proportion of schizophrenics who use cannabis experiences such a syndrome, nor do they seem to realize that patients who find cannabis effective at preventing psychotic episodes won't be showing up in clinical settings.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 13:09:51 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US CA: Editorial: A Breakthrough Against Schizophrenia? Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: John W.Black Pubdate: Thurs, 20 May 1999 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register Contact: letters@link.freedom.com Website: http://www.ocregister.com/ A BREAKTHROUGH AGAINST SCHIZOPHRENIA? It would be a mistake, as Daniele Poimelli, one of the principal researchers in this work at the University of California, Irvine, reminded us Wednesday, to read too much into this preliminary finding or to expect a miracle cure. But the discovery of elevated levels of anandamide, a chemical produced in the body that acts in a fashion similar to cannabis, in the cerebrospinal fluid of schizophrenic patients could point the way toward more effective and less dangerous treatments for schizophrenia and other mental disorders. We're dealing with hypotheses here, and as Mr. Piomelli was quick to remind us, in science most hypotheses turn out to be false or at least to require substantial refinement. But here's why this research is so interesting. In 1988, as the recent Institute of Medicine report on medical marijuana pointed out, researchers discovered cannabinoid receptors in the human brain - proteins that naturally bind to cannabinoids like THC, the best-understood active ingredient in marijuana. In 1992 researchers discovered anandamides - a naturally occurring substance produced in the body (thus endogenous) that acts on cannabinoid receptors in a similar way to THC. It is believed that anandamide and the cannabinoid receptors are involved in pain control, motion control and the immune system, but research is in its infancy. Mr. Piomelli and his team at UC Irvine discovered some time ago that anandamide "puts the brakes" on dopamine in the brain. Researchers have long believed that excessive dopamine activity is associated with schizophrenia. So Mr. Piomelli's team studied 10 schizophrenic patients against a control group and found dramatically elevated levels of anandamide. That could mean the body has produced extra anandamide to cope with or to mediate excess dopamine production. The implication is that if a drug could inject anandamide or stimulate anandamide production it might be more effective than dopamine blocking drugs used for 40 years to treat schizophrenia. Some current treatments have horrendous side effects as well. Whether that research pans out or not, the research now points to the endogenous cannabinoid system as a hopeful locus of treatment not only for schizophrenia but for other forms of psychosis. That doesn't mean schizophrenics should start smoking marijuana. In fact, while some patients report symptomatic relief from smoking, Mr. Piomelli warns that it is not uncommon for schizophrenics who begin smoking marijuana to continue in a heavy binge-like fashion until a psychotic episode comes on. But marijuana-like compounds, or perhaps compounds found in marijuana, could eventually be a key to more effective treatment for schizophrenia. "The idea," as Mr. Piomelli put it, "is to develop novel medicines that use marijuana as a model - without the side effects. We want to activate some of the cannabinoid receptors in the brain without producing the high, the loss of memory and the lack of motor coordination." This research highlights the importance of changing the legal status of marijuana as quickly as possible. California and five other states have passed laws allowing the use of marijuana by patients with a doctor's recommendation. But at the federal level, marijuana remains - inappropriately and probably illegally - on Schedule I, reserved for uniquely dangerous drugs with no known medical uses. Only the federal government can legally supply the plant for medical research projects, and it has done so only rarely. As the Institute of Medicine report and the UC Irvine studies suggest, cannabis has medical potential. Further research could help a variety of very ill people. *** [Portland NORML would suggest the use of the phrase "binge-like" is prejudicial. Even if a patient felt like he or she had to smoke pot all day long in order to stay sane, staying sane is the opposite of engaging in "binge-like" behavior. "Binge-like" behavior may be annoying, but probably preferable to the antics of a schizophrenic experiencing a psychotic episode. Are people hooked up to a dialysis machine all day long "binging"? It may be that research will ultimately lead to new medications that are better than marijuana and benefit a much larger proportion of patients. But the implication of this article, that cannabis is contraindicated for all schizophrenia patients, just re-states the drug-warrior party line about medical marijuana - that the herb is bad but drugs derived from it or synthesized from it may be good. For more details, see "Psychoses, Adverse Reactions, and Personality Deterioration," Chapter 10 in the book, "Marihuana Reconsidered," by Dr. Lester Grinspoon of Harvard Medical School.] *** Date: Sun, 23 May 1999 23:41:49 -0600 (MDT) From: bryan krumm (krummb@unm.edu) To: "DRCTalk Reformers' Forum" (drctalk@drcnet.org) Subject: Re: CA: Editorial: A Breakthrough Against Schizophrenia? Sender: owner-drctalk@drcnet.org Having worked in psychiatric medicine for the last 10 years, I have have spoken with numerous persons who suffer from schizophrenia who obtain releif from their symptoms by using marijuana. However, it appears to be a double edge sword because I have been told by some that marijuana can sometimes exacerbate their symptoms, particularly with strong strains of marijuana. Cannabidiol has been been shown to possess antipsychotic properties and it is believed that schizophrenia may be related, at least in part, to a dysfunction of the endogenous cannabinoid system. My best guess is that overstimulation of CB1 receptors leads to many of the symptoms seen in schizophrenia and smoking marijuana that is higher in CB2 receptor agonists, such as cannabidiol, which acts as an antagonist at the CB1 receptor, helps decrease the stimulation of CB1 receptors and thus leads to decreased symptoms. Bryan *** Date: Sun, 23 May 1999 07:01:38 -0700 To: "DRCTalk Reformers' Forum" (drctalk@drcnet.org) From: Arthur Livermore (alive@pacifier.com) Subject: Re: FW: Australia: LTE: Drug Report Very Dangerous Sender: owner-drctalk@drcnet.org There are many unanswered questions about the etiology of schizophrenia. During the 1970's, Dr. Janice R. Stevens and I studied the neurophysiology of schizophrenia. When a psychiatrist dogmatically denies the utility of cannabis in the management of schizophrenia, I know that they have simply expressed their belief. When they say they are "appalled" that anyone diagnosed with schizophrenia would use marijuana to treat their illness, I know that they are unwilling to discuss the science rationally. I hope psychiatrists will listen to reason instead of fanning the flames of drug war hysteria. Sincerely, Arthur Livermore At 04:26 PM 5/23/99 +1000, Ken Russell wrote: >Pubdate: Fri, 21 May 1999 >Source: Age, The (Australia) >Author: Dr David Grounds > >DRUG REPORT VERY DANGEROUS [Snipped to avoid duplication. Please follow link. - ed.] Arthur Livermore, Director Falcon Cove Biology Laboratory 44500 Tide Avenue Arch Cape, OR 97102 503-436-1882 alive@pacifier.com
------------------------------------------------------------------- Fresno Irrigation District Wins In Drug-Test Appeal (The Fresno Bee says the 5th District Court of Appeal in Fresno has overturned a jury award of $240,000 to ditch tender Ron Smith for being fired as a result of failing a drug test. Fresno Superior Court Judge Franklin Jones had previously ruled that Smith's constitutional right to privacy had been violated by the drug test, but the 5th District Court of Appeal somehow decided that random drug tests for workers who hold "safety sensitive" positions are more important than a worker's right to privacy. Smith's lawyer, Don Oliver, vowed to appeal the decision to the California Supreme Court.) From: ekomp@earthlink.net Date: Fri, 21 May 1999 09:50:32 -0700 To: dpfca@drugsense.org Subject: DPFCA: MN: US CA: Fresno Irrigation District Wins In Drug-Test Appeal Sender: owner-dpfca@drugsense.org Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/dpfca/ Newshawk: Jo-D Harrison Dunbar Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Fresno Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Fresno Bee Contact: letters@fresnobee.com Website: http://www.fresnobee.com/ Author: Lewis Griswold, The Fresno Bee FRESNO IRRIGATION DISTRICT WINS IN DRUG-TEST APPEAL An appeals court has reversed a decision on a lawsuit filed by a ditch tender who was fired from the Fresno Irrigation District after flunking a drug test. The 5th District Court of Appeal in Fresno ruled in a 3-0 decision that random drug tests for workers who hold "safety sensitive" positions is legal and outweighs a worker's constitutional right to privacy. The decision reverses a jury verdict that awarded ditch tender Ron Smith $240,000 for being fired as a result of failing a drug test. "I kind of figured that's what would happen," Smith said in a telephone interview Wednesday. Smith, who now remodels apartments and houses, had helped maintain the irrigation district's pipes and trenches. "It seems to me that the judges thought all of society should be drug tested." Smith's lawyer, Don Oliver, vowed to appeal the decision to the California Supreme Court. Patrick Wiemiller, chief administrative officer of the Fresno Irrigation District, said the decision "put a smile on my face." "It's a safety vs. privacy issue," he said. Smith, a six-year employee of the district, was fired in 1996 after he tested positive for amphetamines, methamphetamines and marijuana in a random drug test. The district had told employees six months earlier that it was starting a random drug-testing program for most of its 80 employees who worked in positions where others could get hurt if a mistake were made by someone under the influence of drugs. Smith sued, and Fresno Superior Court Judge Franklin Jones ruled that Smith's right to privacy had been violated. A jury later awarded Smith $240,000. The district appealed, holding up the payment to Smith, and then won in a decision made public Monday. "We conclude that the district's interests in minimizing risk of injury to its employees outweighs the plaintiff's privacy interests," Associate Justice Herbert Levy wrote in the decision. Random drug testing "is justified by the hazards inherent in plaintiff's employment," Levy wrote. Smith learned of the ruling Wednesday when The Bee telephoned him for comment. "This is a bad blow for the people of this country," Smith said. "A free country? It's disgusting, disgusting. I was not fired for what I did at work. I was fired for what I did on my own time. "What this tells me is everybody can be tested. If my job was safety sensitive, there's not a job in the world that's not safety sensitive." Smith's job involved construction and maintenance of the district's 800 miles of canals and pipes. Ditch tenders at Fresno Irrigation District earn between $11.73 and $16.50 an hour. The district argued that Smith's work environment is inherently dangerous because employees work inside pipes, work in trenches that can collapse and are climbing in and out of steep ditchbanks. Oliver said the constitutional issues are serious enough that a higher court would be inclined to review it. "The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that a public agency like the Fresno Irrigation District must show that there's a clear and present danger to substantial numbers of the public before drug testing is legal," Oliver said. But Ari Kleiman, the irrigation district's lawyer, said the court of appeal "simply applied existing law to the facts of this case. The lower court considered the hazards associated with the job not significant enough to curtail his privacy rights, and the court of appeal unanimously disagreed."
------------------------------------------------------------------- George W. Bush Jr. Lashes Out At Parody Website (A news release, apparently from RTMARK, a group that specializes in calling attention to corporate subversion of the U.S. political process, recounts the efforts of the probable Republican presidential candidate to shut down a rogue web site maintained by RTMARK and Zack Exley that parodies Bush's official web site and discusses his alleged past cocaine use. Exley, a computer consultant to the Boston financial sector who describes himself as "a Christian who loathes hypocrisy," is incensed that "Bush won't deny he used cocaine, yet hundreds of thousands of people are serving very long sentences for equivalent or lesser crimes, including many in Texas," where Bush is governor. "Clinton just got away with perjury while a hundred people are in jail for that crime. Do we want our children to learn that a crime is only a crime if you don't have power?" In a case that may set a disturbing legal precedent in the area of free speech on the internet, Bush filed a complaint May 3 with the Federal Elections Commission, asserting that Exley violated the law by not registering as a political committee, citing gwbush.com's "fair market value" as evidence that Exley has exceeded the $1,000 threshold that defines a political committee under election law.) From: "David Crockett Williams" (gear2000@lightspeed.net) To: "CIA-Drugs List" (Cia-drugs@onelist.com), "InTheShadows" (intheshadows@onelist.com), "CTRL" (CTRL@LISTSERV.AOL.COM), "Friends of Free Cannabis" (friends@freecannabis.org), "Drug Policy Foundation list" (dpfca@drugsense.org), "South Central egroup" (south-central@egroups.com), "BayAreaActivistList" (bay_area_activist@onelist.com), "FoodNotBombs List" (fnb-l@tao.ca) Subject: DPFCA: Fw: GEORGE W. BUSH JR. LASHES OUT AT PARODY WEBSITE Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 11:07:44 -0700 Sender: owner-dpfca@drugsense.org Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/dpfca/ Give 'em heck! Fax and phone numbers for comments to Bush's attorney listed below. Bush refuses to acknowledge his cocaine use. With proper promotion this could have far reaching effects towards ending the drug war but I bet it wasn't crack. I am forwarding this separately to my partial list of national and Bay area media. Please forward to relevant lists that you may be on that are not shown above. -----Original Message----- Date: Thursday, May 20, 1999 8:06 AM Subject: GEORGE W. BUSH JR. LASHES OUT AT PARODY WEBSITE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 20, 1999 GEORGE W. BUSH JR. LASHES OUT AT PARODY WEBSITE Bush learns about internet a moment too late Contact: Ray Thomas (mailto:bushinfo@rtmark.com) Zack Exley (mailto:zackexley@yahoo.com) Bush attorney Benjamin Ginsberg (202-457-6405, fax 202-457-6315) URLs: http://www.gwbush.com/, http://rtmark.com/gwbush.com, http://www.georgewbush.com Bush letter to F.E.C., etc.: http://rtmark.com/bush.html Each week, thousands of people seeking information on probable Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush, Jr. type "gwbush" into their web browsers and end up at http://www.gwbush.com/. Bush has tried hard for weeks to shut down the rogue site, which parodies Bush's official http://www.georgewbush.com/ and discusses his past cocaine use, as well as parodying U.S. politics in general. Bush's legal efforts began April 14 with a cease-and-desist letter claiming that gwbush.com violated copyright laws. Shortly thereafter, on May 10, Time Magazine reported that the Bush campaign had just purchased sixty additional domain names, including bushbites.com and bushsux.org, in an apparent attempt at damage control. Bush's most recent effort is a complaint filed with the Federal Election Commission that may have widespread implications for free speech on the internet. gwbush.com is owned by Zack Exley, a Boston computer consultant. Most of the content on the website was provided by RTMARK, a group that specializes in calling attention to corporate subversion of the U.S. political and electoral process. gwbush.com is listed as an unofficial Bush campaign site in Yahoo! and elsewhere. Bush's latest legal effort against gwbush.com, a complaint filed May 3 with the Federal Elections Commission, asserts that Exley has violated election laws by not registering as a political committee, and urges that the site's "fair market value" puts the endeavor well over the $1000 threshold that defines a political committee under election law. (At one point, Bush's counsel had asked Exley at what price he would sell his domains, which also include gwbush.org and gbush.org; Exley quoted $350,000.) The F.E.C. case may set a legal precedent in the area of internet speech in electoral campaigns. One F.E.C. employee, who preferred not to be identified, said the commission has recently established a "special inquiry committee" to discuss possible regulation of sites such as gwbush.com. "George W. Bush Jr. apparently thinks small-time folk should have to register with the government before exercising free speech on the internet," said Rita Mae Rakoczi, a lawyer and RTMARK representative. "The implications of such a precedent could be quite serious." RTMARK and Mr. Exley represent the unlikely kind of collaboration the internet makes possible. Mr. Exley is a computer consultant to the Boston financial sector, and describes himself as "a Christian who loathes hypocrisy." RTMARK is primarily devoted to anti-corporate activism, and counts the very companies that Mr. Exley works for as some of its targets. By reserving the domain names, Exley initially hoped to sell them back to the Bush camp for a small profit. That changed, however, when he read news articles that discussed Bush's refusal to deny past cocaine use. His interest in the matter has since escalated into something of a crusade. "Bush won't deny he used cocaine, yet hundreds of thousands of people are serving very long sentences for equivalent or lesser crimes, including many in Texas [where Bush is governor]. Clinton just got away with perjury while a hundred people are in jail for that crime. Do we want our children to learn that a crime is only a crime if you don't have power?" Exley first invited RTMARK to provide content for gwbush.com after hearing about their "franchise" program, in which the group provides a tailor-made thematic website to anyone with an appropriate domain. According to RTMARK spokesperson Ray Thomas, "Bush himself was originally a secondary issue for us. We just wanted to use gwbush.com as a platform to make various points about how corporations have subverted and sabotaged the political and electoral process, and hoped it could illustrate the low level to which campaigning has sunk. The more Bush has tried to get in our way, however, the more we've chosen to make the site a direct attack on his 'stealth' presidential campaign, and the worse that makes it for Bush." (RTMARK's first version of gwbush.com is now archived at http://rtmark.com/gwbush.com/.) While the controversy surrounding http://www.gwbush.com/ represents the first time RTMARK has been drawn into political conflict, clumsy legal actions are nothing new to RTMARK. In April of last year, for example, Geffen and BMG Music wrote RTMARK and Illegal Art letters demanding they cease distribution of Deconstructing Beck, a CD of music made entirely from samples of Beck recordings. Those letters (posted at http://rtmark.com/lawletters.html) helped RTMARK draw widespread attention to issues of fair use and copyright law with what had begun as an obscure release with a very limited audience. The full text of the Bush lawyer's letter to the F.E.C., his cease-and-desist letter, and other materials can be found at http://rtmark.com/bush.html. The pages of http://www.gwbush.com/ that deal specifically with Bush's cocaine use can be found at http://www.gwbush.com/bushpramnesty.html and http://www.gwbush.com/bushq3.html. For more on Bush's domain-name buying frenzy, see http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/990513/bn8.html. RTMARK (http://rtmark.com/) uses its limited liability as a corporation to sponsor the sabotage of mass-produced products. One of RTMARK's ultimate aims is to eliminate the principle of limited liability. Occasionally, as with http://www.gwbush.com/, RTMARK participates in advocacy directly related to issues of corporate abuses of the political process.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Fighting the drug war (The Dallas Morning News says the American Drivers Association, a national truck drivers' group based in Longview, Texas, with 86,000 members, has begun a billboard campaign advising I-20 motorists headed into East Texas from Louisiana to "just say no" when police officers ask to search their cars and trucks for drugs. J.D. Davis of the association said Texas police conducted an estimated 110,000 vehicle searches in 1998. About 1,000 of those searches, or less than 1 percent, yielded illegal drugs, he said. "It's clear the vast majority of these searches occur when the officer doesn't like your looks or you might argue about the traffic violation," he said. The goal, said Davis, is to place a billboard on every Texas interstate by year's end.)From: Swftl@aol.com Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 15:55:21 EDT Subject: [cp] Fwd: Just Say ' No! ' To: undisclosed-recipients:; Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 13:32:45 -0500 Reply-To: John Wallace (JWallace@KARTA.COM) Sender: Drug Policy Forum of Texas (DPFT-L@TAMU.EDU) From: John Wallace (JWallace@KARTA.COM) Subject: Just Say No! Comments: To: dpft-l@tamu.edu To: DPFT-L@TAMU.EDU from today's Dallas Morning News 05/20/99 Fighting the drug war Truckers association urges travelers to reject officers' requests to search vehicles By Scott Parks The Dallas Morning News A national truck drivers association has begun a billboard campaign advisingI-20 travelers headed into East Texas from Louisiana to "just say no" when police officers ask to search their cars and trucks for drugs. An association spokesman said the campaign was inspired by a West Texas lawyer who erected a similar billboard last year when an Abilene-based drugtask force began searching vehicles during traffic stops. J.D. Davis, founding director of the American Drivers Association inLongview, said the billboard was put up two weeks ago along Interstate 20.Westbound travelers can't miss the brightly colored sign that says, "Justsay no to Vehicle Searches. Protecting your rights. American DriversAssociation." The message includes the association's phone number. Callers are advised totape-record their traffic-stop encounters and to refuse officers' request tosearch their vehicles. Mr. Davis said he began the campaign after several association memberscomplained about state troopers searching their trucks for no apparentreason during traffic stops. "We believe these are retaliatory searches, and they're done because someonedoesn't just say 'yes sir' and 'no sir' or they have the audacity to tellthe officer they don't believe they were speeding," said Mr. Davis, whosegroup counts 86,000 members. "Our members are like most people," he said. "They don't know they have aconstitutional right to say no when an officer asks to search." Mike Cox, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety in Austin,declined to comment on the campaign. "We don't want to accuse anybody of meddling," he said. "It's anybody'sright to put their opinion on a sign." Mr. Cox said a trooper needs one of two things to search a vehicle for drugsduring a routine traffic stop: the driver's permission or probable cause tobelieve a crime is being committed. "Our troopers are highly trained, and they won't do anything contrary to thelaw or DPS policy," Mr. Cox said. "A person always has the ability to say noto a search if the officer doesn't have probable cause." Mr. Cox said state troopers have made an impressive number of drug bustsduring roadside traffic stops. Last year, troopers confiscated 21 tons ofmarijuana and 2,600 pounds of cocaine during traffic stops on Texashighways, Mr. Cox said. "That translates into $48 million worth of illegal drugs taken off thestreets," he said. "We think we are doing good things for Texas and thenation in general." Mr. Davis said truckers support drug enforcement, but many doubt thatroadside searches are an effective tool. He said Texas police agenciesconducted an estimated 110,000 vehicle searches in 1998. About 1,000 ofthose searches, or less than 1 percent, yielded illegal drugs, he said. "It's clear the vast majority of these searches occur when the officerdoesn't like your looks or you might argue about the traffic violation," hes aid. Mr. Davis said he believes state troopers should advise motorists they areentitled under the Fourth Amendment to refuse a search request, but legalexperts say officers have no such obligation. Ted Wilson, a criminal law expert in Houston, said officers who lackprobable cause cannot legally pressure a travelers into a consensual searchby threatening to detain them while they get a warrant from a magistrate. "The law says you cannot coerce someone into allowing a search," he said."Once the officer [without probable cause] is told no, it's over." Mr. Davis said association members and volunteer lawyers are financing the"just say no" campaign. He said the next billboard will go up on Interstate45 between Houston and Dallas. The goal, he said, is to place the message onevery Texas interstate by year's end. Pat Barber, a West Texas lawyer, erected the first "just say no" billboardlast summer on his Mitchell County ranch adjacent to I-20. Two weeks after Mr. Barber's billboard went up, the Texas Department ofTransportation accused him of violating state and federal sign regulations. He responded by suing the state agency for attempting to violate his freedomof speech. The lawsuit is pending in state district court in Austin. Mr. Davis read about Mr. Barber and latched onto the billboard campaign. "We're always looking for ways to educate our members, and this was amarvelous way to get the word out," he said. Mr. Barber said he's happy he inspired the campaign. "I just don't believe people want a Third World police state," he said.
------------------------------------------------------------------- How The Media Muzzles The Marijuana Message (Hartford Advocate columnist Michael Marciano says MTV refuses to discuss its policy of censoring marijuana-related imagery in its music videos. On the TV screen, rap star Snoop Doggy Dogg sits in the driver's seat, toting a bottle wrapped in a paper bag. As the song's lyrics go, the rapper is "rolling down the street, smokin' Indo, sippin' on gin and juice," - or at least that's what he says on the CD. On TV, the word "Indo", aka Indonesian weed, has been deleted. Yes, Snoop and his buddies can drink and drive on MTV, but what they're smoking is as taboo as a naked crotch shot. There are hundreds of instances in which MTV has enforced a policy of censoring marijuana references. Guns, gangsters and prostitutes are still acceptable, of course.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 11:51:18 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US CT: How The Media Muzzles The Marijuana Message Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Mike Gogulski Pubdate: 20 May 1999 Source: Hartford Advocate (CT) Copyright: 1999 New Mass. Media, Inc. Contact: editor@hartfordadvocate.com Website: http://www.hartfordadvocate.com/ Author: Michael Marciano HOW THE MEDIA MUZZLES THE MARIJUANA MESSAGE On the TV screen, rap star Snoop Doggy Dogg sits in the driver's seat, toting a bottle wrapped in a paper bag. As the song's lyrics go, the rapper is "rolling down the street, smokin' Indo, sippin' on gin and juice," -- or at least that's what he says on the CD. On TV, the word "Indo", aka Indonesian weed, has been deleted from the track -- this as members of Snoop's entourage pass cups around the car for alcohol refills. Yes, Snoop and his buddies can drink and drive on MTV, but what they're smoking is as taboo as a naked crotch shot. And this censorship is just one of hundreds of instances in which MTV has enforced a policy -- which includes blurring out any images of pot leaves and requiring artists to submit censored tracks -- to exclude any and all marijuana references. Guns, gangsters and prostitutes are still acceptable, of course. Although contacted numerous times over the past several weeks, MTV has refused to discuss its policy to censor weed-related imagery. A spokesman for the network could only say last week that MTV does not show "drug use" of any kind, but could offer no explanation for the fact that Snoop's drinking and driving doesn't seem to pose a problem for the network. The censorship of "Gin and Juice" is just one of many examples of MTV's drug-related hypocrisy. Ostensibly a barometer of musical and youth culture, the Viacom-owned network considers something as benign as a pot leaf logo on a hat or shirt off limits, but when Spring Break rolls around, images of college kids abusing alcohol and stumbling in the streets are commonplace on the boob tube channel. "I think it is unfortunate," says Steven Duke, a professor of law at Yale University and recognized expert on drug policy. "Presumably many of these college kids are underage, and in that case you can't distinguish between a legal and an illegal drug -- both alcohol and marijuana are illegal if you're under 21. And as for drugs there is no doubt that alcohol is a more damaging drug than marijuana." Ironically, MTV's anti-marijuana policy violates one of the key values -- i.e. freedom of expression -- associated with the popular music it promotes. "MTV is a private organization, so I don't think it's a case of government censorship," says Duke. "Basically one of the reasons alcohol and tobacco get treated that way is because the industry is domestic and powerful. In other words, when you're a broadcaster and you go against the alcohol or tobacco lobbyists, you're risking losing a lot of money. The alcohol industry in particular supports the ad campaigns against marijuana because they realize that they're in competition. There's a clear competition between alcohol and marijuana." Duke says the networks are caught between a rock and a hard place. "If you say anything about marijuana being an acceptable drug or depict normal people enjoying marijuana, you're going to get the government down on your head," he says. "There's no real point -- unless you want to go on a crusade -- in saying anything positive about marijuana." But MTV's choice to censor rather than just ignore pot images and lyrics may, ironically, call more attention to pot, rather than veil it. "I suppose one of the things that censorship might accomplish is to make it more interesting to young people," says Lynn Zimmer, an associate professor of sociology at Queens College in New York. "If someone cares enough about something to censor it, it must be important. And I think for kids who know that's what's happening, it may actually give a bit more glamour to marijuana. It is interesting that the issues of demonization and glorification seem to go together." Not that the popular media's perpetuation of marijuana disinformation is anything new, Zimmer adds. "In my class today I showed some of the Reefer Madness clips from the 1930s, and the students thought they were pretty amusing," she says. "Not many people believe any more that marijuana causes crime and insanity. So the myths change with the times. They almost never go away, and they certainly haven't done any good. It certainly hasn't stopped marijuana use." Michael Marciano
------------------------------------------------------------------- Pot Politics (An insightful and well-researched article in the Hartford Advocate about the drug-policy-reform movement in the United States says there are now more than 400 reform groups, about 350 of which were established in the last decade in response to the government's escalating war on some drug users. Some view the myriad agendas and lack of unity as necessary, others as depleting the movement's strength and focus. The drug policy reform movement didn't start out as a mix of pot smokers and policy wonks. It started as a coalition of doctors and lawyers. Abolitionists, women's suffragists, and Gandhi's satyagrahi were even more divided than drug policy reformers, but accomplished more. According to Nora Callahan of Washington state, the founder of the November Coalition, which advocates for the families of drug-war prisoners, when she talks to her brother in jail, he says prisoners find hope in the very fact that so many people are challenging drug policies from so many different angles. "It's a huge brick wall, should we be barreling into the same spot?" Callahan asks, "Or should it come down brick by brick?") Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 11:51:19 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US CT: Pot Politics Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Mike Gogulski Pubdate: 20 May 1999 Source: Hartford Advocate (CT) Copyright: 1999 New Mass. Media, Inc. Contact: editor@hartfordadvocate.com Website: http://www.hartfordadvocate.com/ Author: Ken Krayeske POT POLITICS Or "Dude, Where's The Grassroots Party At?" Will Disjointed Drug Reformers Burn Themselves Out? The hundreds of groups that form the drug policy reform movement nationwide seem to have taken their political cues from Monty Python's Life of Brian. While the organized resistance to America's official war on drugs is not a comedy set in Christ's Jerusalem, a look inside the movement reveals reformers doing exactly what makes Life of Brian so hilarious: adopting acronyms, holding meetings, bickering over trivialities and espousing conflicting political stances while the enemy runs roughshod. Yes, Connecticut's drug reform movement certainly has its equivalents of the Popular People's Front, People's Front of Judea and Popular People's Front of Judea: Three years ago Cliff Thornton left his $70,000 a year job in middle management at the phone company to start Efficacy, a non-profit organization dedicated to ending the war on drugs. He and his wife, Maggie, work out of their Windsor home full-time, telling anyone who will listen that rather than enforcing antiquated and unjust prohibitions, the common sense answer is legalization and regulation of marijuana, and the medicalization of hard substances such as cocaine and heroin. Mike Gogulski of Hamden juggles his 9-to-5 job at a computer firm with his passion for stopping the madness of prohibition. Gogulski considered joining Efficacy, but instead in January, he and a few others formed the Connecticut Cannabis Policy Forum. Their mission is to remove all penalties for marijuana consumption by adults in Connecticut. Former state legislator and four-time mayor Bill Collins of Norwalk sparked up A Better Way in 1994 to lobby for legislative change in drug policy. In 1995, he pushed for the Connecticut Law Revision Commission's landmark study that eventually concluded the solution was harm reduction: that is, treating substance use as a public health issue rather than a criminal justice problem. Jelani Lawson, who serves on the New Haven Board of Alderman, runs the Connecticut Drug Policy Leadership Council in his spare time. The council formed in 1997 to rally support for the Law Revision Commission report. And over at Western Connecticut State University, the Nutmeg State's oldest drug policy reform group carries the banner for NORML, the National Organization for the Reformation of Marijuana Laws. These groups represent only a few of the leaves of the plant of protest that keeps growing both in Connecticut and nationwide. Across the U.S., there are more than 400 drug policy reform organizations that include think tanks, political parties and non-profit education centers, according to Aaron Wilson, who works for the Partnership for Responsible Drug Information. About 350 of these have formed in the last decade. They have formed to respond to the government's escalating war on drugs and users. According to FBI statistics, arrests for possession of marijuana alone have soared since 1992, the year before Bill Clinton assumed the presidency. That year, 342,000 people were arrested. By 1997, that number had jumped to 695,000. Clinton's regime has arrested 2.8 million smokers to date, more than presidents Nixon, Reagan or Bush. Data shows that 87 percent of those arrested were for simple possession of less than an ounce or marijuana. While the generals in the drug war would point to these figures as proof that the battle is being won, increasing numbers of people from divergent parts of society are reaching an entirely different conclusion. In recent years conservatives from William Buckley to cops such as former New Haven Police Chief Nicholas Pastore have come out in favor of some kind of legalization. Their reasons are myriad. One arrest for even a minor marijuana-related indiscretion can throw a life into turmoil. The government can invoke asset forfeiture laws and seize property, including houses, cars and bank accounts. Accused users are left broke, unable to afford legitimate counsel. The Department of Children and Families can use an arrest as grounds to declare an unfit family, and break up the family unit. The burden on the criminal justice system prevents cops, courts, and jails from putting their resources into ending truly violent crime. Thanks in part to an overburdened jail system filled with minor drug-related offenders, a murderer can spend less time behind bars than someone convicted of crack cocaine possession. Housing a prisoner costs at least $25,000 annually. Connecticut alone has about 16,653 men and women serving time, about 23.8 percent of whom are in for non-violent drug offenses. The ancillary expenses, such as health care for the prisoner with AIDS or tuberculosis, add up as well. Even for those not arrested, the war's tentacles stretch into virtually every facet of life -- whether it is random drug testing in the workplace, the fear of being pulled over on the highway for driving while black, or the ineffective Drug Abuse Resistance Education, which increasing numbers of studies indicate wastes valuable classroom time and possibly goads students into experimenting. Yet in 5,000 years of use, marijuana has never been credibly linked with a death. The Office of National Drug Control Policy figures that illegal drugs cause an estimated 9,300 deaths annually, as compared to the 430,000 estimated deaths from cigarette smoking. Yet drug czar Barry McCaffrey, who runs the Office of National Drug Control Policy, has a record $17.8 billion budget for 1999. Throw in the state and local police funding, and Adam Smith of DRCNet -- the Drug Reform Coalition Network, estimates national spending for fighting drugs is $50 billion a year. If strength in numbers were all it takes, the battle against questionable drug policy might have had a larger policy impact by now. But toppling the governmental Goliath has proved no easy feat for this band of stoners, suits and grassroots activists. Efforts could be further along, however, if groups were more united. The more than 400 reform groups have almost just as many agendas. Missions range from wanting to legalize pot only to legalizing cocaine and heroin, to providing clean needles, to shortening the sentences of drug offenders. Some say this diversity adds strength because everyone picks at different areas of the problem. "Never in the history of the drug policy movement have there been this many people who have stayed in this long," Thornton says. "The word is that it had to be a multi-pronged attack." Others get angry about all the johnny-come-latelys. "Sometimes I get pissed when there are more and more groups," says Denny Lane, who instituted the pro-pot Vermont Grassroots Party in 1994. "We should just stick together and strengthen what we have." And others insist the diversity and the apparent working at cross purposes is exactly what is necessary for success. Take Ethan Nadelmann, director of the Lindesmith Center in New York City. The Open Society Institute, bankrolled by Greek billionaire George Soros, finances Nadelmann's think tank, which distributes money to local reform groups such as Efficacy. The movement needs numbers of community groups, Nadelmann says. "Playing ball locally is what is most important in any democracy." Plus, small sizes can confront issues immediately as they spring up, he says. Still, Nadelmann recognizes how growth paradoxically can create weaknesses. "Any one issue on drug policy reform moves forward by disassociating itself from other issues," he says. The West coast medical marijuana initiatives passed by distancing themselves from decriminalization. The industrial hemp law recently approved in North Dakota separated itself from recreational use. Needle exchangers won't pull for methadone the same way people against mandatory minimum sentencing laws disavow legalization. "That paradox may be fading, but it slows things down," Nadelmann says. That contradiction is vital, maintains Chuck Thomas of the D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project. "If you lump the issues together, you lose supporters for any of the particular issues that might have done well on their own merits," he says. Despite the various factions, some inroads have been made. On the West Coast, in the last four years, five states -- California, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon and Washington -- have voted to make marijuana legal for medical purposes. In Connecticut, legislative changes have produced cutting edge treatment programs that attempt to shift the burden off of the criminal justice system. Still, it's a conundrum, Gogulski of the Connecticut Cannabis Police Forum agrees. "Everybody is pulling in different directions at the same puzzles," he says. "We are all trying to undo the same knot, and we are all pulling at different strings." Nadelmann, Thomas and others take comfort in history. Abolitionists, women's suffragists, and Gandhi's Indian satyagrahi were even more divided than the pro-drug movement, but accomplished more. "When my friends and colleagues bemoan the growing elements of conflict within this movement, my response is 'Get real,'" Nadelmann says. "Our level of internal conflict is in all likelihood less than that in the gay rights movement or the civil rights movement." Indeed, he predicts that as the voices against prohibition grow louder, internal struggles will worsen. Vermont activist Lane doubts that more division within the movement is even possible. To date he has spent almost every penny he has to work for legal herb. Running the Grassroots Party from his mountain top cabin, 45 minutes southeast of Burlington, Lane recently ended a six-year drought of living without a car or running water. He's also been under DEA surveillance since 1972. Lane dreams of writing a book titled The Nuances of Bickering and Infighting Among Freedom Fighting Hemp Activists. Chapter outlines to date would feature egos, agendas and personality clashes. "Too many people want to be chiefs and there are not enough Indians." There's no money except from Soros, Lane says, and that money isn't going to the grassroots types. It's going to the suits. Lane would like Soros to spend money on a central printer for the movement and a central counsel. Along that line, the American Civil Liberties Union just assigned New Haven attorney Graham Boyd to work on legalization issues in court, full-time. Boyd is fighting two cases now. But it's not the pack of lawyers Lane envisions. Otherwise, he says, "We get a lot accomplished with a little money." Indeed, his leadership elevated the Grassroots gang to major party status, alongside Vermont's Republicans and Democrats. While Lane chose the name Grassroots Party for solidarity with the semi-successful Minnesota Grassroots Party, he figures a common name for all these drug reform groups could lend credibility. But Lane then deals with heads calling him at 3 a.m. asking, "Dude, where's the grassroots party at?" Connecting the burners and book-benders is one of the movement's biggest challenges, agrees Steve Hager, editor-in-chief of High Times. "There has to be an event that galvanizes everybody and unifies all of the separate issues," he says. "We haven't had the spark that transforms the millions of cannabis users into cannabis activists." The May 1 Million Marijuana March tried, rallying about 200,000 people in about 30 cities around the world. The biggest gatherings were in London, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Montreal and Chicago, says organizer Dana Beal. He wanted a million joints "a'light" in one day, he says, and he thinks it may have happened. "It was the first time we've ever had a worldwide coordinated protest," says Beal. "It was successful, but one always wishes it was more successful." Even so, it wasn't the galvanizing moment that, say, the 1963 March on Washington and Rev. Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech was for the civil rights movement. "If it is a true coalition, then it builds on consensus. It is very hard to do that with the stoners," says Hager. "It is like trying to herd a bunch of kittens to focus and unify," says. The drug policy reform movement didn't start out as a mix of pot smokers and policy wonks. It started, unbelievably, as a coalition of doctors and lawyers. In 1951, a Yale educated lawyer named Rufus King, who had been a clerk for a U.S. senator in Washington, began criticizing the Boggs Act -- the first of the federal mandatory minimum drug sentencing laws. By 1957, King had built a coalition between the American Medical Association and the American Bar Association to restore the Bill of Rights. King, now 82 and still living in Washington, says that the current laws prevent doctors from prescribing drugs that could be of use to patients: "Doctors should be up on their hind legs in outrage," says King. The doctors were the first on board. As early as 1937, the AMA testified in favor of medical marijuana before Congress. But based on the testimony of Harry Anslinger, the head of the Treasury department's Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, the feds outlawed all usage. Anslinger, who held onto that post for 32 years, crushed the AMA-ABA committee by scaring away sources of funding. King continued to work, lobbying elected officials and writing books, but by the mid-1970s, he dropped out in disgust. The splintering began in the 1960s, when beat poet Allen Ginsberg and friends gave birth to Legalize Marijuana, or LeMar, in San Francisco in the late 1960s. That faded and in 1970, NORML opened shop in Washington, D.C. In southern California, a group of heads called Amorphia formed to free the weed, and by then, the internecine bickering had begun. NORML was the best and strongest of the litter in the early years. It had better political connections and scored a grant from the Playboy Foundation. According to Keith Stroup, the founder of NORML, tensions rose when Amorphia -- which sold rolling papers to finance its activities -- told Playboy that NORML was full of middle-class sell-outs. "We were openly fighting, trying to undermine their efforts, and they were doing it to us," says Stroup. "Fortunately, before it became public, cooler heads said we were on the same side." The leader of Amorphia became NORML's West Coast boss, and its business manager moved to D.C. to keep NORML's books. The union grew and pulled enough weight to convince President Jimmy Carter to consider decriminalization of pot. That momentum crashed in 1978 after NORML founder Stroup and White House aides were caught partying together with narcotics. Stroup resigned, only to return in 1994. Now, in his second tour as the head of the organization, Stroup says he has noticed a drop in quarreling. "I don't want to suggest there's perfect harmony," he says. "There are still a limited number of funders, and we still have the problem of more than one organization approaching the same person for what is the same work." Attorney King, then retired from the full-time practice of law, also returned to the fold. In 1986 his friend Arnold Trebach invited him to the advisory board of the infant Drug Policy Foundation, another think tank. Ira Glasser, the head of the ACLU, is also on the board. King resigned last week at the annual DPF conference in Bethseda, Maryland. Once again, he says, he was disillusioned at the slow pace of change and the fractured movement. Last week's DPF conference -- attended by leaders like East Haven's Lawlor and the Lindesmith's Nadelmann -- was held to hash out ideas, plans and programs for cooperation. But Hamden activist Gogulski sat through sessions including a panel discussion about what direction the reform movement takes from next, and says the conference never really got around to dealing with it. "With the exception of one out of the six speakers, that question wasn't addressed," he says. Only Deborah Small, from the Lindesmith Center, addressed the idea of compromise over pursuing ideology. The differences between the stoners and the suits are magnified by the fight over funding, especially when miscommunication and competition leads similar groups to approach the same foundations for money. Compared to the $50 billion war chest held by the temperance folks, the opposition is poor. "The overall funding for the [drug reform]movement, if you had to pin me down, in 1999, I would say it is probably $6 or $7 million," says Smith of DRCNet. "The issue has grown faster than the funding," he adds. "The comedy is when the drug czar stands again and again to warn about the well-funded, well-organized legalization cabal. I'm not sure which is funnier, the well-funded or well-organized part." Given the combination of fiscal woes and conflicting goals, some suggest choosing a central spokesman for the cause might be the ans-wer. "If you have a charismatic leader and that person becomes the messiah for the movement, it can help unify people," High Times' Hager says. He envisions a leader like legendary hempster Jack Herer, the author of The Emperor Wears No Clothes, a groundbreaking book on the "conspiracy" to keep hemp illegal; or Dennis Peron, who fronted the campaign to pass California's ballot proposition 215 in 1996, which was financed by Soros. "Those two would be the closest, but they are not national figures, and they are not taken seriously by the media," he says. "Back in the 1960s, it was easy for Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman to get national attention. Now it is relatively impossible to get national attention," Hager concludes. Even California's Peter McWilliams, an AIDS patient unable to attain marijuana despite the referendum, can't get national press, and his book, Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do is a New York Times bestseller. Attorney King wants a well-known African-American, someone like Charles Rangel, the eight-term Democratic congressman from Harlem, to step forward. Rangel chairs the select committee on substance abuse. "He was a real hawk. I've got Charlie eating out of my hand now," King says. "He put in a bill to equalize cocaine crack penalties." Kevin Zeese, a 20-year veteran who once headed NORML but now runs Common Sense for Drug Policy, another D.C. think tank, thinks the model to look to is that of the early years of the civil rights movement in the 1950s. "Under a unifying force, the civil rights movement became more effective; then they really started to see changes in the laws. They really started to see national legislation passed," Zeese says. "I'm not sure it would have been achieved without coalition." That's why he started the Alliance of Reform Organizations, which uses the Internet to engage national leaders from Efficacy to the ACLU in regular e-mail strategizing sessions. Zeese acknowledges, however, that the analogy with the civil rights movement may not be a fair one. The civil rights movement had millions of supporters, while at most, the total memberships of NRG and ARO adds up to 550,000 -- and that includes the 300,000 members of the ACLU, who may be lukewarm, personally, when it comes to legalizing drugs. "The difference makes the need for us being unified even more important," he says. Maybe the unity won't happen until there are more people, Gogulski of the Connecticut Cannabis Policy Forum postulates. "Maybe we have to get to 1,000 groups before it starts to happen all by itself," he says. "I hope not." Perhaps looking outside the movement for support will help. Zeese has formed an even broader cooperative called The National Coalition for Effective Drug Policies. He pens various missives to Congress and to President Clinton, and has attracted dozens of signatories, such as the Evangelical Lutheran Church, the Children's Defense Fund, Family Watch, NOW and FAMM, which stands for Families Against Mandatory Minimums, a group that objects to federally mandated, stiff penalties for illegal drug and gun use. The problem is that these groups are only interested in supporting their particular cause. For instance, FAMM only approves of Zeese's prose when it concerns mandatory minimums. Julie Stewart, a native of Washington state, set up FAMM after her brother was arrested for growing marijuana in 1990. FAMM, based in Washington, D.C., began in 1991 at the onset of his five-year term. "Our purpose is to restore judicial discretion to judges," she says, noting that the group is against cookie cutter sentencing for guns as well. "This is not a drug issue for us; this is a justice issue." The inability of activists to find an amicable aim doesn't surprise Nora Callahan of Washington state. Callahan joined FAMM in 1994 while her brother was in the can on cocaine conspiracy charges. He's been in since 1989 and at this point, has 14 years left. But because FAMM doesn't go far enough in criticizing drug policy, she parted on good terms in 1997 and, yes, she established her own group too -- the November Coalition. "We go a little further in criticizing drug policy," Callahan claims. It is, she admits, a little bit like Python's Life of Brian, she says. "We laugh about it all the time," Callahan says. They rehearse the skit in the offices. "'Are you the Coalition of November?' 'No, we're the November Coalition. Fuck off.'" And she knows that disunity won't free her brother. Ironically enough, when she talks to her brother in jail, he says prisoners find hope in the very fact that so many people are challenging drug reform from so many different angles. "I've thought about strategy. Should we all do the same thing? It's a huge brick wall, should we be barreling into the same spot?" Callahan asks, "Or should it come down brick by brick?"
------------------------------------------------------------------- In Switch, Democrats Won't Act on Pataki Plan to Ease Drug Laws (The New York Times says New York state's Democratic legislative leadership plans to shelve Gov. George Pataki's proposal to scale back the Rockefeller-era mandatory-minimumm sentencing guidelines for drug offenders. Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver appears unwilling to support any such effort this year out of concern that Democrats might be portrayed as soft on crime in the next election, especially in relatively conservative upstate districts and in the suburbs of New York City.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 11:32:20 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US NY: In Switch, Democrats Won't Act on Pataki Plan to Ease Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Nathan Riley Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: letters@nytimes.com Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Raymond Hernandez IN SWITCH, DEMOCRATS WON'T ACT ON PATAKI PLAN TO EASE DRUG LAWS ALBANY, N.Y. -- Concerned about appearing soft on crime in the next election, the Democratic legislative leadership plans to shelve Gov. George Pataki's proposal to scale back New York's strict drug laws and appears unwilling to support other such efforts this year. The Democratic position marks a significant turnabout in the Capitol, where the party has for years led the crusade against the state's Rockefeller-era drug laws, only to be accused of coddling criminals by Republicans, who had previously blocked attempts to change the laws. The Democrats, who control the Assembly, said they believed that any bid to weaken the drug laws, among the most stringent in the nation, could backfire on Democratic lawmakers from more conservative districts, mostly upstate and in the suburbs of New York City, where crime is a potent issue. The move is part of an overall strategy by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver to solidify the Democratic majority's moderate credentials. In recent years, Silver has defied liberal Democrats, many of whom, like himself, are from New York City, by staking out conservative positions on issues like crime and welfare, hoping to defuse political attacks by Republicans. More recently, he brushed aside the protests of New York City lawmakers and backed the repeal of a city tax on people who commute to work there. Silver on Wednesday declined to comment on the drug laws. But Patricia Lynch, his spokeswoman, said he had no plans to take up the governor's or any other proposals to overhaul the laws this year because doing so could place some of his members on the defensive in the 2000 elections. "At this time, there are no plans by the Assembly leadership to address the governor's proposal," Ms. Lynch said. The speaker's stance makes it highly unlikely that any revisions to the drug laws will occur this year, despite mounting criticism that the laws have caused New York's prison population to swell with nonviolent, often first-time, drug offenders who have been subjected to tough mandatory sentences. The Republicans in the state Senate had indicated that they would support the governor's proposal. The Democratic reversal has also further alienated many liberals in the party who viewed the proposal by the governor, a Republican, as a rare opening to finally enact some changes to the drug laws after a generation. "I am trying to convince my own house that this is a unique time," said Jeffrion Aubry, a Democratic assemblyman from Queens who wants to lessen the law's sentencing guidelines. "But it's an uphill battle because they're afraid of the perception that they are being soft on crime." The position staked out by the speaker even caught a spokesman for the governor off guard. "That's bizarre," said the spokesman, Michael McKeon, when asked for a response. He then chided Democrats in the Assembly for continually refusing to act on criminal justice proposals advanced by the governor. "They're not doing anything on criminal justice issues, no matter what it is," he said. Aides to Silver say that his main criminal justice initiative for the legislative session is a measure to ban assault weapons and place safety locks on firearms. Silver's position on the drug laws has widespread support among suburban and upstate Democrats who have no great appetite for scaling them back. Naomi Matusow, a Democratic assemblywoman from Westchester County, expressed deep misgivings about rushing to overhaul the laws, given the dangers posed by many drug offenders. "We're dealing with potentially dangerous situations," she said. "Throwing out the existing laws seems to me to be very precipitous." The laws, which were adopted in 1973 under Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, force judges to comply with rigid sentencing guidelines that require long prison terms, even for relatively minor drug offenses like possessing a small quantity of narcotics. For example, a person who is convicted of selling more than two ounces of cocaine, heroin or other controlled substances -- or possessing more than four ounces -- must be sentenced to a minimum of 15 years in prison. The laws have remained largely in place since their enactment, despite mounting criticism and repeated attempts, mostly by Democrats, to revise them. The critics have charged, among other things, that the laws have clogged the state's prisons with drug offenders, many of them nonviolent addicts, who might be better served in treatment programs or other cheaper alternatives to prison. Last year alone, 9,063 people were sent to state prison for drug offenses. That brought the total number of people serving state prison terms for nonviolent drug crimes to slightly more than 22,000, or roughly a third of the total state prison population of 70,000, according to the Correctional Association of New York, a prison watchdog group.
------------------------------------------------------------------- The Zogby New York Poll (The Media Awareness Project forwards a press release from the Zogby web site, together with a news release from the Lindemsith Center, showing that a new poll of New York state residents reveals about 2-1 support for politicians who would act to reform the state's Rockefeller-era mandatory-minimum sentencing guidelines for drug offenders. The survey also reveals nearly three of every four likely New York state voters say anyone charged with simple possession of illegal drugs should receive treatment instead of a prison sentence.) Date: Sat, 22 May 1999 09:23:07 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US NY: The Zogby New York Poll Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Richard Lake Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Zogby New York Website: http://www.zogby.com/ Note: Below is the press release from the Zogby website, followed by additional information released by The Lindesmith Center. VOTERS WOULD SUPPORT LEGISLATORS WHO FAVOR REDUCED DRUG SENTENCING; SUCH LEGISLATORS NOT LABELED "SOFT ON DRUGS," ZOGBY POLL SHOWS State legislators could generate votes by supporting reductions in sentencing for illegal drug offenders, a Zogby New York survey reveals. A survey of 700 likely voters throughout New York State shows that a majority (50.7%) said they would be more likely to vote for state legislators who favor reducing some sentences and giving judges greater discretion to decide appropriate penalties for drug offenders. At the same time, a combined 25.1% say they would be less likely to vote for such legislators while 21.4% said such a position would make no difference on how they voted. The survey was conducted April 26 through April 28, 1999 and has a margin of sampling error of +/- 3.8%. An overall majority of the respondents (63.9%) said they don't consider a legislator who supports reducing prison terms for drug offenders "soft on drugs," while 31.1% of those surveyed say that anyone who votes to reduce prison terms for drug offenders is indeed "soft on drugs." Support for a legislator who favors drug sentencing reform was particularly strong in New York City (56.9%) and Upstate New York (51.2%). The survey also revealed that nearly three of every four likely New York State voters say anyone charged with simple possession of illegal drugs should receive treatment instead of a prison sentence. When asked: "Which comes closer to your own opinion (regarding simple drug possession) jail/prison or treatment?" 73.8% of those surveyed chose treatment, with 18.9% choosing jail or prison. In specific subgroups, treatment was favored by a similar three-fourths of the respondents from New York City and Upstate New York, along with African-Americans, Hispanics, most age groups and income levels, union workers, females and those who live in other large state cities. Meanwhile the largest support among subgroups for jail or prison terms came from 25% of the respondents who live in suburbs and 27.3% of the respondents who identify themselves as Republican. Statistics from the Correctional Association of New York show there currently are more than 22,300 drug offenders in New York State prisons and nearly 60% of all women inmates in New York State were incarcerated for drug offenses. Statistics also show the state's annual cost of incarcerating drug offenders is over $715 million a year. Further information about the survey on drug offender sentencing is also available by contacting the Lindesmith Center at (212) 548-0383, or the Center's website at www.lindesmith.org Zogby International Press Release *** [From The Lindesmith Center] RE: Results for Zogby New York The survey of 700 voters throughout New York State was conducted Monday, April 26 through Wednesday, April 28, 1999. All calls were made from Zogby International headquarters in Utica, New York. The poll has a margin of sampling error of +/- 3.8%. Error margins are higher for sub-groups. FINALLY, A FEW QUESTIONS ABOUT CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES. 23. New York's drug laws are among the toughest in the country. There are now thousands of men and women in New York's prisons serving long sentences for drug possession or selling small amounts of drugs. If your state legislator were to vote in favor of a bill to reduce some sentences, and give judges greater discretion to decide appropriate penalties, would this make you much more likely, somewhat more likely, somewhat less likely, or much less likely, to vote for him or her, or would it make no difference? Much more likely 29.1 Somewhat more likely 21.2 Somewhat less likely 8.6 Much less likely 16.5 No difference 21.5 Not sure 2.8 Nearly 30 percent of respondents favor granting legislators and judges greater latitude in determining penalties and sentences for drug offenders. The strongest support comes from New York City (33%) and those who live in large cities in general, the 50-64 age group, and college graduates. Republicans (22.7%), the 50-64 age group and the $50-64,999 income group were much less likely to support legislators or judges who want to reduce penalties on drug offenders. More than one-third (37.8%) of those in the 18-29 age bracket, African-Americans, and the $15-$24,999 income level say it would make no difference. 24. Many state legislatures believe that New York's drug laws are too strict, and result in many non-violent drug offenders serving prison sentences longer than violent criminals. But legislators also fear being labeled "soft on drugs" if they vote for legislation to reduce prison terms for non-violent drug offenders. Do you think anyone who votes for reducing prison terms for drug offenders is "soft on drugs?" Yes 31.1 No 63.9 Not sure 5.0 A majority in every sub-group, except Hispanics, would not label a legislator "soft" if he/she reduced prison terms. Hispanics were evenly-divided (49.5% say no and 48.7% say yes). Those most in approval were college graduates (71.2%) and those in the $75,000 income bracket (79.2%). Catholics (37%), 50-64 year-olds, and non-union workers (32.6%) were most opposed to reducing prison terms for drug offenders. 25. Some people think anyone caught in possession of illegal drugs should be sent to jail or prison. Others think it makes little sense to imprison people for simple drug possession and they should receive treatment instead. Which comes closer to your own opinion jail or prison, or treatment? Jail or prison 18.9 Treatment 73.8 Not sure 7.2 Treatment is favored by three-quarters (76.8%) of respondents in New York City, African-Americans, Hispanics, most age groups and income levels, union workers, females, and those who live in large cities. The strongest support for treatment (82.8%) comes from those in the less than $15,000 income bracket. One-quarter of Republicans (27.3%) and suburbanites prefer jail terms. 26. Methadone (meth-ah-done) is a medication that, when properly administered, can eliminate cravings for heroin and block its effects. Methadone treatment is only administered through special clinics. Do you agree or disagree that people addicted to heroin should be able to receive methadone treatment at ordinary doctors' and health clinic offices as well? Agree 60.0 Disagree 30.4 Not sure 9.7 By a better than 8% margin, more Upstaters than suburbanites (64.8%-52.4%) and Democrats than Republicans (64.2%-52.1%) agree there should be additional methadone treatment facilities. African-Americans are closely divided (48.9% agree-43% disagree), as are Hispanics (57.6%-37.4%). There is very strong agreement from Jewish respondents (71.5%) and those in the $75,000 income bracket (72.9%). 27. Would you favor or oppose a policy that allows New York physicians to prescribe marijuana for medical purposes to seriously and terminally ill patients, to alleviate symptoms of disease and the side effects associated with treatments. Favor 80.2 Oppose 16.3 Not sure 3.5 Overall, four in five (80.2%) favor a "policy that allows New York physicians to prescribe" marijuana for medical reasons to patients, while 16.3% are opposed and 3.5% are not sure. Independents (86.2%) are more likely than Democrats (80.8%) or Republicans (75.9%) to favor such a policy and whites (82.1%) and Hispanics (82.5%) are significantly more likely to favor the medical use of marijuana than are African Americans (64.2%). Support for the measure increases with income and decreases with age.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Pharmacia's New Drug Could Provide Different Avenue To Treat Depression (The Wall Street Journal says company research presented at a psychiatric conference yesterday in Washington, D.C., showed Reboxetine, a new type of antidepressant made by Pharmacia & UpJohn Inc., is just as effective as Prozac in reducing depression, and is more effective at improving the social functioning of patients. The drug is approved in many European countries; Pharmacia & Upjohn officials said they expect a regulatory decision in the U.S. by the third quarter. According to the company, Reboxetine, if approved, would be the first antidepressant in the U.S. designed to block the re-uptake of norepinephrine, thereby increasing levels of the naturally produced chemical that revs up the brain and is associated with a patient's drive and vitality. Reboxetine takes about four weeks to start working.)Date: Fri, 21 May 1999 20:40:40 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US NY: Pharmacia's New Drug Could Provide, Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Tom O'Connell Pubdate: May 20, 1999 Source: Wall Street Journal (NY) Copyright: 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: letter.editor@edit.wsj.com Website: http://www.wsj.com/ Author: ELYSE TANOUYE Page: B2 PHARMACIA'S NEW DRUG COULD PROVIDE DIFFERENT AVENUE TO TREAT DEPRESSION WASHINGTON - A new type of antidepressant made by Pharmacia & UpJohn Inc. is as effective as Prozac in reducing depression and is more effective at improving the social functioning of patients, according to research presented at a psychiatric conference here yesterday. Reboxetine, which is undergoing U.S. regulatory review, could give doctors a different avenue to treat depression. The experimental drug raises levels of norepinephrine, a brain chemical that revs up the brain and is associated with a patient's, drive and vitality. Lower-than-normal levels of norepinephrine are associated with a lack of energy, motivation, and interest in life, all-important symptoms of depression, says Christopher Gallen, Pharmacia-Upjohn vice president of clinical research. "By adding vitality and color in an otherwise gray life, we can make a real difference for a lot of people," Dr. Gallen says. The drug is approved in many European countries; Pharmacia & Upjohn officials said they expect a regulatory decision in the U.S. by the third quarter. Prozac and similar drugs affect a different brain chemical, serotonin. The drugs have been widely used in part because they are safer than older generation drugs. But many people have imbalances in other brain chemicals such as norepinephrine. While crowded, the antidepressant market is huge. Pharmacia & Upjohn said Reboxetine, if approved, will be the first antidepressant in the U.S. that specifically boosts norepinephrine levels by blocking its "re-uptake" by cells. The company, based in Bridgewater, N.J., hopes Reboxetine will attract doctors' attention because of this feature, and because it has the same level of side effects as competitors such as Eli Lilly & Co.'s Prozac. Although Reboxetine is intended to increase energy levels in patients, Dr. Gallen says, it is actually quite different from conventional stimulant drugs in that "there's no evidence" that it is addictive, and it takes much longer - about four weeks - to start working. In studies conducted in Europe and Brazil, Reboxetine was compared with a placebo and, in some cases, with Prozac. In one analysis, Reboxetine had higher efficacy than a placebo in three of four short-term studies. And, in another study of patients who were undergoing long-term treatment, 78% were in remission after 12 months, compared with 45% in the placebo group In another study, Reboxetine was as effective as Prozac in treating depression. Yet another study showed Reboxetine was more effecive than Prozac at improving patients' social functioning, which included measures of job interest in hobbies, gregariousness and family relationship quality. In New York Stock Exchange composite trading, Pharmacia & Upjohn shares rose $1.8125 to $54.5625.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Of Merchant Ships And Crack-Sellers' Cars (The Christian Science Monitor says the U.S. Supreme Court agreed this week that because forfeiture laws were passed by Congress in the 1790s, shortly after the Bill of Rights was written, the Constitution must also permit law-enforcement officials the same latitude in the 1990s. At issue was a 1993 Florida case involving the car of Tyvessel White. Alleging that Mr. White was a drug dealer, police seized his car without a warrant under a state forfeiture law. When they searched the car, also without a warrant, they found two pieces of crack cocaine in the ashtray that they used to convict Mr. White of narcotics possession. The high court ruled police didn't need a warrant before seizing and searching the car. Legal analysts say they are concerned the decision will encourage local, state, and federal law-enforcement officials to abandon the warrant process when seizing or searching cars subject to forfeiture.) Date: Wed, 19 May 1999 17:30:08 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: US: Of Merchant Ships And Crack-Sellers' Cars Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: EWCHIEF Pubdate: Thur, 20 May 1999 Source: Christian Science Monitor (US) Copyright: 1999 The Christian Science Publishing Society. Contact: oped@csps.com Website: http://www.csmonitor.com/ Forum: http://www.csmonitor.com/atcsmonitor/vox/p-vox.html OF MERCHANT SHIPS AND CRACK-SELLERS' CARS How is an automobile seized in the 1990s similar to a British merchant ship in the 1790s? In the 1790s and early 1800s, US customs agents were empowered to search and seize goods, and eventually the trading ships carrying them, without first obtaining a warrant. They could do so if the ships were suspected of smuggling cargo into the country without paying required duty. A majority of US Supreme Court justices agreed this week that because such laws were passed by early members of Congress shortly after the Bill of Rights was written, the Constitution must also permit present-day law-enforcement officials the same latitude. At issue before the court was a 1993 Florida case involving the car of an alleged cocaine dealer, Tyvessel White. Police seized the car from a public parking lot under a state forfeiture law without obtaining a warrant. When they searched the car, also without a warrant, they found in the ashtray two pieces of crack cocaine that they used to convict Mr. White of narcotics possession. At issue before the high court was whether Florida police needed a court- authorized warrant before seizing and searching White's car. History as a yardstick Under the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution, law-enforcement officials are required to obtain a warrant issued by a neutral judge prior to searching or seizing private property. But there are long-standing exceptions to this fundamental requirement. Some of those exceptions date to colonial times. White's lawyers challenged the warrantless seizure and search of their client's car, saying police had ample time to obtain a warrant, but failed to do so. The Florida Supreme Court agreed, and threw out White's conviction. On Monday, by a 7 to 2 vote, a majority of the justices reversed the Florida court. They used history to support their decision. "In deciding whether a challenged governmental action violates the {Fourth} Amendment, we have taken care to inquire whether the action was regarded as an unlawful search and seizure when the Amendment was framed {more than 200 years ago}," wrote Justice Clarence Thomas in the majority opinion. Such inquiries into the intent and apparent wishes of the nation's founding fathers are common among conservative members of the high court. This so-called jurisprudence of original intent is aimed at rolling back the perceived liberal excesses of earlier Supreme Court decisions while restoring the nation to what conservatives view as the proper balance of constitutional safeguards. But not all analysts see it that way. Steven Kessler, a New York lawyer and forfeiture expert, says the Supreme Court decision fails to place early US laws in proper perspective. "Whose ships were we seizing? Britain's," he says. "Wewere at war with that country. We just broke away from them." Mr. Kessler says that the ship-seizure law was the only British forfeiture statute retained by the new American nation. The ship-seizure law was a form of payback for years of British tyranny. In addition, legal experts say, the seizure law was grounded in the concept that unless customs officials could act quickly (without taking the time necessary to visit a judge) the illicit cargo and the vessel might disappear. As such, an exception to the warrant rule was established when exigent circumstances required officials to act immediately. In the Florida case, White's lawyers argued that because police had waited three months before seizing his car, they had more than enough time to satisfy the warrant requirement. Justice Thomas glossed over this issue in his decision. He repeatedly cites a 1925 Supreme Court decision that includes a historical analysis of warrantless seizure laws dating to the earliest years of the nation. But Thomas does not take note of a key paragraph in that same 1925 decision, which says: "In cases where the securing of a warrant is reasonably practicable, it must be used." A matter of semantics The majority decision in the Florida case effectively changes that word "must" to "may" in forfeiture cases involving cars parked in a public place. "The court really has declared open season on cars," says Tracey Maclin, a professor at Boston University School of Law. "This is a reaffirmation that people have very diminished privacy expectations with respect to their cars." Specifically, the court ruled that under Florida's forfeiture law, White's car was the legal equivalent of contraband because months earlier police said hey watched White conduct drug deals using the car. The forfeiture law permits police to seize and forfeit as contraband any vehicle used to commit a crime. The majority decided that because police do not need a warrant to seize contraband - such as drugs or crime evidence - in a public place, they would not need a warrant to seize a contraband car in a public parking lot. Dissenting opinion In a dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that he sees no reason that Florida authorities could not have obtained a warrant prior to seizing and searching the vehicle. "On this record, one must assume that the officers who seized White's car simply preferred to avoid the hassle of seeking approval from a judicial officer." Legal analysts say they are concerned the decision will encourage local, state, and federal law-enforcement officials to abandon the warrant process when seizing or searching cars subject to forfeiture. "It blows another hole in the Fourth Amendment without any real need to do so," says Richard Troberman, a Seattle lawyer who filed a brief in the case on behalf of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. "The police never gave any justification for not seeking a warrant. And they waited three months before seizing the car."
------------------------------------------------------------------- DrugSense Focus Alert No. 108 - Canadian Reporter Tells Real Story of Medical Marijuana (DrugSense asks you to write a letter to the Toronto Star responding to Sunday's op-ed by one of its reporters who came out and explained why she refuses to apologize for using marijuana as medicine.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 11:12:57 -0700 To: mgreer@mapinc.org From: Mark Greer (MGreer@mapinc.org) Subject: DrugSense FOCUS Alert Canadian Reporter Tells Real Story of Medical Marijuana DrugSense FOCUS Alert #108 May 20, 1999 Canadian reporter tells the real story of medical marijuana TO SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, DONATE, VOLUNTEER TO HELP OR UPDATE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS PLEASE SEE THE INFORMATION AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS FOCUS ALERT *** PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE *** DrugSense FOCUS Alert #108 May 20, 1999 Media coverage of medical marijuana often suffers from the perceived need of journalists to "balance" positive statements by patients and doctors with standard negative propaganda from prohibitionists. Regardless of the obvious benefits experienced by medical marijuana users, when their stories are told, some government of law enforcement official usually gets the chance to say what a terrible message medical marijuana sends to kids, or that "smoke isn't medicine." A wonderful exception to this practice was published in The Toronto Star this week. A reporter employed by the paper wrote a piece explaining why she uses medical marijuana and why she refuses to feel fear or shame for her actions. In addition to offering a touching self-portrait of a medical marijuana user, writer Barbara Turnbull gives a great introduction to medical marijuana and the methods (or lack of methods) the Canadian government is using to deal with the issue. Barbara Turnbull should be commended for her bravery in taking such a public stand, as should her editors for giving her the forum to tell her story, and the story of so many others. Please write a letter to The Toronto Star encouraging them to continue to unravel the truth about medical marijuana without getting tangled up in the lies of prohibition. 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 MAPTalk list if you are subscribed, or by E-mailing a copy directly to MGreer@mapinc.org Your letter will then be forwarded to the list with so others can learn from your efforts and be motivated to follow suit This is VERY IMPORTANT as it is the only way we have of gauging our impact and effectiveness. *** CONTACT INFO Source: The Toronto Star Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com *** ORIGINAL ARTICLE HERE'S WHY I SMOKE MARIJUANA Date: May 16, 1999 Source: The Toronto Star Section: Point of View Page: A3 Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com Web: http://www.thestar.com/ Author: Barbara Turnbull, Toronto Star Staff Reporter [Snipped to avoid duplication. Please follow the link. - ed.] *** SAMPLE LETTER (sent) Thanks to writer Barbara Turnbull and The Toronto Star for completely humanizing the issue of medical marijuana ("Here's Why I Smoke Medical Marijauna," May 16). Turnbull's excellent writing should remind everyone that this is about real people, not drug-free fantasylands. It takes great courage to open up one's private life for public scrutiny. That courage is magnified further when sharing personal matters that may draw the attention of police officials charged with enforcing cruel and unnecessary laws. I hope Barbara Turnbull faces no repercussions for her honesty. She provides a powerful example and demonstrates just how feeble the arguments against medical marijuana are. It is heartening to see that The Toronto Star allowed her a forum to tell the truth. I know there are newspapers here in America where she would have been fired (or "helped" with the offer of a drug treatment program) for even suggesting to report the reality of her life. Stephen Young IMPORTANT: Always include your address and telephone number Please 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. *** 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 *** Prepared by Steve Young (theyoungfamily@worldnet.att.net) DrugSense FOCUS Alert Specialist *** 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 us help reform. Send any news articles you find on any drug related issue to editor@mapinc.org *** 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! *** Steve Young Read about the losers and winners in the drug war at: http://home.att.net/~theyoungfamily Mark Greer Executive Director DrugSense MGreer@mapinc.org http://www.drugsense.org http://www.mapinc.org
------------------------------------------------------------------- Mandatory Addiction Treatment Won't Work (A letter to the editor of the Toronto Star representing a provincial federation of 250 community mental health and addiction programs says Mike Harris's proposal for mandatory drug treatment for welfare recipients with addictions is totally impractical. Ontario's addiction treatment system is unable to meet existing demands from voluntary clients; any influx of mandatory clients would exacerbate this problem.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 13:09:52 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: Canada: PUB LTE: Mandatory Addiction Treatment Won't Work Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Dave Haans Pubdate: Thurs,20 May 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Author: Lynne Raskin, Community Mental Health and Addiction Programs, Toronto MANDATORY ADDICTION TREATMENT WON'T WORK As a provincial federation of 250 community mental health and addiction programs, we know that what Mike Harris is proposing for welfare recipients with addictions is totally impractical. Ontario's addiction treatment system is unable to meet existing demands from voluntary clients; any influx of mandatory clients would exacerbate this problem. Also, as experts at the street level in treating people with addictions, we have the experience and expertise to know what works and what doesn't. We do not support mandatory treatment of addictions in exchange for receiving welfare benefits or any other government financial assistance. We support the need for a broad range of services, accessible to all. But to do this, we need additional community resources. Blunt threats and stereotyping are not the answers.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Alternative drugs to claim health benefits (The Canadian Press says natural health products carrying government-approved health claims should start appearing on Canadian store shelves within a year. The new labels will represent a dramatic shift in policy for the Health Department, which has previously refused to endorse the therapeutic benefits of herbs, plants and other alternative medicines.) From: creator@islandnet.com (Matt Elrod) To: mattalk@listserv.islandnet.com Subject: Alternative drugs to claim health benefits Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 06:34:08 -0700 Lines: 70 Thursday, May 20, 1999 Alternative drugs to claim health benefits By DENNIS BUECKERT, CP OTTAWA -- Natural health products carrying government-approved health claims should start appearing on Canadian store shelves within a year. The new labels will represent a dramatic policy shift for the Health Department, which has previously refused to endorse the therapeutic benefits of herbs, plants and other alternative medicines. Colin Broughton, transition director for the new Office of Natural Health Products, says it will seek to identify the active ingredients in natural remedies, many of which remain poorly understood. Once key ingredients are known it will be possible to set quality standards for products like ginseng or garlic pills, which currently vary widely in composition depending on the manufacturer or batch. A 17-member transition team announced yesterday includes a Chinese botanist, a naturopathic doctor, a major exporter of Canadian ginseng and a variety of other natural health advocates. In recent hearings by the Commons health committee, witnesses said the Health Department lacked expertise to assess alternative medicines. Witnesses also contended the department is hostile to alternative therapies, and some said it has conspired with the pharmaceutical industry to keep them off the market. With the new strategy, Health Minister Allan Rock has put some of those anxieties to rest. "The industry is looking for leadership and the Office of Natural Health Products is prepared to provide that," says Broughton in an interview. Gerry Harrington, a spokesperson for the Nonprescription Drug Manufacturers Association of Canada, welcomed the naming of the transition team. "Hurray, the next step of the process is under way," he said. "It couldn't happen too soon. We have a void right now in the regulatory structure. "We need improvements in the labelling, we need clearer rules on the types of claims that can be made, we need clearer rules on the manufacturing standards and quality standards for these products." Sales of alternative therapies are estimated at $1.1 billion to $1.8 billion this year and the total has been growing at a rate of 15 per cent to 20 per cent a year. Under current regulations, an herbal product is classified either as a food or a drug. If it is classified as a food, as most are, the product cannot make health claims. If the product is classified as a drug, it becomes subject to stringent regulations on labelling, manufacturing and proof of efficacy, as well as stiff licensing fees. The new regime creates a third category of products which can make health claims without going through the costly clinical trials required of synthetic drugs. A history of use in other countries, or in Canada's aboriginal cultures, could be accepted as sufficient evidence a given therapy may have value. The new office plans to provide extensive information about alternative medicines at its Internet site.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Natural remedies face new rules (A somewhat different version in the Toronto Star) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 10:06:08 -0400 To: mattalk@islandnet.com From: Dave Haans (haans@chass.utoronto.ca) Subject: TorStar: Natural remedies face new rules Newshawk: Dave Haans Source: The Toronto Star (Canada) Pubdate: Thursday, May 20, 1999 Page: A7 Website: http://www.thestar.com Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com Natural remedies face new rules Ottawa set to approve health claims OTTAWA (CP) - Natural health products carrying government-approved health claims should start appearing on Canadian store shelves within a year. The new labels will represent a dramatic policy shift for the Health Department, which has previously refused to endorse the therapeutic benefits of alternative medicines. Colin Broughton, transition director for the new Office of Natural Health Products, said it will seek to identify the active ingredients in natural remedies, many of which remain poorly understood. Once key ingredients are known, it will be possible to set quality standards for products like ginseng or garlic pills, which currently vary widely in composition depending on the manufacturer or batch. A 17-member transition team announced yesterday includes a Chinese botanist, a naturopathic doctor, a major exporter of Canadian ginseng, and other natural health advocates. In recent Commons health committee hearings, witnesses said the Health Department lacked expertise to assess alternative medicines. Some also said the department is hostile to alternative therapies, and that it has conspired with the pharmaceutical industry to keep them off the market. With the new rules, Health Minister Allan Rock has alleviated some of those anxieties. "The industry is looking for leadership and the Office of Natural Health Products is prepared to provide that," Broughton said. Sales of alternative therapies are estimated at $1.1 billion to $1.8 billion this year, and that total is growing by 15 to 20 per cent annually. Under current regulations, an herbal product is classified either as a food or a drug. If it is classified as a food, as most are, the product cannot make health claims. If the product is classified as a drug, it becomes subject to stringent regulations on labelling, manufacturing and proof of efficacy, as well as stiff licensing fees. The new regime creates a third category of products which can make health claims without going through the costly clinical trials required of synthetic drugs. A history of use in other countries or in Canada's aboriginal cultures could be accepted as sufficient evidence of a therapy's value. Gerry Harrington, a spokesperson for the Nonprescription Drug Manufacturers Association of Canada, welcomed the naming of the transition team. "It couldn't happen too soon. We have a void right now in the regulatory structure," he said. Improvements in labelling, clearer rules on the types of claims that can be made, and clearer rules on the manufacturing and quality standards are needed, Harrington said. He said the success of the new herbal remedy classification depends on its execution. "Will the system be responsive? The amount of new science, new evidence ... about these products is growing at an exponential rate. "It's going to be vital that the new regulator be flexible enough and fast enough on its feet to reflect that changing best-available-evidence as it comes to light." *** Dave Haans Graduate Student, University of Toronto WWW: http://www.chass.utoronto.ca:8080/~haans/
------------------------------------------------------------------- Two Alleged Drug Dealers Win In Courts (The Seattle Post-Intelligencer says efforts in Mexico City to prosecute the Amezcua Contreras brothers, whom American authorities believe rank among the world's largest producers of methamphetamine, appear to be collapsing. A federal judge yesterday declared proceedings against Jesus Amezcua unconstitutional. And his younger brother, Adan, 29, was freed from a federal prison yesterday after an appellate judge threw out trafficking and other charges against him.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 17:06:23 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: Mexico: Two Alleged Drug Dealers Win In Courts Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: John Smith Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA) Copyright: 1999 Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Contact: editpage@seattle-pi.com Website: http://www.seattle-pi.com/ TWO ALLEGED DRUG DEALERS WIN IN COURTS MEXICO CITY - Efforts to prosecute the Amezcua Contreras brothers, whom American authorities say rank among the world's largest producers of illegal methamphetamines, appear to be collapsing. Jesus Amezcua, who is 33 and has been imprisoned here for nearly a year as the United States attempts to extradite him on trafficking charges, won a victory early yesterday when Olga Sanchez Contreras, a federal judge, declared the proceedings unconstitutional. Mexico's Constitution prohibits the extradition of Mexican citizens. In a separate case, Jesus Amezcua's younger brother, Adan, who is 29, was freed from a federal prison yesterday after an appellate judge threw out trafficking and other charges against him. Adan Amezcua had been imprisoned since 1997.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Activists Manipulating Drug Summit, Says MP (According to the Australian Associated Press, New South Wales Liberal Member of Parliament Peter Debnam today claimed the New South Wales drug summit was being secretly manipulated by activists who wanted to relax drug laws. Debnam, a delegate to the summit, said "I greatly regret the working groups were held in secret and not open to the public.") Date: Wed, 19 May 1999 22:24:38 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: Australia: Wire: Activists Manipulating Drug Summit, Says MP Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Kenneth William Russell Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Australian Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Australian Associated Press ACTIVISTS MANIPULATING DRUG SUMMIT, SAYS MP New South Wales Liberal MP Peter Debnam today claimed the drug summit was being secretly manipulated by activists who wanted to relax drug laws. Debnam is on the drug summit working group, chaired by Attorney-General Jeff Shaw, that has agreed to a preliminary resolution to trial safe injecting rooms and hold a heroin trial. "It was clear to me that the proposed resolutions of the working group were established from the beginning and nothing was going to substantially change them," he said. "The resolutions are weasel words, some of them directly and others indirectly allow the fundamental decriminalisation agenda. "I greatly regret the working groups were held in secret and not open to the public." His working group is examining ways of breaking the drugs and crime cycle. It found the Health Department should trial "appropriately-supervised self-administration facilities" and the prescription of heroin. On other issues, the working party said police should be allowed to caution offenders carrying small amounts of cannabis for personal use. It said jail penalties for possessing and cultivating cannabis and for having equipment to take the drug should be removed. The resolutions must now be voted on by a special resolutions group, which will make recommendations to government on its drug policy at the end of the summit.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Shooting Gallery, Heroin Trial Boost (The Illawarra Mercury, in Australia, says State Attorney-General Jeff Shaw agreed to a preliminary resolution approved Tuesday night at the New South Wales drug summit in Sydney, to trial safe injecting rooms and the legal prescription of heroin. On other issues, a working party said police should be allowed to caution offenders carrying small amounts of cannabis for personal use, and jail penalties should be removed for possessing and cultivating cannabis, and for having equipment to use the herb. The resolutions must now be voted on by a special resolutions group, which will make recommendations to the Government at the end of the summit.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 23:32:10 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: Australia: Shooting Gallery, Heroin Trial Boost Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Kenneth William Russell Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia) Copyright: Illawarra Newspapers Contact: editor@illnews.com.au Website: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/ SHOOTING GALLERY, HEROIN TRIAL BOOST Shaw Suports Working Group's Resolution Controversial proposals to legalise shooting galleries and conduct heroin trials have been given a major boost at the NSW drug summit in Sydney. State Attorney-General Jeff Shaw agreed to a preliminary resolution carried late Tuesday night, by a working group he chaired, to trial safe injecting rooms and the legal prescription of heroin. And paramedic Jim Porter yesterday told delegates the Government was putting the lives of ambulance workers at risk by refusing to make shooting galleries legal. Drug summit delegates came face to face with the casualties of drug addiction yesterday during site visits to rehabilitation centres around Sydney. During one visit to the drug hot spot of Cabramatta, in Sydney's south-west, a heroin user collapsed in front of delegates and had to be treated by a paramedic. The suggestion by delegates, including National Drug and Alcohol Research Council director Professor Wayne Hall and Law Society President Margaret Hole, to look at drug reforms comes in the face of opposition by Premier Bob Carr and Prime Minister John Howard. Mr Carr has opposed safe injecting rooms, a recommendation made by Justice James Wood after he investigated police corruption. But Mr Porter said the Government was not fulfilling its duties under occupational health and safety laws. The closing down of so-called shooting galleries at Kings Cross sex shops on an order from police during the state election campaign had made ambulance officers' jobs more dangerous, by making them more vulnerable to being accidentally jabbed by HIV or Hepatitis C-infected needles, he said. Mr Porter described the plight of walking into ``dilapidated houses with no electricity, huge amounts of uncapped needles, walking up and down stairs with treads missing, no floorboards''. His call followed a resolution from a working party chaired by Mr Shaw considering ways of breaking the drugs and crime cycle. The working party found the Health Department should trial ``appropriately supervised self-administration facilities'' and the prescription of heroin. On other issues, the working party said police should be allowed to caution offenders carrying small amounts of cannabis for personal use. The working party said jail penalties for possessing and cultivating cannabis, and for having equipment to take the drug, should be removed. The resolutions were opposed by two senior Liberal delegates - Opposition spokesman on legal affairs Chris Hartcher and treasury spokesman Peter Debnam. Labor's Member for Bathurst Gerard Martin expressed reservations about the resolution for safe injecting rooms and magistrate Craig Thompson opposed the removal of jail terms for cannabis offences. The resolutions must now be voted on by a special resolutions group, which will make recommendations to the Government on its drug policy at the end of the summit.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Delegates To Vote On Summit Resolutions (The Australian Associated Press says delegates at the New South Wales drug summit will vote tonight on whether to recommend the government should legalise shooting galleries and relax cannabis laws. Debate on nearly 170 resolutions started just before 3 pm and was expected to go well into the night.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 13:10:06 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: Australia: Wire: Drugs: Delegates To Vote On Summit Resolutions Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Kenneth William Russell Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Australian Associated Press DRUGS: DELEGATES TO VOTE ON SUMMIT RESOLUTIONS Delegates at the New South Wales drug summit will tonight vote on whether to recommend the government should legalise shooting galleries and relax cannabis laws. Debate on nearly 170 resolutions started just before 3pm and was expected to go well into the night. A preliminary proposal agreed to by Attorney-General Jeff Shaw earlier in the week for the Health Department to trial safe injecting rooms appeared to have been dropped from the resolutions. Instead, the summit will vote on whether safe injecting rooms be trialled by non-government organisations. Four senior Liberal MPs opposed the resolution to trial the so-called shooting galleries, as did Labor MP Gerard Martin and pharmacist Phil O'Grady. The Wood Royal Commission into police corruption two years ago suggested the establishment of safe injecting rooms but the idea has been continually knocked back by Premier Bob Carr. During the recent election campaign police ordered the closure of shooting galleries in sex shops in Sydney's Kings Cross. The Wayside Chapel in Kings Cross put the issue in the headlines ahead of the summit by opening a "tolerance room" where addicts were allowed to shoot up. The room has been temporarily closed during the week-long summit. Early in the debate, delegates carried forward a resolution to establish a pilot program for a Children's Drug Court within the Children's Court system. Troy Bramston from the Premier's Youth Advisory Council said the seven youth representatives at the summit had banded together to call for radical reforms, including trials of prescribed heroin, safe injecting rooms and the decriminalisation of possession of cannabis for personal use. "I urge delegates at this summit to move out of your entrenched positions to consider new solutions but this requires leadership," Mr Bramston said.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Carr Faces Drug Dilemma (The Sydney Morning Herald says an unexpectedly strong push for drug law reform is emerging at the New South Wales Drug Summit, challenging the long-standing views of the prohibitionist Premier. The Government will formally respond to the delegates' reform proposals in four to six weeks, but the political bipartisanship promised this week has evaporated, putting more pressure on Mr Carr to overrule summit recommendations.) Date: Wed, 19 May 1999 22:24:31 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: Australia: Carr Faces Drug Dilemma Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Kenneth William Russell Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Contact: letters@smh.fairfax.com.au Website: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Paola Totaro and David Humphries CARR FACES DRUG DILEMMA An unexpectedly strong push for drug law reform is emerging at the NSW Drug Summit, in a challenge to the long-standing views of the Premier, who opposes scaling back existing prohibitions. The gathering support for safe heroin injection rooms as a key recommendation will present Mr Carr with a political dilemma as he has made clear his personal unease with this and other harm minimisation strategies such as heroin trials, promising a conscience vote for all Labor MPs. While a heroin trial will be rejected by the summit, the new law reform package also comes in spite of early public calls from both Mr Carr and his Special Minister of State, Mr Della Bosca, for lowered public expectations from the gathering. The recommended legal changes, likely to also include the removal of jail terms for cannabis use, are now set to be put on the table fora final vote of the 135 State MPs and 80 non-parliamentary delegates tomorrow. The Government will formally respond in four to six weeks' time but the political bipartisanship which was promised for this week has evaporated, adding to pressure for Mr Carr to overrule summit recommendations. The shadow Treasurer, Mr Peter Debnam, led the charge yesterday against the emerging liberalisation agenda, saying: "This is a total set-up of the resolutions to be put forward [from summit working groups to tomorrow's final session]. "The decriminalisation of drugs and backing off law enforcement on cannabis was a determined agenda of the left wing of the Labor Party and the bureaucracy from the beginning and no argument in the working groups was going to change that. We will have to depend on the votes on the floor of the summit [to overturn them]." The recommendations will be handed to the special resolutions group, which will draft the final proposals for the vote tomorrow. They include: * A huge increase in funding for detoxification and rehabilitation services. * A trial, under Health Department auspices, of supervised, legal heroin injection facilities, which would be allowed to operate undisturbed. This was supported late last night by the health maintenance working group, with the proviso that locals be polled on such trials through their councils. * Abolition of jail terms for possession of cannabis, cultivation of a small number of plants and the possession, use or sale of cannabis smoking equipment. * Trial of a police cautioning system for minor cannabis offences and consideration of an extension of the program to other drugs. Offenders would have to admit possession, say the drug was for personal use, and undergo drug education. * Expansion of the Drug Court trial to the Children's Court. * Decriminalisation of the possession of injecting equipment such as syringes, and self-administration of illicit drugs. * Expansion of the Young Offenders Act to include minor drug offences in the conferencing program. The proposals are effectively the product of two main working groups - Breaking The Drugs and Crime Cycle, chaired by the Attorney-General, Mr Shaw, and Drugs and Law Enforcement, chaired by the Police Minister, Mr Whelan.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Ex-Taumarunui Constable Fined On Drug Charges (The Dominion, in New Zealand, says Rebecca Lorene Boyce has been convicted of using cannabis oil and possession of cannabis and fined $660.) Date: Tue, 25 May 1999 17:02:32 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: New Zealand: Ex-Taumarunui Constable Fined On Drug Charges Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: EWCHIEF Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Dominion, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 1999 The Dominion Contact: letters@dominion.co.nz Address: P O Box 1297, Wellington, New Zealand Fax: +64 4 474-0350 Website: http://www.inl.co.nz/wnl/dominion/index.html Author: New Zealand Press Association EX-TAUMARUNUI CONSTABLE FINED ON DRUG CHARGES A FORMER Central North Island police constable at the centre of High Court action over the dismissal of drug charges against her last year, has been convicted of the offences. Rebecca Lorene Boyce, 26, appeared in Taumarunui District Court recently to face charges of using cannabis oil on February 2, 1998, and possession of cannabis on March 18, 1998. During this time she was a constable at Taumarunui. She was fined $200 on each charge and ordered to pay $260 court costs. Each charge was originally dismissed on June 24 by Judge Gregory Ross after numerous adjournments. Judge Ross said the constant need for the defendant to re-appear in court because of delays was causing her undue embarrassment. "The information is dismissed to record my unhappiness at lack of prompt attention to matters which should have been attended to much earlier," Judge Ross marked the court papers at the time. However, a judicial review of the decision in the High Court at Hamilton, prompted by the attorney-general's office, found the judge had erred, and sent the charges back to the Taumarunui Court. The ruling stated the judge should have allowed police to speak before dismissing charges in June. The charges were delayed in the court system when police were slow to respond to a request for diversion by Boyce's solicitor, Anil Jaichand.
------------------------------------------------------------------- Trial By Jury (Two letters to the editor of the Independent object to yesterday's announcement by the British home secretary, Jack Straw, of plans to prohibit jury trials for about 18,500 defendants a year accused of such offences as theft, possession of "drugs" and assault.) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 13:09:57 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: UK: 2-PUB LTE's: Trial By Jury Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Martin Cooke (mjc1947@cyberclub.iol.ie) Pubdate: Thurs, 20 May 1999 Source: Independent, The (UK) Copyright: 1999 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd. Contact: letters@independent.co.uk Address: 1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5DL Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/ Author: (1) Dr Chris Payne; (2) Dr Gary Slapper TRIAL BY JURY Sir: Anyone who has ever attended a magistrates' court will have seen the magistrates suspiciously and aggressively question the defendant while falling over themselves to defer to the police before invariably finding for the prosecution ("Thousands lose right to jury trial", 19 May). To allow magistrates to try summarily many more of those offences which now go before a jury will, without doubt, lead to a much higher conviction rate - possibly, I would guess, as high as 100 per cent. The Home Secretary's measure is half baked. If it is implemented, it will soon become obvious that much time and money will be saved if the formality of an appearance before the magistrates, with its inevitable conclusion, were to be dispensed with completely. If Mr Straw were to think the measure through, he would surely come to the conclusion that it would be much more efficient if convictions could proceed automatically on the word of a single police officer. Dr Chris Payne, Uxbridge, Middlesex *** Sir: If, for serious crimes, you support the rigmarole of jury trials because so much is at stake for the defendant, how then can you justify removal of the defendant's right to a jury trial in cases which manifestly threaten a life-ruining outcome for a defendant? Offences involving sex and dishonesty are cases in point. Currently, criminal offences are divided into three sorts: minor offences only triable by magistrates; offences which can be tried by magistrates or juries; and serious offences which only be tried by juries. The rationale is that the jury trial is a better, safer way to try the more serious cases, and a way that bolsters public confidence in the criminal justice system. In earlier times, judges would often fine or imprison jurors who persisted in returning verdicts at variance with the preference of the bench. In 1671 a case established that juries should be immune from punishment for their verdicts. Trial judges meddling with jury verdicts, however, was nothing compared with the Government's plan to rule out jury trials for whole categories of serious offence. And for what justification? The price of a few rooms in the ostentatious new palace of MPs offices. Dr GARY SLAPPER, The Law Programme The Open University, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire -------------------------------------------------------------------
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