Portland NORML News - Friday, May 28, 1999
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Victory (An e-mail from Mike Assenberg of Waldport, Oregon, says the Mormon
Church has changed its mind about excommunicating him for his legal use of
medical marijuana.)

From: Oscfm@aol.com
From: "CRRH mailing list" (restore@crrh.org)
Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 12:49:01 EDT
Subject: VICTORY
To: restore@crrh.org

Some of you might remember that about three months ago I wrote about the
MORMONS kicking me out of there church because I use medical marijuana.

They came to my house yesterday and said how sorry they were for kicking me
out & have asked me to come back to the church. Some of you might know that
the church made it a crime of the church in 1915 to use marijuana long before
the states made it a crime.

I am one for never giving up & in this case it paid off to stand my ground.
Also I have a new web page that I would like people's view on it's at
www.casco.net/~oscfmp

***

[Portland NORML notes: The reason for the Mormon Church's early disapproval
of marijuana will undoubtedly surprise those who have never heard about the
Mormon splinter group that moved to Mexico in 1910 and to some extent took up
pot smoking. The story is explained by the legal historian, Professor Charles
Whitebread, in his speech on The History of the Non-Medical Use of Drugs in
the United States, presented at the 1995 California Judges Association
conference.]

***

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your instructions to restore-owner@crrh.org.

***

Campaign for the Restoration and Regulation of Hemp
CRRH
P.O. Box 86741
Portland, OR 97286
Phone: (503) 235-4606
Fax: (503) 235-0120
Web: http://www.crrh.org/
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Federal Court Issues Injunction Against Four Oregon Laws on Gathering
Signatures for Initiatives, Referenda (A press release from Portland lawyer
Daniel Meek says the U.S. District Court in Portland issued an injunction
this afternoon against enforcement of four Oregon statutes. Signature
gatherers no longer have to be registered Oregon voters, and no longer have
to display a notice stating that the person obtaining the signatures is being
paid. Chief petitioners and political committees are also no longer required
to disclose the names of paid circulatorc and the amount paid to each.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 23:11:59 -0700
To: EM008A_?? DPF_OR List Serv (dpfor@drugsense.org)
From: Floyd F Landrath (AAL@InetArena.com)
Subject: DPFOR: [Fwd: Federal Court Enjoins 4 Provisions of Oregon Law on
Initiative Process]
Sender: owner-dpfor@drugsense.org
Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/

This is really good news and looks like it will get even better. fl

Dan Meek wrote:

***

Daniel Meek
10949 S.W. 4th Avenue
Portland, OR 97219
phone (503) 293-9021
fax (503) 293-9099
dan.meek@usa.net
danmeek@teleport.com

***

PRESS RELEASE * PRESS RELEASE * PRESS RELEASE

Federal Court Issues Injunction Against 4 Oregon Laws on Gathering
Signatures for Initiatives, Referenda

Legal Challenges to Other Oregon Statutes Will Continue

May 28, 1999

The U.S. District Court in Portland this afternoon issued an
injunction against enforcement of four Oregon statutes pertaining to
the gathering of signatures on initiatives and referenda. The Court
enjoined enforcement of:

1. ORS 260.560 (and, effectively, Article IV, section 1 of
the Oregon Constitution), which requires anyone who obtains
signatures to be a registered Oregon voter.

2. ORS 250.045(5)(b)(C), which requires that every signature
sheet for a initiative or referendum display a "notice
stating that the person obtaining the signatures is being
paid," if that is the case.

3. ORS 260.118, which requires chief petitioners of
statewide initiatives or referenda to disclose the name of
each paid circulator and amount paid to each.

4. ORS 260.083(1)(b), which requires every political
committee to disclose the name of each paid circulator and
amount paid to each.

The Court's Opinion and Order stated:

Petition circulators should know exactly what is expected of
them. Pending legislative action of these regulations, the
State of Oregon is enjoined from enforcing ORS ??
250.045(5)(b)(C), 250.560, 260.118, and 260.083(1)(b).

"This is the first step. We will press on to challenge the other parts
of Oregon law that harm everyone's opportunity to sign petitions when
they want to," said Don McIntire, one of the plaintiffs in the case.

The Court declined to enjoin other challenged provisions of Oregon
law. Some of those provisions have already been enjoined by the Oregon
Courts, including:

1. The requirement in Measure 62 that any person who pays
any other person to collect a signature be licensed by the
Secretary of State and be subject to a $25,000
administrative penalty for paying for a signature while
unlicensed.

2. The requirement in Measure 62 that anyone who pays anyone
to collect signatures report monthly the name, address, and
amount paid to each circulator.

3. The authorization in Measure 62 that the Legislature may
"pass laws which prohibit or regulate payment for gathering
signatures . . . on a per signature basis."

"If the state courts lift the injunction against enforcement of
Measure 62, we will go back to the U.S. District Court to expand the
federal injunction to include these provisions," said Dan Meek,
attorney for plaintiff Laurence Tuttle of the Center for Environmental
Equity.

The U.S. District Court also declined to enjoin the other provisions
challenged by the plaintiffs, concluding: "These specific statutory
challenges are better suited for the more deliberative process of
litigation." The provisions that will now go to hearing are:

1. The requirement that all signature sheets for any
petition state "Some Circulators For This Petition Are Being
Paid," whether or not any individual circulator is being
paid.

2. The requirement that chief petitioners report the
contributions received and expenditures made by anyone who
supports the gathering of signatures on a petition,
including persons not connected with the chief petitioners.

3. The requirement that each signature sheet "contain only
the signatures of electors of one county," which invalidates
a significant percentage of all signatures gathered on
statewide petitions.

4. The requirement that a signature sheet be a 2-sided
document, which precludes distribution of the sheets by
publication in newspapers, the Internet, or other "1-sided"
media.

5. The requirement that every signature be witnessed in
person by a circulator who has a belief about the status of
the person signing as "an elector," thus precluding leaving
signature sheets in the coffee break room.

The suit was filed by the American Constitutional Law Foundation
(ACLF) and Oregon proponents of the initiative process, including:

Larry Tuttle - Oregon environmental activist; chief petitioner on 1994
measure to regulate chemical ("heap leach") mining

Don McIntire - taxpayer advocate and chief petitioner on several
taxation and spending limitation measures, including Measure 5

Saul Klein - principal of Klein Campaigns, Inc., which has collected
signatures for several initiative measures

The complaint, memoranda, and relevant United States Supreme Court
opinions (Buckley v. ACLF and Meyer v. Grant are available at:
http://www.files.net/aclf.

For more information, contact:

Bill Orr, ACLF (303) 837-1263

Daniel Meek, attorney
(503) 293-9021
fax 293-9099
dan.meek@usa.net

Linda K. Williams, Attorney
(503) 293-0399
fax 245-2772
lawyer@teleport.com

Larry Tuttle
(503) 221-1683
cee@teleport.com

Don McIntire (503) 666-4451

Saul Klein (503) 321-5108

***

ADDRESS:

Lloyd K. Marbet
19142 SE Bakers Ferry Road
Boring, OR 97009
Phone: (503) 637-3549
Fax: (503) 637-6130

WEB SITES:

Don't Waste Oregon: http://www.teleport.com/~dwoc
Coalition for Initiative Rights: www.teleport.com/~dweezil/cir.htm
Stop Oregon's Gambling Addiction: http://www.teleport.com/~dweezil/no66
-------------------------------------------------------------------

New petitioning rules in Oregon (A list subscriber forwards an excerpt from a
press release issued by the Coalition for Initiative Rights, which explains
the ramifications of today's ruling by the U.S. District Court in Portland
blocking enforcement of four Oregon statutes regulating the gathering of
signatures for initiatives and referenda. Now anyone can gather signatures!)
Link to earlier story
Date: Tue, 01 Jun 1999 01:46:26 -0700 To: DPF_OR List Serv (dpfor@drugsense.org) From: Floyd F Landrath (AAL@InetArena.com) Subject: DPFOR: New petitioning rules in Oregon Sender: owner-dpfor@drugsense.org Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/ From a press release dated 5/28/99 issued by Coalition for Initiative Rights: http://www.teleport.com/~dweezil/cir.htm As a result of a law suit filed by the American Constitutional Law Foundation (ACLF) and Oregon proponents of the initiative process: The U.S. District Court in Portland this afternoon blocked enforcement of 4 Oregon statues on the gathering of signatures on initiatives and referenda. In short what this means is: 1. Now anyone can gather signatures, ANYONE! 2. No longer required to print "SOME PETITIONERS ARE GETTING PAID TO GATHER SIGNATURES" on the sheet. 3. No longer requried to report names of those who get paid for signatures. Even though the U.S. District Court took no action, the following have already been enjoined by the Oregon Courts, including: 1. Requirement for licensensing of paid petitioners. 2. Monthly reporting requirement. 3. Prohibition on per signature payment. Plaintiffs will expand upon the litigation and hearings on the following will take place in the near future: 1. The requirement that each signature sheet "contain only the signatures of electors of one county," (which invalidates a significant percentage of all signatures gathered on statewide petitions). 2. The requirement that a signature sheet be a 2-sided document, which precludes distribution of the sheets by publication in newspapers, the Internet, or other "1-sided" media. 3. The requirement that every signature be witnessed in person by a circulator who has a belief about the status of the person signing as "an elector," thus precluding leaving signature sheets in the coffee break room. The complaint, memoranda, and relevant United States Supreme Court opinions (Buckley v. ACLF and Meyer v. Grant) are available at: http://www.files.net/aclf *** Date: Tue, 01 Jun 1999 19:07:54 -0400 To: "DRCTalk Reformers' Forum" (drctalk@drcnet.org) From: Paul Wolf (paulwolf@voicenet.com) Subject: re: New petitioning rules in Oregon Sender: owner-drctalk@drcnet.org >1. Now anyone can gather signatures, ANYONE! Floyd - the Supreme Court ruling will have implications in every state. When I first saw this story I contacted the Counsel for the DC Board of Elections, and he said they had already begun working on new legislation to follow the guidance of the SC. This year in DC, anyone will be able to collect signatures for ballot initiatives. With I59, 5000 signatures were collected by someone living in a homeless shelter. She wrote down the address of the shelter as her home address (on the petition sheets) but the District's voter registration records listed her parents' address. The Board of Elections said the sigs could not be counted because the addresses didn't match. (we had to win a lawsuit to get them counted - the judge said the Board of Elections had no right to silence thousands of voters for something so stupid). This year it won't matter who collects the sigs, if they are from out of town, etc. Ex-felons could presumably collect sigs. It's a big victory for ballot access. Unfortunately, few states here in the East have a ballot initiative process at all. People in Eastern states should lobby their legislators and make ballot access a priority issue. The ballot initiative process is a basic democratic tool these days.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Crime victim measures get final House OK (The Associated Press says the
Oregon House of Representatives has given final approval to an eight-measure
ballot package aimed at replacing Measure 40, approved by voters in November
1996 but overturned by the state supreme court last summer. The eight
measures would supposedly ease the burden of crime victims, but some just
make prosecutors' lives easier and impose new burdens on defendants and
convicts. The package would, among other things, expand police search and
seizure powers and admissibility of evidence; require that jurors in criminal
trials be registered voters and not have committed a felony in 15 years;
prohibit the retroactive release of a prisoner if a new law reduces the
sentence for the crime committed; and sets a tougher standard for granting
bail before trial.)

Newshawk: Portland NORML (http://www.pdxnorml.org/)
Pubdate: Fri, May 28 1999
Source: The Associated Press (OR)
Copyright: 1999 The Associated Press
Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/
Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/
Author: Amalie Young, AP

Crime victim measures get final House OK

SALEM, Ore. (AP) - The Oregon House has given final approval to an
eight-measure ballot package aimed at easing the burden of crime victims,
replacing a voter-passed measure that was overturned in court.

The package backed by prosecutors and victims' groups is similar to a
proposed constitutional amendment strongly approved by voters in 1996.

The measure was thrown out by the Oregon Supreme Court last summer on
grounds that its multiple subjects should have been sent to the voters as
separate measures.

Rep. Kevin Mannix, sponsor of the original initiative measure that voters
approved, split the proposal into eight pieces to correct the flaw.

"This was taken away from Oregonians on a technicality," he said. "Let the
people decide - again."

Despite heated debate on some issues, the measures approved Thursday were
forwarded - many on strict party line votes - to the Senate.

The measures could be on the ballot as soon as November.

Included in the provisions are giving victims rights to be consulted about
plea bargains, to speak at sentencings and to be kept apprised of the
defendant's court proceedings.

"I believe that the state has the obligation to ensure every single one of
those rights to victims," said Rep. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, who led the
charge against other proposals.

"But," he added, "the other measures have been misidentified as victims rights."

The other measures would:

* Give prosecutors the right to demand a jury trial despite a defendant's
objection.

* Expand police search and seizure powers and admissibility of evidence.

* Require that jurors in criminal trials be registered voters and not have
committed a felony in 15 years.

* Allow 11-1 jury verdicts for murder convictions instead of unanimous verdicts.

* Prohibit the retroactive release of a prisoner if a new law reduces
sentence for the crime committed.

* Set a tougher standard for granting bail before trial.

Democrats criticized most of the measures, saying they were thinly disguised
attempts to change the criminal justice system.

Debate grew heated over a measure to exclude felons and unregistered voters
from serving on juries.

Rep. Jeff Merkley, D-Portland, said that would make minorities and young
people under-represented on juries because they tend to register to vote in
fewer numbers.

"This has nothing to do with victims rights," he said.

Mannix argued that the intent of the measure is to encourage political
participation and that people who hold a life sentence in their hands should
demonstrate they care enough about their community to participate in the
political process.

The measure to allow choice of a jury trial is HJR88; the measure to require
jurors to be registered voters is HJR89; the measure to protect crime
victims from the defendant is HJR90; the measure to align Oregon's provision
in criminal cases with federal law is HJR91; the measure to allow 11-1 jury
verdicts is HJR92; the measure to change rules about use of
self-incriminating statements is HJR93; the measure to prohibit retroactive
release is HJR94.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

DA says keep school expulsion records private (The Associated Press says Mark
Huddleston, the district attorney in Ashland, Oregon, has denied a parent's
request to examine Ashland High School records of students expelled over
drugs and weapons, even if such students' names are blacked out. The
petitioner, Paul Copeland of Ashland, said he wanted to see the records so he
could judge whether the school district is handling expulsions fairly since
it enacted a zero tolerance policy on drugs last year.)

Newshawk: Portland NORML (http://www.pdxnorml.org/)
Pubdate: Fri, May 28 1999
Source: The Associated Press (OR)
Copyright: 1999 The Associated Press
Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/
Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/
Author: no byline

DA says keep school expulsion records private

ASHLAND, Ore. (AP) - The district attorney has denied a parent's request to
examine Ashland High School records of students expelled over drugs and
weapons, even if the names are blacked out.

District Attorney Mark Huddleston said his examination of federal and state
law made it clear to him the records should remain private.

The petitioner, Paul Copeland of Ashland, said he wanted to see the records
so he could judge whether the school district is handling expulsions fairly
since it enacted a zero-tolerance policy on drugs.

The policy, implemented last year, requires expulsion of students found with
drugs in their possession on school property.

The school district refused to give Copeland the records - even with the
names and identifying characteristics of the students blacked out - citing
federal privacy statutes. Copeland appealed to the district attorney, citing
state public records law.

Copeland said he was deeply disappointed with the district attorney's
opinion, but has not decided whether to pursue the case further.

"The public has a right to know about these cases. Some involved violence in
the schools and expulsions for weapons," Copeland said. "I also have a
concern that when punishment is dispensed in secret there's a potential for
abuse."

Copeland's attorney, David Fine, said Huddleston ignored case law in his
denial of the appeal. He said other state high courts have ruled differently
on similar matters.

Schools Superintendent John Daggett said the Oregon School Board Association
was very concerned about the case.

"I'm pleased that children and families have had their right to privacy
upheld," he said.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Million Marijuana March (A letter to the editor of the Seattle Times shames
the newspaper for not deeming it newsworthy that 4,000-5,000 marijuana-law
reformers marched May 1 from Volunteer Park to Westlake Center.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 17:53:39 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US WA: PUB LTE: Million Marijuana March
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: John Smith
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company
Contact: opinion@seatimes.com
Website: http://www.seattletimes.com/
Author: Jennifer Harrison, Seattle

MILLION MARIJUANA MARCH

Not Just A Stoner Rally; Where Was The News Coverage?

On May 1, I was one of 4,000 to 5,000 people who joined the Seattle Million
Marijuana March from Volunteer Park to Westlake Center.

I joined the march, as did thousands of people worldwide in their own
cities, to show my support for the reclassification of medical marijuana as
a Class C drug, and to support the uses of industrial hemp as a sustainable,
pesticide-free substitute for cotton, paper and oil.

This was not just a stoner rally: We had people of all backgrounds and ages
join our parade. The Seattle Police Department closed the streets and
directed traffic. We were all courteous and friendly to each other.
Thousands of people were feeling democratically empowered and were
peacefully advocating change.

But was The Seattle Times there? No. In fact, apart from a (surprisingly
positive) blurb in The Stranger, there was no mention that Broadway and Pike
streets were closed while thousands of people marched in support of
marijuana-law reform.

Just like civil rights was at its peak, marijuana reform is a sticky,
politically unpopular movement.

I, like many others, read The Times to get local and state news. Shame on
you for not covering this great grass-roots democratic event. Shame on me
for relying on The Times to provide me an unbiased look at what is happening
in my city and state.

Jennifer Harrison, Seattle
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Straight Edger Charged In Assault At West Valley Party (The Salt Lake
Tribune, in Utah, suggests a group of Straight Edge members who believe that
nobody should be allowed to smoke, drink or use "drugs" burst uninvited into
a party, asked if anyone was drinking alcohol, and proceeded to punch six
people and spray them in the face with mace.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 13:56:15 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US UT: Straight Edger Charged In Assault At West Valley Party
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Luciano Colonna
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Copyright: 1999, The Salt Lake Tribune
Contact: letters@sltrib.com
Website: http://utahonline.sltrib.com/
Forum: http://utahonline.sltrib.com/tribtalk/
Author: Kelly Kennedy, The Salt Lake Tribune

STRAIGHT EDGER CHARGED IN ASSAULT AT WEST VALLEY PARTY

An 18-year-old West Valley man was charged Thursday with six counts of
assault after he allegedly burst uninvited into a party and punched and
sprayed six people in the face with mace. Police say the man was one of as
many as eight members of a violent faction of the Straight Edge movement who
participated in the melee in a West Valley City on May 2.

Sam Dickson is wanted on $100,000 bail and is also charged with aggravated
burglary. A witness said the assailants showed up at the party and asked if
anyone was drinking alcohol.

Straight Edge members do not consume alcohol, drugs or cigarettes. A small
percentage believe that no one else should be allowed to smoke, drink or use
drugs.

A witness said a woman who lived in the house asked the men to leave because
she did not know them. The witness said the men began to leave, but started
an argument with another woman in the front yard about alcohol use and then
forced their way back into the house through the front door. Charges state
Dickson ran downstairs and then upstairs.

While doing so, he and the other men allegedly sprayed pepper-spray in the
faces of other guests and punched them. At least one victim was knocked to
the ground and beaten.

Charges state Dickson told police he did go to the party, was asked to leave
and "the defendant further stated that he did enter the residence and began
to hit whomever he saw in the residence."

The incident left the witness feeling scared. "I've never even dealt with
Straight Edgers before.

My friends are acting like it's not a big deal, but I'm scared.

I'm just worried that they will come after us."
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Marijuana Laws Inching Leftward (The Aspen Daily News covers NORML's 1999
legal seminar, continuing through Saturday in the Colorado resort town. R.
Keith Stroup, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform
of Marijuana Laws, told an audience made up mostly of lawyers that "For the
first time in 20 years, the political tide is moving ever so slowly in our
direction. People say they are worried about crime, but they mean violent
crime, not somebody smoking a joint in their home.")

Date: Mon, 7 Jun 1999 09:38:48 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Colorado: Marijuana Laws Inching Leftward
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: GDaurer
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: Aspen Daily News (CO)
Copyright: 1999 Ute City Tea Party Ltd. dba Aspen Daily News
Contact: Jburrus@aspendailynews.com
Address: 517 E. Hopkins Avenue
Fax: (970) 920-2118
Feedback: http://www.aspendailynews.com/contact_us/form.htm
Website: http://www.aspendailynews.com/
Author: James Burrus

MARIJUANA LAWS INCHING LEFTWARD

It may not seem like our country's laws, attitudes and public policy are
getting softer on marijuana, but reports from the legal trenches show a
distinct, albeit subtle, shift.

"Politically we are making some substantial progress," said R. Keith Stroup,
executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana
Laws, to the approximately 55 men and women -- mostly lawyers -- gathered at
the Gant Thursday for the group's 1999 legal seminar.

Stroup pointed to last November's general election, which saw five out of
five states pass ballot initiatives allowing medical use of marijuana.
Oregon voters, too, shot down by a 2-to-1 margin an attempt to make
marijuana possession a criminal offense as opposed to warranting just a
ticket.

"For the first time in 20 years, the political tide is moving ever so slowly
in our direction," Stroup said. "People say they are worried about crime,
but they mean violent crime, not somebody smoking a joint in their home."

NORML's legal seminar runs through Saturday and covers a wide array of
topics -- from pretrial investigations and picking a jury to cultural
defenses in drug cases and cross examination of snitches.

Thursday's session started off with a rollicking stand-up state of the legal
union address by Aspen attorney and erstwhile defender of Dr. Hunter S.
Thompson, Gerald H. Goldstein.

In 45 minutes, Goldstein blazed through a panalopy of issues, injecting
several one-liners and asides that kept the counselors in stitches.

Taken on their face, many of the legal decisions and political stands
reported on by Goldstein could hardly be seen as funny. But it must hae been
the delivery that brought laughs at such items as the bill proposed recently
by the Mississippi legislature calling for the removal of a body part for
violation of the state's controlled substance law. Or the citizenry's
diminishing right of privacy at the hands of police using ever more
sophisticated technology.

"There is an inverse relationship between the police's increases in
technology and our diminishing expectation of privacy," Goldstein said. "We
need greater protection as technology advances."

Other presentations of the day included "Ethical considerations when
defending juveniles: Kids say the darndest things," "Defending against
charges of child abuse" and "Pretrial investigations: The most important
part of the case."

In the latter talk, Phillip Russell, a former prosecutor in the Bronx, New
York City, said pretrial investigation is where defense attorneys lose most
of their cases.

"They have police departments, we have secretaries," Russell said.

He proceeded to offer examples of how to use the blizzard of paperwork
generated by the legal system to one's best advantage. From knowing where
and how to get all the 9-1-1 tapes of an incident to asking for all the
negatives of photos taken by police at a crime scene, getting the whole
story can often make the difference between winning and losing a case.

And when dealing with prosecution "experts" of any kind, Russell reminded
his audience to be vigilant in maintaining "presumption of bullshit anytime
a government expert testifies."

Perhaps the most prescient of the presentations, in terms of the
organization's ongoing effort to reform marijuana laws, was John Kenneth
Zwerling's "Voir Dire (jury selection) in a medical marijuana case."

Zwerling offered tips on how to question potential jurors that enables them
to give honest answers, how to follow a line of questioning to its logical
conclusion and how to subtly "educate" jurors about the issues they will be
dealing with.

But at one point in reviewing a transcript of the medical marijuana case in
question, Zwerling deftly broached the issue of jury nullification -- the
ability of any juror to decide independently of any instruction from the
judge that a law is not just or fair, and decide accordingly.

Judges never discuss jury nullification and, in fact, if mentioned by a
defense attorney during a trial, can be grounds for a mistrial.

However, as a tool for overturning heavy-handed and oppressive drug laws,
its power should not be underestimated.

"The debate is beginning to focus on law-abiding citizens who want to smoke
a joint instead of having a cocktail," Stroup said. "They are law-abiding
citizens and contribute to society. Three to four years from now you will
see public policy come closer to where public opinion is.

"A jury should reflect community values, but if policy doesn't start
changing in the next three to four years, I think you will begin seeing a
lot of juries nullifying cases," Stroup said.

Jury nullification gained national attention in 1997 when Laura Kriho, a
juror in a drug possession case in Garfield County, was charged with
contempt of court. First Judicial District Chief Judge Henry Neito found her
guilty Feb. 10, 1997.

Her attorney said she was found guilty solely because she did not volunteer
how she felt about drug laws and for exercising her constitutional right as
a juror, by acting independently and going against Judge Neito's
instructions by considering all the aspects of the case, including the
potential punishment.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Officer Is Cleared In Death Of A Suspected Drug Dealer (The New York Times
says a Manhattan grand jury has declined to indict a police officer in the
death of Kenneth Banks, a suspected crack cocaine dealer. Banks' skull was
fractured after he was hit on the head by a police radio thrown by officer
Craig Yokemick during a chase in Harlem last Oct. 29.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 06:11:54 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US NY: Officer Is Cleared In Death Of A Suspected Drug Dealer
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Nathan Riley
Pubdate: Fri, 28 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: KIT R. ROANE

OFFICER IS CLEARED IN DEATH OF A SUSPECTED DRUG DEALER

A Manhattan grand jury has declined to indict a police officer in the
death of a suspected drug dealer who was hit in the head by a police radio
thrown by the officer during a chase, the Manhattan District Attorney's
office announced Thursday.

The suspect, Kenneth Banks, 36, suffered a fractured skull and lapsed into a
coma after he was hit by the radio and fell from his bicycle during the
altercation in Harlem last Oct. 29. Banks died 12 days later.

The officer, Craig Yokemick, and his partner, had begun to chase Banks after
they saw him hand several vials that appeared to contain cocaine to another
person on the street, according to the police. Prosecutors said that Officer
Yokemick threw his police radio at Banks when it seemed Banks would get
away.

The police said the officers found Banks carrying one vial of crack cocaine
and a box cutter after he was injured.

James M. Kindler, Chief Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan, said the
grand jury "found the officer was justified in the force he used in his
effort to apprehend Banks."

He added that "neither tackling him nor the use of the radio is the sort of
force that you would think would result in death; this is just an
unfortunate chain of circumstances."

Police Commissioner Howard Safir talked little about the grand jury's
decision yesterday, saying only that "the criminal justice system has
spoken." But he said the department would begin its own inquiry into the
incident to see whether Officer Yokemick violated any administrative policy
when he tried to arrest Banks.

Citing the continuing investigation, Officer Yokemick's lawyer, John Tynan,
said that he could not comment.

Officer Yokemick remains on modified desk duty, stripped of his badge and
gun.

Banks's family called the grand jury's decision "a devastating shock" and
disputed some elements of the case as presented by the District Attorney's
office. The family's lawyer, Jonathan S. Abady, said that he would soon file
a civil complaint in Federal court charging Officer Yokemick with violating
Banks's civil rights and would also get in touch with Federal prosecutors in
the hope that they might investigate the killing.

The Chief Medical Examiner had ruled Banks's death a homicide, saying it was
the result of blunt trauma to the head caused by the police radio. But that
conclusion was disputed by the neurosurgeon who treated Banks at
Metropolitan Hospital Center and by the chiefs of neurosurgery at New York
Hospital and Harlem Hospital Center, all of whom said Banks's fatal injuries
were the result of the fall from his bike to the concrete, according to the
District Attorney's office.

While prosecutors said that the distinction would have had little effect on
the case's outcome, the family said that it remained convinced that Officer
Yokemick's radio killed Banks.

"You look for better when you come to a cop, you look for protection, not
for someone who's a destroyer," Banks's mother, Maybell Banks, said by
telephone from her home in Hertford, N.C. "What's happened here is sick and
no kind of justice."
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Hemp: It's Rope, Not Dope - Farmers, Activists Seek To Legalize Crop (The San
Francisco Chronicle says a small corps of techno-savvy activists based in
Lexington, Kentucky, is playing a big role in the national campaign to
legalize industrial hemp. Using e-mail, faxes and cell phones, and in
friendly, easy-going Southern style, the Bluegrass group, whose members
include actor and part-time Kentuckian Woody Harrelson, have been doggedly
educating state lawmakers and activists across the country who are pressuring
the government to lift the hemp ban.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 13:56:11 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US: Hemp -- It's Rope, Not Dope Farmers, Activists Seek To
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Frank S. World
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Page: A1
Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Chronicle
Contact: chronletters@sfgate.com
Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/
Author: Leslie Guttman, Chronicle Staff Writer

HEMP -- IT'S ROPE, NOT DOPE FARMERS, ACTIVISTS SEEK TO LEGALIZE CROP

LEXINGTON, Ky. -- In the quiet heart of the conservative Bluegrass
state, a small corps of techno-savvy activists is playing a big role in
the national campaign to legalize industrial hemp, a crop the activists
call an economic life preserver for U.S. farmers but which the federal
government says is a dangerous drug.

The tall, cane-like hemp plant was cultivated throughout the United
States for decades to make clothing, rope and other items but lost its
respectable reputation in 1937, when the government banned marijuana -
and hemp along with it.

However, it isn't illegal to import hemp from countries like China, and
right now, hemp is an eco-celebrity of the green movement, used to make
everything from diapers to dashboards, shampoo to sneakers. Nut butter,
fuel, lip gloss, horse feed - the list is as long as the hemp stalk.

In 1997, North Americans spent $75 million on hemp products, up from $3
million in 1993, according to John Roulac, founder of Hempbrokers, an
international hemp-seed product supplier in Sebastopol. He estimates
that annual sales could approach $1 billion within the next five years
or so.

Using e-mail, faxes and cell phones, and in friendly, easy-going
Southern style, the Bluegrass group, whose members include actor and
part-time Kentuckian Woody Harrelson, have been doggedly educating state
lawmakers and activists across the country who are pressuring the
government to lift the hemp ban.

Their mission is to enable U.S. farmers to grow a profitable,
sustainable, pesticide-free crop that will keep rural towns thriving -
and benefit the environment with what they believe is the soybean of the
new millennium.

``We knew we´d have to grow the word before we could grow the
crop,´´ says Lexington hemp activist Joe Hickey.

The hemp seed is tiny, almost birdseed-like, with a gray-brown hull that
develops when the seed matures on the flowering plant at summer's end.
Inside the glands of the female flowers, a low level of the chemical
delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is produced; this is the
mind-altering compound found in marijuana. The flowers' sticky resin can
cling to the seed hulls, leaving traces of THC.

Marijuana, hemp's botanical cousin in the cannabis family, contains
about 5 to 20 percent THC; hemp usually contains less than 1 percent,
way too little to get a person high, say hemp activists and numerous
scientists.

The U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy in Washington answers
queries on hemp with a three-page fax that classifies marijuana and hemp
as the same plant because both contain the psychoactive compound. At the
Drug Enforcement Administration, officials say it's not their job to
make or change the law, just to enforce it.

Bob Weiner, spokesman for National Drug Policy Director Barry McCaffrey,
says the government fears that legalizing hemp would send the wrong
message about drugs to young people. He adds that law enforcement finds
it difficult to tell the difference between hemp and marijuana ``from
the sky´´ (via helicopter) when it comes to pinpointing illegal
fields for eradication.

``We´re open to new research ... we have no objection to hemp as a
product, we just don´t want to see a drug culture come in through the
back door,´´ says Weiner.

``The DEA says, `We can´t tell the difference between industrial hemp
and marijuana,´ ´´ says Hickey, ``Well, that´s the difference
between poppy seeds on a bagel and poppy seeds in heroin.´´

Some hemp activists say the federal opposition arises in part from fears
of budget cuts for law enforcement. In Kentucky, as in other states,
wild hemp - also known as ditchweed - is routinely eradicated with the
same vigilance used against marijuana fields. According to a 1996 report
from the Vermont state auditor's office, 78 percent of the marijuana
that was destroyed in the state, and 99 percent destroyed across the
country with federal money, was ditchweed.

Weiner denies any budget fears and calls the activists ``paranoid.´´
He also questions the market potential for hemp: ``We want to make sure
farmers with economic problems aren´t given a silver bullet that´s
not real.´´

Hawaii Rep. Cynthia Thielen, however, sees hemp as the eventual savior
to Hawaii's eight-year economic slump. Thielen introduced in the state
Legislature a bill to permit growing industrial hemp; it recently passed
the House and Senate. The governor is expected to sign it into law in
June. The bill calls for test plots, which would be monitored by the
Drug Enforcement Administration.

``Sugar is dead,´´ Thielen says of Hawaii´s ex-cash cow and the
state´s inability to compete with the bargain-bin prices of sugar in
the global marketplace. ``Every day that passes, and we do not allow
farmers to grow industrial hemp, means agricultural workers are
unemployed. And our land lies fallow.´´

Other states are pushing hard for hemp. Last month, North Dakota became
the first state to make growing and selling industrial hemp legal.
(Growers will apply for DEA permits to do so.)

Pro-hemp legislation has either passed or is brewing in at least 11
additional states. (No hemp legislation is pending in California,
although the Democratic Party passed a measure endorsing industrial hemp
April 3 at its annual convention.)

Nearly all the states' pro-hemp legislators and advocates have consulted
the Bluegrass activists at one time or another. They have become hemp
authorities - reeling off history, factoids, scientific research
results - from the amount of information they have gathered in their
efforts to legalize hemp in Kentucky.

``The Kentucky group is key; they are the leaders,´´ says Thielen.
``They are helping everyone else.´´

Across the gently sloping hills of Lexington and surrounding towns, hemp
grows tall and wild, a reminder of when the plant and the state's
economy were intertwined as closely as mint juleps and Derby Day. Even
Henry Clay, the Great Compromiser and a beloved native son, was a hemp
farmer.

The state was a top hemp grower when the crop was legal (this includes a
brief time during World War II when the U.S. ban was lifted in order to
allow rope to be made for the military). Kentucky lore has it that hemp
seed is what made the canaries in the coal mines sing.

The current Kentucky hemp movement started in 1993 and moved into
national focus in '96, when Harrelson joined forces with Hickey,
Lexington tobacco farmer and businessman Andy Graves and others. They
also brought in Jake Graves, Andy's 76-year-old father, to educate
farmers on the issue. Jake Graves, a pillar of Lexington society, was a
leading Kentucky hemp farmer in the early '30s.

Harrelson decided to join up with the feisty Bluegrass contingent
because ``they were full of vision and energy,´´ he says. He adds
that the state´s hemp history made it the logical place to do battle.
A suit challenging the state ban is currently before the Kentucky
Supreme Court, filed after Harrelson planted four hemp seeds on his
small Lee County property in 1996.

As far as the state fight goes, Graves says the government's moral
stance on hemp doesn't make sense because Kentucky already ``raises all
the vices -- thoroughbred racing, whiskey and tobacco.´´

The activists are plotting their next move on a federal suit that was
dismissed in March. It will either be appealed or a new suit filed,
possibly arguing that the hemp ban violates the North American Free
Trade Agreement and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade by
putting U.S. farmers at a disadvantage to those in hemp-growing
countries.

While Harrelson and the Kentuckians regularly travel around the United
States giving hemp sermons -- as they did at the University of
California at Berkeley campus last fall -- a crucial part of the
effort's success has been the techno-campaign. Without e-mail and a Web
site (www.hempgrowers.com), the word would not have spread so far and
fast.

The activists point to Canada as a model of what could be. The country
legalized hemp last year, and about 6,200 acres were planted, yielding a
crop that sold for approximately $450,000, according to Robert L'Ecuyer,
general manager of Kenex Ltd., Canada's largest hemp grower and
processor. L'Ecuyer says he doesn't know yet how much hemp will be
planted across Canada in '99, but it may be five or six times as much as
last year.

In the center of Lexington, at Tattersall's Tobacco Warehouse on the
first day of the annual tobacco sales last fall, the auctioneer reeled
off the bids in a gravelly Southern streak as farmers waited to see how
much multinational tobacco companies would pay for their harvest. The
sweet, almost choking smell of tobacco from hundreds of huge,
honey-colored sample bales filled the dim warehouse. Underneath that
aroma was something else: the smell of fear.

It's unclear how much of the nation's tobacco settlement - more than
$200 billion - will go to U.S. farmers whose lives, towns and families
thrive only as long the tobacco plant does. The fate of the quota and
price-support system is also uncertain. Tobacco farmers fear the rise in
cigarette prices will lead to less demand, and foreign competition from
countries like South Africa lies ahead. Tobacco currently sells for
about $6,000 an acre, compared to $300 an acre for corn.

Throughout the battle to legalize hemp, the priority for Hickey, Graves
and the other hemp activists in Kentucky is the future of U.S. farmers
of tobacco and other crops with depressed prices, such as wheat.

The Kentucky tobacco farmers, like those in other states, are one of the
most conservative groups in America, and yet they are also behind hemp.
Farmers like Jimmy Sharp, who remembers his father growing fields of
hemp in the '30s. ``I don´t have a problem with it,´´ he says,
leaning over a bale at the auction during a break.

Standing next to him, tobacco farmer Graves adds, ``Everybody´s daddy
or grandaddy grew hemp. It helped support a way of life around here. As
long as it makes money, they´ll grow it.´´

Hickey believes hemp will grow rural economic development across the
country. He envisions local processing plants for items as bold as the
car made from plastic hemp that Henry Ford once built - plants like the
one a Canadian firm just announced will be built in northwestern
Manitoba.

Change in federal policy might be afoot. Although the DEA maintains
official silence about the future of industrial hemp from its public
affairs office in Washington, Rep. Thielen in Hawaii says she is hearing
a different tale.

She says DEA Chief of Operations Gregory Williams told her recently that
the agency is working on revising security regulations to permit U.S.
farmers to plant hemp because of the commercial interest. A DEA
spokeswoman for Williams wouldn't comment other than to say the office
is reviewing Hawaii's request on ending the hemp ban.

Change can't happen soon enough for the Bluegrass hemp team. Says
Harrelson, ``The argument has been that hemp sends the wrong message to
our youth. What about cigarettes, alcohol and tobacco? What kind of
message do they send? Those are the real drugs. Hemp isn´t.´´

HEMP AS AN INDUSTRIAL CROP

Although industrial hemp is currently illegal to grow in the United States
without a permit from the Drug Enforcement Administration, it is legal to
import hemp to make numerous products. Here are some of the plant's diverse
uses:

Uses for the leaves

-- Animal bedding, mulch and mushroom compost

Uses for seeds/hemp oil

-- Food: Granola, protein-rich flour, salad oil, margarine, food supplements

-- Health products: Soap, shampoo, bath gels and cosmetics

-- Other uses: Birdseed, oil paints, solvents, varnish, chain-saw
lubricants, printing inks, putty and fuel

Uses for hemp stalk

-- Clothing: Fabrics, handbags, denim, diapers, socks, shoes and fine
textiles from the cottonized fibers

-- Other textile uses: Twine, rope, nets, canvas bags, tarps and carpets

-- Paper: Printing paper, fine and specialty papers, technical filter paper,
newsprint, cardboard and packaging products

-- Building materials: Fiberboard, insulation material, fiberglass
substitute, concrete blocks, stucco and mortar

-- Industrial products: agro-fiber composites, compression-molded parts,
brake/clutch linings and caulking

HEMP AND MARIJUANA

Both are varieties of the species Cannabis sativa. Marijuana contains about
5 to 20 percent of the mind-altering chemical delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol
(THC), while hemp contains less than 1 percent.

Source: Nova Institute, 1995/Courtesy of Hemp Horizons by John Roulac
(Chelsea Green Publishing)
-------------------------------------------------------------------

AIDS sufferers could smoke marijuana under Stefanini bill (The MetroWest
Daily News, in Framingham, Massachusetts, says a bill championed by state
Rep. John Stefanini, D-Framingham, would add AIDS to a list of illnesses
that the state would theoretically allow to be treated experimentally with
marijuana. There's only one small hitch: Massachusetts has no legal source
of marijuana. In part because there is no marijuana supply, no one is
enrolled in any experimental program.)

From: Epeggs@aol.com
From: "CRRH mailing list" (restore@crrh.org)
Date: Sun, 30 May 1999 07:28:33 EDT
Subject: AIDS sufferers could smoke marijuana under Stefanini bill
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition\NORML
A State Affiliate of the National Organization
for the Reform of Marijuana Laws
P.O. Box 0266, Georgetown, MA 01833-0366
781-944-2266 - www.masscann.org
epeggs@aol.com

The MetroWest Daily News
33 New York Avenue
Framingham, MA 01701
Telephone (508)626-3800
Fax (508) 626-3885
Letters to the editor can be sent by e-mail from:
http://www.townonline.com/metrowest/misc/forms/metrolet.html

May 28, 1999

AIDS sufferers could smoke marijuana under Stefanini bill

By STEVE LEBLANC
NEWS STATEHOUSE BUREAU

BOSTON -- AIDS sufferers could legally light up marijuana cigarettes under a
bill championed by state Rep. John Stefanini, D-Framingham.

The state already technically allows the experimental medical use of
marijuana for the treatment of diseases like cancer, glaucoma and asthma.
Stefanini's bill adds AIDS to the list of diseases.

"We need to recognize that there can be some legitimate, therapeutic uses for
this controlled substance," Stefanini said.

State law gives the Department of Public Health the authority to approve
marijuana experimentation to relieve the effects of certain diseases. AIDS
activists have long contended marijuana can help some of the side effects of
the disease, including nausea.

There's only one small hitch in the state law: Massachusetts has no legal
source for marijuana.

In part because there is no available marijuana, at least none that can be
purchased legally, no one has enrolled in any experimental program.

But that isn't stopping advocates from pushing to get the program up and
running.

Brian Fitzgerald, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, has been in a
wheelchair since 1969. Using marijuana helps relieve his pain by relaxing his
muscles. The drug also boosts his appetite, he said.

"It's definitely a beneficial thing," said Fitzgerald, who testified at a
Statehouse hearing yesterday. "I would rather be smoking or eating weed than
taking Valium, which is a proven addictive drug. For medicinal purposes,
there's really nothing else."

His doctor would prescribe the drug, but fears the legal consequences,
Fitzgerald added.

"If a doctor decides you need something or something would be beneficial for
you, why should he lose his license?" he said. "I think (lawmakers) have to
basically get real."

Not everyone agrees.

Anti-drug activists warn that legalizing marijuana, even for medicinal
reasons, could send the wrong message.

"If we care at all about what's happening in this society, we don't want to
make illegal drugs appear to be good medicine, because it's not medicine at
all," said Lea Cox, president of Concerned Citizens for Drug Prevention.

Opponents also say there are other, legal drugs that can treat the same
symptoms.

But Stefanini said those fears are misplaced.

"The bill does not contemplate in any way the use of marijuana for anything
other than a narrow group of documented diseases under professional
supervision," he said.

Lawmakers heard a handful of other AIDS-related bills at the same hearing.

One would give rape victims the right to know whether their assailants are
HIV-positive. Another would allow police and emergency medical technicians to
compel AIDS tests if they become exposed to blood or bodily fluids in the
course of their work.

AIDS activists fear any exception to the confidentiality laws could
discourage people from getting tested and seeking treatment.

Public Health Commissioner Howard Koh said the state's message on HIV testing
should be simple and clear: No one should be tested without their consent.

"Exceptions that make it impossible for the department to use this simple
message... will have negative implications for public health," Koh said.
"People will be afraid to seek testing if they perceive that the privacy and
confidentiality of those seeking HIV-testing are not protected."

Copyright (c) 1999, Community Newspaper Company. All rights reserved.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Colleges Report Increases In Arrests For Drug And Alcohol (The Chronicle of
Higher Education says its annual campus crime survey shows arrests for
illegal drugs and alcohol at the nation's colleges and universities increased
7.2 per cent and 3.6 per cent, respectively, from 1996 to 1997. The increases
mark the sixth consecutive year such arrests have increased. As in past
years, many campus police officers and safety experts attribute the increases
not to increased alcohol or drug use by students, but to more aggressive
enforcement efforts and toughened policies restricting drinking on campus.)

Date: Sun, 6 Jun 1999 17:44:46 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US: Colleges Report Increases In Arrests For Drug And Alcohol
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: M & M Family
Pubdate: Fri May 28, 199
Source: Chronicle of Higher Education, The (US)
Copyright: 1999 by The Chronicle of Higher Education
Contact: editor@chronicle.com
Website: http://chronicle.com/
Author: JULIE L. NICKLIN

COLLEGES REPORT INCREASES IN ARRESTS FOR DRUG AND ALCOHOL VIOLATIONS

Experts Differ On Whether Trends Reflect Tougher Enforcement Or More
Substance Abuse

Arrests for violations of drug or alcohol laws at the nation's
colleges and universities increased 7.2 per cent and 3.6 per cent,
respectively, from 1996 to 1997.

The increases mark the sixth consecutive year that arrests for such
violations have gone up, according to an annual campus crime survey by
The Chronicle.

As in past years, many campus police officers and safety experts
attribute the increases not to increased alcohol or drug use by
students, but to more-aggressive enforcement efforts and toughened
policies restricting drinking on campus. They also say many of the
arrests involve outsiders who were visiting campus.

However, some health researchers point out that more and more college
students who are drinking alcoholic beverages are doing so in order to
get drunk, and as a result are behaving in ways that result in arrest.
A new study suggests that illegal drug use on the campuses is also
rising.

The Chronicle's survey of nearly 500 of the nation's largest colleges
and universities also showed that arrests for weapons-law violations
grew significantly from 1996 to 1997. The number of reports of
forcible sex offenses, such as rape and fondling, increased slightly.

However, the number of non-forcible sex offenses (incest and statutory
rape), along with murders, robberies, aggravated assaults, burglaries,
and motor-vehicle thefts,institutions categorize them, & also the
order they appear in story. jln) decreased, reflecting reduced rates
of such crimes in urban areas around the country.

The Chronicle's annual survey, which has been conducted for the past
seven years, is based on the crime reports that colleges are required
by federal law to disclose annually. The most recent survey is based
on the reports of 483 four-year colleges and universities with more
than 5,000 students.

Experts on campus safety warn against using the data to make
comparisons among campuses, or to conclude that a campus with a
relatively low number of reported crimes is safe, while one with a
high number is dangerous.

The survey showed that in 1997, arrests for liquor-law violations --
including illegal possession or transportation of alcoholic beverages
-- totaled 17,624, up from 17,019 in 1996. The 3.6-per-cent increase,
however, was smaller than the 12.2-per-cent increase recorded from
1995 to 1996.

Five institutions -- the State University of West Georgia, followed by
the Universities of Minnesota (Twin Cities) and Oregon; Clemson
University; and the University of Georgia, reported increases in
alcohol-related arrests of 120 or more.

For the second year in a row, Michigan State University reported the
highest number of alcohol arrests -- 633. That figure, however, is
down 10.2 per cent from 1996's total of 705. Michigan State's figures
for both years also include liquor-infraction tickets, which officials
consider arrests.

Tony Kleibecker, a spokesman for Michigan State's Department of Police
and Public Safety, says the decline from 1996 to 1997 suggests that
students are responding to the university's efforts to curb drinking,
at a time when the state has tightened its alcohol laws. "Students are
definitely being more careful about where they drink," he says.
"They're saying, 'I don't need the infraction, so I'm going to stay
inside and not cause trouble.'"

Michigan State officials, he adds, are not concerned that the
institution has twice topped the list of alcohol arrests. The
university enrolls more than 40,000 students, he points out.

What's more, Michigan State plays host to five or six football games
every fall, each one bringing in 75,000 people -- many of them
underage -- who attend tailgate parties before, during, and after the
games. University officials could not determine how many of the 633
arrests in 1997 were of non-students, but they say that traditionally,
the proportion has been about half. "Football Saturdays alone can
really spike our numbers," says Mr. Kleibecker.

In the past year, alcohol has helped to fuel two riots involving
Michigan State students. Seventeen students were arrested in May 1998
during a riot prompted by the university's decision to ban alcohol at
a popular campus tailgating spot. This past March, about 5,000
Michigan State students and others set fires, overturned cars, and
smashed windows near the campus after the university's team lost to
Duke University in a semifinal game of the National Collegiate
Athletic Association's basketball championship.

The greatest increase in alcohol arrests from 1996 to 1997 occurred at
the State University of West Georgia, where the number rose from 62 to
265.

Thomas J. Mackel, director of public safety, says the university
"beefed up" its patrols of residence halls to cut down on students'
parties and carousing. Three "really aggressive" officers on bicycles
patrol areas near residence halls and parking lots from 7 p.m. to 3
a.m. daily, he adds. "We actually have more people looking for the
violations. It wasn't like all of a sudden our students started drinking."

Clemson reported the fourth-largest increase in liquor arrests, to 200
in 1997 from 68 in 1996. Heather Burkett, a records clerk in the
public-safety division, explains that the number grew because
officials began counting arrests of "minors in possession" of alcohol,
a statistic that the federal law calls for reporting. Previously,
officials had counted only arrests for public intoxication, disorderly
conduct, and violations of open-container laws.

Campus-safety experts say the total of 7,897 arrests in 1997 for
violations of drug laws, a 7.2-per-cent increase over 1996, also can
be largely explained by tougher enforcement. The increase exceeded the
5-per-cent rise from 1995 to 1996.

The University of Oregon reported the largest increase in drug
arrests, from 21 to 106. Thomas R. Hicks, associate director of the
Office of Public Safety, says the increase resulted largely from a
decision in 1997 to broaden the types of drug violations reported.

Under federal law, institutions are required to report only the number
of actual arrests for such violations, which is what the university
had been doing. Under Oregon law, possession of less than one ounce of
marijuana is considered a "violation," subject to a fine. But
possession of the same amount in some other states would result in
arrest. Accordingly, the university decided to include such violations
in its annual crime report, Mr. Hicks says. "We felt we needed to be
consistent with what other campuses might be reporting."

Four other institutions -- the Universities of Akron, Arizona, and
California at Riverside, and Washington State University -- also
reported increases of more than 45 drug arrests from 1996 to 1997.

In 1997, the University of California at Berkeley reported 179 arrests
-- more than any other institution -- for drug-law violations. That
figure, a campus police official says, includes citations, which
technically are "arrests," even though no one is taken into custody.
The university also ranked No. 1 in the category in 1996, with 193
drug arrests and citations.

In recent years, says Lieut. Adan Tejada, of the university's police
department, officers have stepped up their patrols on the south side
of campus, including People's Park, where drug dealing, panhandling,
and drinking had become more common. In 1997, campus police officers
made about 40 narcotics arrests in the park, few of them involving
Berkeley students, he says. Most of the arrests were for the
possession or sale of cocaine, heroine, LSD, or marijuana, he says.

While police officials say tougher law enforcement may be driving up
the number of drug and alcohol arrests, some health researchers say
worrisome trends among college students may also be to blame.

Henry Wechsler, director of college alcohol studies at Harvard
University's School of Public Health, points out that even though
research shows a drop in the number of college students who are
consuming alcohol, those who do drink are consuming more than ever
before.

A 1997 study of drinking at 116 colleges by Mr. Wechsler and other
researchers found that the proportion of students surveyed who
reported drinking alcohol to "get drunk" increased from 39.4 per cent
in 1993 to 52.3 per cent in 1997. "There is more drunkenness, and
along with that are more problems," he says.

What's more, a forthcoming report, based on a survey by Mr. Wechsler
and others, concludes that there has been an increase in drug use by
college students from 1993 to 1997. The survey, he says, shows that a
large cohort of college students began using drugs in middle school
and have continued doing so. He declined to divulge further details
until the study's release this year. "Unless things change," he says,
"the increase in drug use should last for a few more years."

In 1997, institutions reported a total of 951 arrests for weapons-law
violations, up 4.4 per cent from 1996. The total had declined by 14.2
per cent from 1995 to 1996.

Some campus police officials and safety experts say the statistic
fluctuates so much each year that it doesn't necessarily reveal any
trend. Others, however, say the increase reflects the fact that
growing numbers of children, teenagers, and adults are carrying
weapons -- either to protect themselves or to feel powerful.

Arizona State University reported 32 arrests for weapons-law
violations in 1997, more than any other institution.

Stewart F. Adams, crime-prevention coordinator for the university's
Department of Public Safety, says the majority of those arrested were
not Arizona State students. Thirteen of the arrests were of students
attending an alternative high school for troubled teenagers near the
university's East Campus. Most of the remaining 19 arrests were of
local gang members who "cruise" through the main campus at night, he
says. Most of the weapons confiscated were semiautomatic handguns that
were found during routine traffic stops.

"We still feel the campus is fairly safe, because we don't have a
whole lot of violations occurring during class hours," Mr. Adams says.
Campus and local police officers are working together to curb the
presence of gang members on and around the campus.

S. Daniel Carter, vice-president of Security on Campus, a non-profit,
campus-watchdog organization in King of Prussia, Pa., says that even
if crimes are committed by outsiders, "it is ultimately the
responsibility" of campus officials to provide a safe
environment.

While some campus crimes increased substantially from 1996 to 1997,
the number of reports of forcible sex offenses grew at a much slower
rate, 0.4 per cent. From 1995 to 1996, the number of forcible sex
offenses had risen 14.6 per cent. Experts say sex offenses continue to
be the crimes least likely to be reported by victims.

Mr. Carter says the 1996 figures might have been inflated because in
May of that year, the U.S. Department of Education sent a letter to
institutions reiterating which crimes needed to be reported. After
that, he says, many institutions became more diligent about reporting
crimes.

Saginaw Valley State University in 1997 saw the number of forcible sex
offenses reported on its campus rise to six, from one in the previous
year.

Craig T. Maxwell, Saginaw Valley's director of public safety, says the
university has tried to help students overcome fears that they might
have about reporting sex crimes. The department's staff includes a
female officer who is a rape specialist, and students have been made
aware, through campus programs, that she can help victims of sex crimes.

Many safety experts and police officers believe that the sharp
29.5-per-cent drop in non-forcible sex offenses on the nation's
campuses from 1996 to 1997 results from more and more institutions'
finally reporting such crimes correctly.

Based on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's definition, which
institutions are supposed to use in reporting their crime statistics,
the category should include only incest and statutory rape. However,
many colleges also have included sex crimes such as indecent exposure,
lewd behavior, and others that do not involve force.

At Oregon, for example, reports of non-forcible sex offenses fell from
seven in 1996 to zero in 1997, because officials stopped including
instances of public indecency.

The total number of murders on the nation's campuses also fell, from
19 in 1996 to 13 in 1997, following an increase of four from 1995 to
1996. Aggravated assaults were down 0.8 per cent in 1997, burglaries
dropped 8.1 per cent, and robberies and motor-vehicle thefts each fell
by 9.2 per cent. In cities and rural areas nationally, the F.B.I.
reported an overall 2.4-per-cent drop from 1996 to 1997 in violent or
property crimes, including aggravated assault, burglary, and
motor-vehicle theft.

In October 1998, a number of federal legislative changes were made to
push institutions to be more diligent -- and open -- in reporting
those and other crimes.

Under the Student Right-to-Know and Campus Security Act of 1990, and a
1992 amendment to the act, colleges and universities are required
annually to report crimes in 10 categories: murder; forcible and
non-forcible sex offenses; robbery; aggravated assault; burglary;
motor-vehicle theft; and arrests for liquor-, drug-, and weapons-law
violations.

Under a provision passed during the 1998 reauthorization of the Higher
Education Act, colleges are now also required to include in their
reports arson and manslaughter, and to record the number of people
referred for campus disciplinary action for liquor-, drug-, and
weapons-law violations.

In addition, colleges must report the number of hate crimes that
result in "bodily injury." Previously, institutions had to report only
the number that involved aggravated assault, murder, or rape.

About 40 per cent of the 483 institutions in The Chronicle's survey
noted, in some way, whether hate crimes had occurred on their
campuses. Only about a third had done so in the previous survey.

About 330 institutions responded to The Chronicle's written request
for copies of their crime reports. The remaining reports came in after
subsequent telephone calls. Many institutions also are making their
reports available on World-Wide Web sites.

"For years, there were a whole lot of people who didn't believe -- or
chose not to believe -- that these crimes occur on the nation's
campuses," says Max L. Bromley, an associate professor of criminology
at the University of South Florida, and a former official of the
university's police department. "The reports raise the whole dialogue.
People can no longer bury their heads in the sand."

Michelle Carroll provided research assistance for this article.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Canada Close To OKing Medicinal Marijuana (The Orange County Register, in
California, notes a measure calling for the "legalization" of medical
marijuana passed May 25 in the Canadian House of Commons.)

Date: Sat, 29 May 1999 11:04:58 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: Canada Close To OKing Medicinal Marijuana
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: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: Orange County Register (CA)
Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register
Contact: letters@link.freedom.com
Website: http://www.ocregister.com/
Section: News, page 12

CANADA CLOSE TO OKING MEDICINAL MARIJUANA

Canada's federal government has moved one step closer to permitting the use
of marijuana for medical purposes.

A measure calling for the legalization of pot for medical reasons passed
Tuesday night in the House of Commons.

The bill motion, tabled by an opposition party, calls on the government to
"take steps immediately" to develop clinical trials, guidelines for its use
and a safe supply of marijuana for people who need it for medical reasons.

Victims of AIDS and cancer have been lobbying for years for the right to
use marijuana as a pain killer and appetite stimulant.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Rock Stirs The Pot With Comments (The Calgary Sun says Canadian Health
Minister Allan Rock all but admitted yesterday he's smoked pot. But the
lawyer in him made sure his admission wouldn't hold water in court. "As
former attorney general of Canada, I am keenly aware of the right against
self incrimination in this country. I fully intend to invoke that right," he
said yesterday. Rock strongly signalled he intends to give home-grown pot a
whole new meaning, saying he wants to produce a 'made in Canada' brand.
However, his department is still trying to figure out where the marijuana
will be grown, who will grow it and under what conditions.)

Date: Sat, 29 May 1999 11:28:53 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: Rock Stirs The Pot With Comments
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Debra Harper
Pubdate: Fri, May 28, 1999
Source: Calgary Sun (Canada)
Copyright: 1999, Canoe Limited Partnership.
Contact: callet@sunpub.com
Website: http://www.canoe.ca/CalgarySun/
Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/home.html
Aurhor: Anne Dawson, Ottawa Bureau

ROCK STIRS THE POT WITH COMMENTS

OTTAWA -- Health Minister Allan Rock all but admitted yesterday he's smoked
pot.

But the lawyer in him made sure his admission wouldn't hold water in court.

"As former attorney general of Canada, I am keenly aware of the right
against self incrimination in this country.

"I fully intend to invoke that right," Rock said yesterday.

"But one thing I can be very clear about -- I never smoked marijuana -- for
medicinal purposes."

Rock made his comments after testifying before a parliamentary committee
about how he intends to proceed with clinical trials on the medicinal use
of marijuana.

Rock strongly signalled he intends to give home-grown pot a whole new
meaning saying he wants to produce a 'made in Canada' brand.

"I think we're up to it as a nation," Rock said. "I'd like to see it in
Canada."

He told the committee his department is still trying to figure out where
the pot will be grown, who will grow it and under what conditions.

Options include importing the weed, allowing private companies to grow it
or letting government officials plant a pot garden.

Rock said his priority is to ensure Canadians who need pot to cure their
medical pains have a "safe source."

He said there are several advantages to having government bureaucrats grow
the dope. They include being able to ensure a certain level of cleanliness
and a consistent concentration of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana.

Rock was asked by Bloc MP Bernard Bigras about reports one of his officials
travelled to the University of Mississippi to investigate how the Americans
grow their dope.

Mississippi is where all U.S. scientific research on marijuana is conducted.

But Rock said he knew nothing about the report and has no intention of
checking out the U.S. government's private stock.

Bigras said Rock should turn to the Americans for assistance in setting up
a Canadian system of marijuana production because they have more expertise
than Canadians.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Commons A-Buzz Over Grown-In-Canada Pot (According to the Toronto Star
version, the Canadian health minister, Allan Rock, said yesterday he would
announce next month details about clinical trials for pain patients. Rock
said the benefits of having medical marijuana grown in Canada under the
watchful eye of the government are that "you'd have a consistent percentage
of THC, consistent quality, [and] a level of cleanliness which is
consistent." But he didn't explain why one size must fit all, or why private
enterprise can't produce to specs what is shaping up to be the Canadian
government's own cannabis cup winner.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 09:56:30 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: MMJ: Commons A-Buzz Over Grown-In-Canada Pot
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Dave Haans
Pubdate: Friday, 28 May 1999
Source: Toronto Star (Canada)
Page: A2
Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star
Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com
Website: http://www.thestar.com/
Author: Tim Harper, Toronto Star Ottawa Bureau

COMMONS A-BUZZ OVER GROWN-IN-CANADA POT

OTTAWA - Allan Rock appears high on home-grown, saying he would prefer
the marijuana for clinical pot trials be grown here in Canada.

``I think we're up to it as a nation, aren't we?'' the federal health
minister said yesterday.

Rock, who next month will announce details of clinical marijuana
trials for those who need it to ease pain, said there are benefits to
having the pot grown here under the watchful eyes of government
bureaucrats.

``The advantages might be you'd have a consistent percentage of THC,
consistent quality, a level of cleanliness which is consistent,'' he
said.

``Especially when you are doing research, you want to reduce the
number of variables, one of them being the quality of the marijuana
being smoked.''

THC is the active substance that provides the ``buzz'' for cannabis
users.

Health Canada has so far received 26 requests from people who wish to
use marijuana for medicinal purposes.

Later in the day, Rock was asked about his personal history with pot.
`I have never smoked marijuana . . . for medicinal purposes,'' Rock
said.

Lawyer Eugene Oscapella of the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy
said Canada grows good quality cannabis, which is already being used
for therapeutic purposes.

``It just takes a wave of the wand by the minister to give someone
permission to grow it,'' he said.

``If he wants a Canadian supply, it shouldn't take long to get it.
That should be no excuse for feet-dragging.''

Oscapella said higher THC levels would be important for therapeutic
smokers because they would smoke less and therefore be exposed to less
tar.

``They're proud of their marijuana in British Columbia, but there are
plenty of people in Ontario using Ontario pot,'' he said. ``It's like
any drug, however, in that dosage and quality will vary. That's why we
have clinical trials.''

Earlier this week, the House of Commons approved a motion legalizing
the use of marijuana for health and medical reasons.

Reform critic Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) said his party
backs the therapeutic use of pot but wants to ensure it not be used as
a route to legalizing marijuana.

``We do not want this to become a loophole whereby people can say they
have a headache and need to take marijuana,'' he said.

Progressive Conservative critic Peter McKay (Pictou-Antigonish-Guysborough)
voiced his party's support, but said Rock is moving too slowly.

He referred to statements by Vancouver's Compassion Club, which
supplies free marijuana to ease the pain of ill clients, saying Rock's
pace means ``more individuals will continue to suffer until
legislation is passed.''

The marijuana debate has caused levity in the Commons.

Reform finance critic Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat) took a jab at
Finance Minister Paul Martin during daily Question Period yesterday
after what he considered a convoluted reply to his question.

``Just two days after we passed the medical marijuana motion and
already we are getting answers like this,'' Solberg said.

Martin failed to point out that Solberg had to admit he voted twice
when the pot motion was put to the Commons Tuesday.

Bloc Quebecois MP Bernard Bigras (Rosemont) introduced the motion
calling for the legalization of marijuana for clinical use.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Through Pot Haze, Rock Stands Solid (The National Post version)

Date: Sun, 30 May 1999 08:47:43 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: Column: Through Pot Haze, Rock Stands Solid
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Kathy Galbraith
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: National Post (Canada)
Copyright: Southam Inc.
Contact: letters@nationalpost.com
Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/
Forum: http://forums.canada.com/~canada
Author: Paul Wells

THROUGH POT HAZE, ROCK STANDS SOLID

You almost literally never hear Allan Rock's name around here except
in the context of an eventual Liberal leadership campaign. The
assumption is that the guy spends all his time scheming to become
prime minister. So it was a bit of a surprise to watch Mr. Rock
defend his department's spending estimates before the health committee
yesterday, and to see how much he obviously enjoys being the health
minister.

MPs spend an hour and a quarter grilling Mr. Rock on the fine points
of health policy. He put on a good show: relaxed, bantering, speaking
at length without glancing at his briefing books, defering to his
deputy minister - the semi-legendary David Dodge - only once. And at
no point during those 75 minutes did a potentially career-destroying
crisis break out, which for Mr. Rock must set some kind of record.

You don't have to watch Parliament for very long before simple
competence - a familiarity with policy and organizations, the ability
to form grammatical sentences in English or French-begins to dazzle.
Mr. Rock was really only demonstrating that the department he's led
for two years doesn't baffle him, but I found this news absurdly reassuring.

He also brought real news with him, as ministers usually do when they
go before committee. The stentorian herky-jerky of Question Period
often blocks real understanding of what's going on inside government;
the relaxed mood at committee is more illuminating. So now we know
tht Mr.Rock is preparing to stockpile marijuana.

"We're looking at the possibility of constituting a stock of marijuana
here in Canada for medicinal purposes." he told MPs. "It's not all
worked out, but we're still working on it."

The mind reels. Civil servants showing up extra-early for work at the
PotCan greenhjouses in Tunney's Pasture, west of Parliament. Rigorous
testing procedures. Signs on the walls: "No giggling! Snacks must be
shared with your supervisor."

Sorry, sorry, this is serious business. Mr. Rock was responding to
questions from Bernard Bigras, the young Bloc MP who's made medicinal
pot a personal crusade. Mr.Bigras (rosemont) wanted to know whether
the plants would be imported or domestic? Domestic, he told reporters
later. "I think we're up to it as a nation, don't you?

(And since I'm opening up paraentheses, I should note that a reporter
asked Mr.Rock still later whether he'd ever smoked marijuana. The
former University of Ottawa student president invoked his right
against self-incriminatin, but added: "I've never smoked marijuana -
for medicinal purposes.")

Back to the committee meeting. Mr.Rock also revealed that he'll be
pushing for a biggish cash commitment in the field of
environment-related health problems. "That'll be the subject of my
next specific request from my cabinet colleagues for reinvestment in
Health Canada."

And he sang such a love song to three programs for children-prenatal
nutrition, aboriginal head-start and the Community Action Program for
Children-that nobody should be surprised if spending on those programs
is ramped up radically and soon.

"They're really quite terrific," the minister said. "They are very
effective. Our evaluations have been very positive, and I think they
have a long-term future...and I would like to see, in the years to
come, a bigger investment in these initiatives for children... They
work. They don't cause any constitutional friction. In fact, there
are more CAPC and prnatal projects in Quebec thatn in any other
province. We have a written protocol with the ministers,
provincially. Nobody's talking constitution or quarrelling about
jurisdiction; we're just focusing on the needs of children. I think
we need to build on these successes, do more of it."

So. A peek at the future, through a haze of government-approved pot
smoke. And a glimpse of a minister who didn't seem to be teetering on
the brink of any precipices. A refreshing change, for him probably
even more than for us.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Ottawa Looking For Steady Supply Of Dope (The Toronto Globe and Mail version)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 11:45:09 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: Ottawa Looking For Steady Supply Of Dope
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Kelly Conlon
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 1999, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact: letters@globeandmail.ca
Website: http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Forum: http://forums.theglobeandmail.com/
Author: Anne McIlroy, Parliamentary Bureau

OTTAWA LOOKING FOR STEADY SUPPLY OF DOPE

Federal government may have to grow its own marijuana for clinical tests on
whether drug helps patients

Ottawa -- The federal government is having trouble getting a supply of
marijuana for forthcoming clinical trials on medicinal uses for the drug, so
it may have to resort to growing its own.

"I think we are up to it as a nation, aren't we?" Health Minister Allan Rock
said yesterday after a meeting of the Commons health committee where the
issue was discussed. He said he is still considering his options, but
government documents obtained by The Globe and Mail make it clear that the
difficulty in finding a safe and secure supply of the drug for clinical
trials could lead to a home-grown solution.

In March, Mr. Rock announced his department is developing guidelines for
trials that could to lead to legalizing marijuana use for people suffering
from diseases such as cancer, AIDS and multiple sclerosis. They now break
the law when they use a treatment they say provides relief from nausea and
other symptoms. Mr. Rock said his department is developing guidelines for
the trials, which he will make public next month.

Government documents, obtained under the Access to Information Act by Ottawa
researcher Ken Rubin, show that obtaining a secure supply of marijuana is
one of the biggest hurdles to allowing the drug to be used as medicine in
Canada.

Mr. Rock summed up the dilemma in a letter that he sent last year to the
Assembly of the Church of the Universe Institute for the Advancement of
Marijuana Medicine.

"For marijuana, there exists a practical problem of finding a secure supply
of a medicinal-quality product," he wrote. "Generally, acceptable sources of
drugs not approved in Canada may be found in countries where they have
received approval. Health Canada has not been able to locate an acceptable
international source of marijuana, and is examining the issue further."

A briefing note, dated April 22, puts it even more bluntly.

"To our knowledge, after extensive research, there is no licit
medicinal-quality marijuana supplier in the world. To make marijuana
available for medicinal purposes in Canada it would need to be grown and
manufactured in Canada. "

Mr. Rock has made it clear that his intent is to help sick and dying
Canadians, not to legalize recreational use of the drug. He has dodged
questions about whether he has smoked marijuana on the grounds that he
doesn't want to incriminate himself, but as a young man he drove Beatle John
Lennon around Ottawa.

"As former attorney-general of Canada, I am keenly aware of the right
against self-incrimination in this country. I fully intend to invoke that
right." Mr. Rock replied with a broad smile.

"I have never smoked marijuana for medicinal purposes," he insisted
yesterday.

Marijuana for medicinal purposes must be pure. Mr. Rock said yesterday the
advantages of a Canadian supply are its guaranteed cleanliness, and that it
could be grown with a uniform level of the main psychoactive compound in the
drug, tetrahydrocannabinol, known as THC. This would allow researchers to
reduce the number of variables in their experiments.

Health Canada says it can't ask the RCMP to turn over contraband, because it
might be contaminated with fungus or other substances.

Government officials are still checking out potential sources in the United
Kingdom and in the United States for clinical trials, but now believe the
long-term solution is likely to be growing it in Canada.

They are looking to the United States, where the University of Mississippi
grows marijuana in a project funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Chuck Thomas, who works for a Washington-based non-profit group that helps
U.S. researchers negotiate the many hurdles to getting marijuana for
clinical trials, says the Canadian government won't get a supply of the drug
just by asking nicely. It now takes five years for U.S. researchers to get
access to the drug, he said.

Canadian officials say another reason for growing Canadian marijuana is that
it would mean the government would not have to follow the protocols set by
other countries but could develop its own rules.

The government is also looking to Britain, where there is at least one
government-sanctioned grower, an individual named Geoffrey Guy.

The briefing document, marked secret but declassified, says Ottawa would
have to set up an infrastructure to cultivate, manufacture and distribute
marijuana cigarettes. That process would involve establishing a legal source
of seeds, and establishing licenses for people to grow the plant, make it
into cigarettes and distribute them. It would also require setting up a
testing laboratory, appropriate security measures and a monitoring system.

Canadians who want to take part in a clinical trial will find application
forms on Health Canada's Web site, at http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Canada Grows More Pot Than Parsley (According to the Calgary Herald, the
first-ever RCMP report on Canada's $18-billion illicit street-drug trade
estimates at least 800 tonnes of marijuana was grown domestically last year.
By comparison, Canadians last year sprouted 727 tonnes of parsley, which, of
course, by weight is mostly water. "This estimate appears overwhelming," the
report states, and, in fact, investigators believe it's "quite
conservative.")
gratuitous graphic
Date: Sat, 29 May 1999 12:05:19 -0700 From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: mapnews@mapinc.org Subject: MN: CANADA: Canada Grows More Pot Than Parsley Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Kathy Galbraith Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999 Source: Calgary Herald (Canada) Contact: letters@theherald.southam.ca Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Author: Mario Toneguzzi and Ian MacLeod CANADA GROWS MORE POT THAN PARSLEY More marijuana was grown in Canada last year than parsley, with the criminal crop increasingly taking root in Ontario and Quebec. And it has become a "major problem" in Alberta, said RCMP Staff Sgt. Birnie Smith, Calgary drug section commander. Some observers claim Alberta is third only to British Columbia and Ontario for the quantity produced. "We've noticed that Alberta has turned into a producing area as opposed to an importing area," said Smith, adding the trend has taken place over the past seven or eight years. "It is a major problem in this country and especially now in this debate about its (marijuana) medical uses." An RCMP report on Canada's $18-billion, illicit street-drug trade estimates at least 800 tonnes of pot was grown domestically last year - the first time the Mounties have made such a calculation. The results have surprised even them. By comparison, 727 tonnes of parsley sprouted in Canada last year. "This estimate appears overwhelming," the report states, and, in fact, investigators believe it's "quite conservative." RCMP Leo Vaillant, one of the report's authors, said, "It's sort of mindboggling but that's what the situation is." Smith said he had "no idea where we stand in production" compared to other areas of the country but believed the magnitude of the problem is likely "population based". "There is a lot of major cultivation in Alberta," he said. And because it remains illegal, "there's the black-market angle and all the baggage that comes with it," said Smith. Many Alberta growers have moved from basements to industrial parks so the large use of electricity is less conspicuous. Or they have moved to rural underground locations to hide their operations. The release of the report follows a call in April by Canada's police chiefs, and quickly backed by the RCMP, for Ottawa to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana. The chief's policy recommends giving police officers the option of ticketing people caught with 30 grams or less of marijuana sparing them a criminal record. They argue the move, which stops short of legalizing the weed, could free up police resources to tackle more serious crimes. The marijuana estimate is based, in part, on the more than one million pot plants police seized across the country last year, up from about 690,000 in 1997. (A more efficient RCMP system of tracking cross-country seizures in 1998 accounts for part of that increase.) Still, police estimate 4.7 million plants were harvested, with each mature plant producing an average 170 grms of "marketable substance". After coffee, alcohol and tobacco and certain prescription drugs, cannabis is the most popular psychoactive substance in the nation, says the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse. But after a decade of relatively stable use, it says pot smoking is gaining in popularity again, especially among the young. Then there's the money to be made. In British Columbia, Canada's chief pot-growing region, a kilogram of potent, hydroponic pot - with a thc strength of 15 to 20 percent - is reported to be selling for more than $6,000 to middlemen.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

'Mindboggling' Marijuana Crop Tops 800 Tonnes (The Ottawa Citizen version
inclues the URL to the RCMP report.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 17:02:37 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: 'Mindboggling' Marijuana Crop Tops 800 Tonnes
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: creator@mapinc.org
Pubdate: Friday May 28, 1999
Source: Ottawa Citizen (Canada)
Copyright: 1999 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact: letters@thecitizen.southam.ca
Website: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/
Author: Ian MacLeod, The Ottawa Citizen

'MINDBOGGLING' MARIJUANA CROP TOPS 800 TONNES

Canadians Harvest More Marijuana Than Parsley, Rcmp Report Says

More marijuana was grown in Canada last year than parsley, with the
criminal crop increasingly taking root in Ontario and Quebec.

A new RCMP report on Canada's $18-billion illicit street-drug trade
estimates at least 800 tonnes of marijuana was grown domestically last
year.

It's the first time the Mounties have made such a calculation and the
results have surprised even them. (By comparison, 737 tonnes of
parsley sprouted in Canada last year.)

"This estimate appears overwhelming," says the report, and, in fact,
drug investigators believe it's "quite conservative." Adds Leo
Vaillant, one of the report's authors: "It's sort of mindboggling, but
that appears to be what the situation is."

The release of the report this week follows a call last month by the
association representing Canada's police chiefs, and quickly backed by
the RCMP, for the federal government to decriminalize the possession
of small amounts of marijuana.

The chiefs' new policy recommends giving police officers the option of
ticketing people caught with 30 grams or less of marijuana, sparing
them a criminal record. They argue the move, which stops short of
legalizing the drug, could free up police resources to tackle more
serious crimes.

Yesterday, Mr. Vaillant stressed the marijuana (and other narcotics)
estimates in the report are not a police attempt to exaggerate the
problem. In fact, he said, police went out of their way to be
conservative.

"We didn't want to put a number out there (that would cause people) to
say, 'here go the police again, they're going to try to spook us.'
(With) all the figures, we're always using the lowest estimates."

The marijuana estimate is based, in part, on the more than one million
marijuana plants police seized across the country last year, up from
about 690,000 in 1997. (A more efficient RCMP system of tracking
cross-country seizures in 1998 accounts for part of that increase.)

Still, police estimate 4.7 million plants were harvested, with each
mature plant producing an average 170 grams of "marketable substance."
And production is up, say police, because demand appears to be growing.

After coffee, alcohol and tobacco and certain prescription drugs,
cannabis is the most popular psychoactive substance in the nation,
says the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse.

But after a decade of relatively stable usage rates, it says marijuana
smoking is gaining in popularity again, especially among the young.

Then there's the money to be made.

In British Columbia, Canada's chief cannibis-growing region, a
kilogram of potent, hydroponic marijuana - with a tetrahydrocannabinol
(THC) strength of 15 to 20 per cent - is reported to be selling for
more than $6,000 to middlemen.

High-grade hydroponic marijuana represents only about 10 per cent the
total amount grown in Canada, but hydroponic operations with more than
3,000 plants are not uncommon, says the report. The rest is
organically grown, with THC values under 10 per cent, says Mr. Vaillant.

So much potent B.C. weed is now suspected of being smuggled into the
U.S. that the U.S. State Department this month cited it as one of the
obstacles to a more open border with Canada.

The profitability of the B.C. growing and smuggling operations has
also caught the attention of eastern producers, notably in Ontario and
Quebec.

"Why should it be limited to (British Columbia)? People are realizing
there's profits to be made by this type of cultivation and they're
getting into it," says Mr. Vaillant, of the force's drug analysis unit.

In the latest of dozens of busts by Ontario and Quebec police over the
last couple of years, Quebec police this month swooped down on five
residences and farm buildings in the Labelle area, about 60 kilometres
north of Sainte-Agathe, and seized 7,250 marijuana plants with an
estimated street value of $7 million.

And although it is still a developing market, the report says it's
likely that marijuana is being smuggled into the United States across
all land border points, including by organized crime groups in Quebec.

Mr. Vaillant believes another reason for the boom are the sentences
for people convicted of cultivating marijuana. "We have a bit lighter
sentencing. It's quite severe in the United States, (where) the judge
has no latitude to determine the sentence."

Other highlights of the RCMP's 1998 drug report include:

-At least 100 tonnes of hashish, 15 tonnes of cocaine and six tonnes
of liquid hashish are smuggled into Canada annually.

-One to two tonnes of heroin are required each year to meet the demand
of Canadian heroin users.

-Drug trafficking remains the principal source of revenue for most
organized crime groups. In Canada, the drug trade has the potential to
generate criminal proceeds in excess of $4 billion at the wholesale
level and of $18 billion at the street level.

-Italian-based organized crime is involved in upper-echelon
importation and distribution of many types of narcotics.

-Asian-based groups are active in heroin and, increasingly, cocaine
trafficking at all levels.

-Colombian-based traffickers still control much of the cocaine trade
in eastern and central Canadian cities.

-Outlaw motorcycle gangs play a major role in the importation and
large-scale distribution of marijuana, cocaine and chemical drugs.

The RCMP report is available on the force's website at
www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/html/drugsituation.htm
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Money Laundering Targeted (The Toronto Star says legislation that is expected
to be introduced by an unspecified power in Canada's House of Commons as
early as today would require banks to report "suspicious transactions of
$10,000 or more." The bill would also require anyone entering or leaving
Canada to declare anything above $10,000 or risk having the undeclared money
forfeited to Canada Customs. The new measures are intended to dramatically
slash the $17 billion supposedly laundered every year by organized crime in
Canada.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 11:45:11 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: Canada: Money Laundering Targeted
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Dave Haans
Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 1999
Source: Toronto Star (Canada)
Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star
Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com
Website: http://www.thestar.com/
Author: Dale Anne Freed, Toronto Star Staff Reporter

MONEY LAUNDERING TARGETED

Tough law would disclose large bank transactions

A tough law on money laundering that will require the reporting of
suspicious transactions of $10,000 or more is expected to be introduced in
the House of Commons as early as today, sources say.

And the law would require anyone entering or leaving Canada to declare
anything above $10,000 or risk having the undeclared money forfeited to
Canada Customs.

The new measures are intended to dramatically slash the $17 billion in money
laundered by organized crime in Canada annually.

An RCMP officer said the legislation is ``long overdue.''

``I think it will make a significant difference,'' Superintendent Ben Soave,
head of the RCMP's combined forces special enforcement unit, which includes
the criminal intelligence section, said yesterday.

Soave also expressed the hope the legislation will be user friendly.

``I hope it won't be so complicated that it will be difficult for officers
to apply in the course of criminal investigations,'' Soave said. ``We hope
it will be effective.''

Bankers are ready to co-operate, an official said.

``It has been long awaited by the banking industry,'' Gene McLean, director
of security for the Canadian Bankers Association, said yesterday.

McLean said the banking industry looks forward to ``working together (with
the government) to make it operate efficiently.''

Although the banks now have a volunteer reporting system in place, this law
will make reporting suspicious financial transactions of $10,000 and above
mandatory, sources say.

The law will affect banks, lawyers, accountants, real estate agents, stock
brokers, casinos and insurance companies, McLean said.

Such legislation will be ``a deterrent to organized crime,'' McLean said.
``Organized criminals will be less likely to consider bringing their money
to Canada,'' he added.

The new law would permit police to mobilize against money laundering.

The Proceeds of Crime legislation, introduced in 1989, only permits police
to seize assets of enterprise crime, as a result of a substantive offence,
such as drug trafficking, McLean explained.

With the current law there has to be a crime before police can seize money
or assets.

So if someone comes to this country with a suitcase of money, police can
seize it but have to return it if it is not directly related to a criminal
offence.

``The reporting of the suspicious financial transaction in banks will assist
the police in tracking money laundering activities,'' Soave said.

Last year Canada was criticized by the 40-nation Financial Action Task Force
at its meeting in Brussels for lagging behind in money-laundering
legislation, McLean said.

At this summer's meeting, McLean said, Canada ``will be looked at positively
because we have this legislation on the books.''

In March, U.S. banking regulators, responding to a public outcry over
privacy concerns, scrapped proposed anti-money-laundering rules that would
have tracked the transaction patterns of bank customers.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue No. 92 (The Drug Reform Coordination
Network's original drug policy newsmagazine features these stories - Thanks,
and another special offer through June 30; Medical marijuana activist
convicted in federal court: jury not allowed to hear evidence of medicinal
use; Four guards charged in beating death of Nassau County inmate; Senate
juvenile justice bill passes in wake of Colorado school shooting, would
dramatically increase surveillance and drug testing; New York assembly
speaker says no to Rockefeller drug law reform . . . or does he?; Policy
change may allow for non-government funded medical marijuana research.)

Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 01:08:53 +0000
To: drc-natl@drcnet.org
From: DRCNet (drcnet@drcnet.org)
Subject: The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #92
Sender: owner-drc-natl@drcnet.org

The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #92 - May 28, 1999
A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

-------- PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE --------

(To sign off this list, mailto:listproc@drcnet.org with the
line "signoff drc-natl" in the body of the message, or
mailto:kfish@drcnet.org for assistance. To subscribe to
this list, visit http://www.drcnet.org/signup.html.)

This issue can be also be read on our web site at
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html. Check out the DRCNN
weekly radio segment at http://www.drcnet.org/drcnn/.

If you haven't yet signed the following legislative petition
alerts, please visit them and join the thousands who have --
and be sure to use the Tell Your Friends page to get the
word out to as many reform supporters as possible!

Asset Forfeiture Reform: http://www.drcnet.org/forfeiture/
HEA Drug Provision: http://www.RaiseYourVoice.com/

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Thanks, and Another Special Offer Through June 30
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html#thanks

2. Medical Marijuana Activist Convicted in Federal Court:
Jury Not Allowed to Hear Evidence of Medicinal Use
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html#smith

3. Four Guards Charged in Beating Death of Nassau County
Inmate
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html#inmate

4. Senate Juvenile Justice Bill Passes in Wake of Colorado
School Shooting, Would Dramatically Increase Surveillance
and Drug Testing
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html#juveniles

5. New York Assembly Speaker Says No to Rockefeller Drug Law
Reform...Or Does He?
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html#nyspeaker

6. Policy Change May Allow for Non-Government Funded Medical
Marijuana Research
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/092.html#medmjresearch

***

1. Thanks, and Another Special Offer Through June 30

THANK YOU: DRCNet would like to thank all of you who
donated in response to our one-day special offer of
Shattered Lives. Many aspects of our work, especially our
exciting lobbying projects, are dependent upon non-
deductible membership donations. Without these, our
effectiveness would be severely diminished. Thanks also for
the wonderful words of encouragement that we have received.
Your moral support keeps us going.

For those who did not take advantage of the special offer,
we are extending another offer that is almost as good, from
now through the end of June: Donate $30 or more to receive
your free copy of Shattered Lives. Or, donate $70 or more
and receive a free copy of the video Sex, Drugs and
Democracy, on the Netherlands' approach to social policy --
or $100 or more and receive both! Visit our secure
registration form at http://www.drcnet.org/drcreg.html or
call (202) 293-8340 or fax (202) 293-8344 with your credit
card information. Or just send your check, made payable to
DRCNet, 2000 P Street, NW, Suite 615, Washington, DC 20036.
(It helps us if you fill out the form to print out and send
in with your check.) Thank you for your support!

***

2. Medical Marijuana Activist Convicted in Federal Court:
Jury Not Allowed to Hear Evidence of Medicinal Use

Operating out of a playbook that is fast becoming their
strategy of choice, federal prosecutors have once again run
an end-around, disregarding the will of California's voters
and elected officials by charging and prosecuting B.E.
Smith, a medical marijuana user and activist, in federal
court. Smith, who was growing marijuana with the explicit
knowledge of the local sheriff's office, was not allowed to
present any evidence of the medicinal nature of his use, and
now faces up to 10 years in federal prison for
"manufacturing" marijuana.

Smith, who did two tours of duty in Vietnam, uses marijuana
to combat the effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, a
condition that had previously driven him to alcohol abuse.
Since beginning to use marijuana, Smith has ceased using
alcohol entirely.

Smith is one of a growing list of medical marijuana
activists targeted by the federal government since medicinal
use was legalized (under state law) by California voters in
1996. Steve Kubby, former Libertarian candidate for
governor, Peter McWilliams, a best selling author, Todd
McCormick and the proprietors of various buyers' clubs
throughout the state are all facing federal charges as well.

Barred by District Court Judge Garland E. Burrell Jr. from
presenting any evidence regarding his medical condition or
his use of marijuana to treat himself, Mr. Smith's defense
was limited entirely to character witnesses. One of these
was actor/activist Woody Harrelson. Harrelson drew the ire
of Judge Burrell when he mentioned Smith's medicinal use on
the stand, in response to a question as to whether he was
surprised to see Mr. Smith standing trial. Prosecutors'
objection to the question was sustained, but Harrelson
responded anyway, saying, "Certainly, for a medical
marijuana case, I consider it odd."

In response to Harrelson's remark, the judge warned him to
obey the rulings from the bench. Harrelson replied, "I'm
just wondering why you're keeping the truth from the jury."
At that point, Judge Garland immediately sent the jury from
the courtroom, after which he lectured Harrelson on a
judge's legal right to control the proceedings. "I didn't
think you had much respect for the law" retorted Harrelson.

At that point, Judge Garland refused to allow further direct
testimony by Harrelson, and excused him from the stand.
"How do you sleep at night?," Harrelson asked the judge, as
he stepped down.

Todd McCormick, who is also facing federal charges, and for
whom Harrelson has posted $500,000 bond, told The Week
Online that Smith's case fits a pattern of strong-arm
tactics by the federal government in dealing with medical
marijuana activists in California.

"B.E. Smith had permission from his local sheriff's office
to grow marijuana. He wasn't being covert. The federal
government, having lost and lost badly at the polls, has
decided to put its boot on the throats of medical marijuana
activists. How can a judge rule that Smith's reasons for
growing the marijuana are irrelevant for a jury to hear?"

McCormick continued, "The federal government is engaged in a
campaign of intimidation, not only of activists but of every
Californian who uses marijuana medicinally, their doctors
and caregivers. They have systematically and blatantly
ignored the will of California voters. And where is Bill
Lockyer, our new Attorney General? When he was elected, he
made it clear that he intended to protect California's sick
and dying against the tyranny of the federal government, but
as soon as the feds threatened to arrest him, he tiptoed
away from the issue with his tail between his legs. In so
doing, he essentially gave the feds the green light to step
up their prosecutions. So much for integrity."

Nathan Barankin, spokesman for Attorney General Lockyer,
told The Week Online that their office is attempting to
resolve the conflict with federal authorities in a way that
will be most effective.

"If the Attorney General of a state is going to take on the
federal government in an area where there is a conflict
between state and federal law, he's going to lose every
time, hands down," he said. "What we have in California,
frankly, is a poorly-written initiative that gives no
direction to how the law is supposed to work, and a lot of
people running around making it up as they go along. As
long as the federal government is set on enforcing federal
law, there's nothing that anyone can do about it."

"John Lockyer, as the Attorney General of California," he
continued, "took an oath to uphold the law. He has been in
contact with the Attorney General (Reno) and the Drug Czar,
and they are aware of the problem that we're facing here.
The response that the Attorney General has received from
those offices would have to be characterized as very
positive. We believe that a strategy of taking on the feds
at every turn on this issue would be extremely
counterproductive and could set the process back by years."

Smith's attorneys plan to appeal his conviction.

***

3. Four Guards Charged in Beating Death of Nassau County
Inmate

Thomas Prizzuto, a methadone patient, was serving the second
day of a 90-day sentence when he was allegedly beaten to
death by guards at the Nassau County (NY) jail after asking
repeatedly for methadone. Four corrections officers have
been charged in the attack. All have pleaded not guilty.

Methadone patients who are abruptly cut off from the
medication suffer serious withdrawal symptoms, including
vomiting, cramps, sweating and diarrhea. Prizzuto
apparently refused to stop calling out to guards for
methadone, which led to his beating. Left in his cell over
the weekend, Prizzuto suffered a seizure and died of a
ruptured spleen.

Guards Ivano Bavaro, Edward Velazquez and Patrick Regnier
were charged with the beating, while a fourth guard, Joseph
Bergen, was charged as an accessory after the fact for
allegedly falsifying a prison record to indicate that
Prizzuto's injuries were sustained in a fall in the shower
room. Another prisoner, however, who was in the cell next
to Prizzuto's, will testify that he heard him being beaten
on the date in question.

Ernest Peace, attorney for Regnier, told The Week Online
that there is little evidence that the guards beat Mr.
Prizzuto.

"The guy was taken to two different doctors between January
8th and January 11th when he died. Neither doctor found
anything wrong, and he was sent back to his cell. Prizzuto
himself claimed he fell. Maybe he was beaten up by another
inmate. My client spent four years in the Navy, he's been a
guard for six, and he's never had a complaint against him."

But Peter Neufeld, who, along with Barry Scheck and Johnny
Cochran is representing the Prizzuto family in their civil
suit, disputes Mr. Peace's assertions.

"This investigation has lasted four months, and involved
forty federal agents. You don't just get an indictment of
prison guards without evidence. It is our understanding
that two other guards have come forward and are cooperating.
As to what doctors saw Mr. Prizzuto, our information is that
the only time he was taken to a hospital was after he went
into seizures. He died in the hospital two days later
(January 13th).

"We are hoping to force the Justice Department to undertake
an investigation into the long history of abuse of inmates
and the practice of refusing to provide adequate medical
care at the Nassau County Jail."

Joycelyn Woods, director of the National Alliance of
Methadone Advocates, told The Week Online that while there
are still very few methadone maintenance programs currently
operating in a US jail (there is one at Rikers Island in New
York and one at the Suffolk County Jail), many correctional
systems will at least detoxify inmates (give them
diminishing doses of the drug for a short period of time),
rather than force them into severe withdrawal.

"It's inhumane, to say the least. People who are using
methadone are, by definition, in recovery. They get their
methadone from licensed programs, there's nothing illicit
about it. But it happens all the time (denying methadone to
people at the Nassau County Jail), and the only reason that
this case has gotten attention is that they beat him to
death and because his wife, who's a methadone patient
herself, was brave enough to seek justice."

"Many of the people who are in jails in this country are
simply awaiting trial, and haven't been accused of anything.
Is it moral to deny these people a medication that they're
taking under a doctor's supervision, leaving them in pain?"

Donna Schoen, patient advocate for the Long Island Jewish
Medical Center's methadone program, who wrote an article in
1995 detailing problems at the Nassau County Jail, told The
Week Online that the problems are endemic.

"In 1995 I heard about a methadone patient, who also had
AIDS, who was left suffering for over a week, twisting on
the floor, having seizures, vomiting. It wasn't until
pressure was brought by a state agency that he was
medicated. Once I started asking around, people came out of
the woodwork telling their stories. In June of 1998, I sent
a letter to Thomas Gulotta (Nassau County Commissioner),
including the article and a list of other people I had heard
from. I told Mr. Gulotta that until there was a methadone
program in place in the county jail, these problems were not
going to go away. He wrote me back and told me that he had
sent my letter on to Joseph Jablonsky (Nassau County
Sheriff), and that I would be hearing from him. Well, it
took him nine months, and the death of this poor kid, before
I heard back."

Schoen said that she is hoping that Prizzuto's death will
not have been in vain.

"People go in to the county jail and get sick. They're
chained to beds for days on end, or beaten, or left to
suffer. What's needed is a program to provide methadone and
a doctor there that understands the medical problems of the
people who are there. Until that happens, more people will
suffer and die there."

***

4. Senate Juvenile Justice Bill Passes in Wake of Colorado
School Shooting, Would Dramatically Increase Surveillance
and Drug Testing

Scott Ehlers, Senior Policy Analyst, Drug Policy Foundation,
ehlers@dpf.org, http://www.dpf.org

On May 20th, exactly one month after the Colorado school
shootings, the Senate passed S. 254, the "Violent and
Juvenile Offender Act." Approved by a vote of 73 to 25, the
massive bill not only seeks to increase penalties for
violent and juvenile offenders, but also promises to expand
suspicionless searches, drug testing, and the use of
surveillance technologies in America's schools.

The drug testing and locker-search provisions contained in
the bill are the brainchild of Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-MI),
one of Congress' top cheerleaders for the war on drugs. His
"School Violence Prevention Act" (Sec. 1611) opens up funds
under the Safe and Drug Free Schools grant program to be
used for "testing a student for illegal drug use or
inspecting a student's locker for guns, explosives, other
weapons, or illegal drugs...." Sen. Abraham was courteous
enough to require the searches and drug testing to be
consistent with the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution,
and also mentions parental consent, but does not require it.

Additionally, S. 254 includes a provision (Sec. 1656) to
establish in New Mexico the School Security Technology
Center at the Sandia National Laboratories, in partnership
with the National Law Enforcement and Corrections Technology
Center. The center would be a joint venture between the
Justice Department, Department of Education and the
Department of Energy, with the Attorney General in charge of
administration. Although initially proposed in S. 638 by
Sen. Bingaman (D-NM), appropriations for the center were
incorporated into the Violent and Juvenile Offender Act.

If the center is kept in the legislation, America's schools
promise to be on the cutting edge of surveillance and drug
detection technology. According to the May 6th issue of the
Drug Detection Report, Sandia Laboratories has developed
instruments known as "surface acoustic wave devices or
integrated acoustic chemical sensors" that can detect
illicit drugs on the skin. The sensor system can reportedly
detect trace levels of airborne drugs as well. The center,
proposed to receive $11.4 million over three years, will
also promote onsite testing of students' hair, according to
the Report.

S. 254 would appropriate $30 million over the next three
years for grants to local schools for security assessments
and technical assistance for "the development of a
comprehensive school security plan from the School Security
Technology Center."

A House version of S. 254 has not been introduced yet, but
stay tuned to the Week Online for news on any movement of
the bill.

The text and status of all federal legislation can be found
online at http://thomas.loc.gov/.

***

5. New York Assembly Speaker Says No to Rockefeller Drug Law
Reform...Or Does He?

For years, Democratic lawmakers in New York State have
sought the repeal of the notorious Rockefeller Drug Laws,
some of the harshest mandatory minimum laws in the US.
Recently, bipartisan support for reform has grown,
culminating this month in a proposal by Republican Governor
George Pataki calling for modest reductions in the laws.
But late last week, the New York Times reported that the
Democratic leadership in the Assembly would not consider any
proposals to scale back the Rockefeller Drug Laws in the
current session. Citing concerns about appearing soft on
crime, an aide to Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said there
were "no plans by the Assembly leadership to address the
governor's proposal."

Reform advocates were shocked at the news. "Most of the
people I've spoken to have people who are incarcerated, and
their hearts just sank when they heard the news," said Terri
Derikart, director of the New York chapter of Families
Against Mandatory Minimums. "They felt like they had been
betrayed by their elected officials."

Assemblyman Silver's office did not return repeated phone
calls requesting comment on the story, but an article in the
Albany Times Union today suggests that the Speaker may have
softened his stance somewhat after fellow Democrats
expressed their dismay. On Thursday (5/27) the Times Union
reported that Silver told a closed-door Democratic
conference that he opposed only Governor Pataki's plan,
though he did not say what other proposals, if any, he does
support.

While reform advocates consider the governor's plan a
positive step toward reforming the laws -- Pataki is the
first governor to formally propose a change in the laws
since they were enacted under Governeor Nelson D.
Rockefeller in 1973 -- most have criticized it as not going
far enough. Currently, even non-violent, first-time
offenders charged with selling two or more ounces or
possessing four or more ounces of a drug face fifteen years
to life in prison. Pataki's plan would reduce the minimum
sentence by just five years, subject to approval by an
appeals judge, and in return for this concession the
governor wants to severely limit parole for all offenders.

Randy Credico of the William Moses Kunstler Fund, which
organizes protests and vigils in support of Rockefeller Drug
Law repeal, said Pataki's proposal was an acknowledgment of
the strength of the reform movement. "He's hoping to snuff
out a popular uprising," he told The Week Online. "He's
trying to cramp the growing grassroots movement, what you'd
call a ground war, which is what is really required to
change these laws." That movement rejects Pataki's
proposal, which, Credico said, "would take New York from
being the state with the worst drug laws to being the state
with the worst drug laws."

Nevertheless, there is a growing consensus that something
must be done. Adding to the momentum for repeal are a
number of reports documenting the effects of the laws on the
state's overburdened prison system and their disparate
impact on Black and Latino New Yorkers. Among the facts:

* Drug offenders now make up roughly one third of the
state's 70,000 inmates.

* In 1998, 46% of the nearly 6,000 drug offenders sentenced
to prison in New York were convicted of drug possession, not
sales.

* At the current level of incarceration, drug offenders in
New York prisons cost taxpayers $715 million dollars per
year.

* In 1997, 77.5% of drug offenders in New York had no prior
convictions for violent felonies, and 50% had no prior
felony drug convictions.

* More than 94% of drug offenders in New York prisons are
Black or Latino.

(source: New York Correctional Association fact sheet)

Numbers like these have prompted calls for reform from
diverse quarters, including New York's Chief Judge, Judith
Kaye, who earlier this year proposed a plan similar to
Pataki's. This spring, Democratic Assemblyman Jeffrion
Aubry introduced a more radical bill that would repeal the
Rockefeller Drug Laws by returning discretion to sentencing
judges, and increase funding for drug treatment programs.
The bill also includes a clause that would allow current
inmates to have their sentences reduced.

There are also several proposals from a range of advocacy
groups that have not yet been introduced in the Assembly,
many more conservative than Aubry's, but still substantial
enough to mitigate the worst excesses of the Rockefeller
laws. The issue seems "hot," which is why the claim from
Speaker Silver's office that the Democratic leadership is
worried about looking too soft on crime sounded odd to many.

"In New York, I don't see how anybody needs any political
cover beyond the Governor stepping forward and saying
something has to be done, the chief judge of the state
saying something has to be done," said John Dunne, a former
Republican state senator who, along with the bipartisan
Campaign For Effective Criminal Justice, wants the law
changed to double the amount of drugs required to constitute
each level of crime. "There are plenty of people to share
the blame as well as the glory for any change that might be
made."

The public seems to share that opinion. In a Zogby
International poll conducted at the end of April, 63% of New
Yorkers surveyed said they would not consider a politician
who voted for reducing mandatory drug sentences "soft on
crime." And nearly 30% of the respondents said that they
favored giving judges more discretion to decide on
sentencing in individual cases. An overwhelming majority
(73.8%) said they favor treatment over jail for minor drug
offenders.

If more cover were needed, Silver may be relieved to hear
that even the conservative think tank The Manhattan
Institute also favors Rockefeller reform, and is expected to
publish a report to that effect in early June, penned by the
notoriously prison-friendly John DiIulio.

Given all this, there is still a good deal of hope among
reform advocates that there will be movement on the laws
this year. Robert Gangi, director of the New York
Correctional Association, a prison watchdog group, told The
Week Online, "It's clear from the polls and from our
political sense, based on newspaper stories and editorial
board comments, that we've won the public debate." Gangi
said his group will move ahead with plans for a lobbying day
in Albany next month.

Terri Derikart said that FAMM and the other activists she
works with will not take no for an answer. "They are
already contacting their legislators," she said. "They want
meaningful drug law reform to be passed this session. They
don't agree that it's going to be shelved. They want to
keep everything to keep moving. So rather than accepting
it, they're raising their voices across the state to say,
'this is wrong, we need these laws reformed now, not just
for our family members, but for those who are about to be
incarcerated.'"

Learn more about the Rockefeller Drug Laws and the movement
to reform them at these web sites:

The Lindesmith Center, http://www.lindesmith.org

New York Correctional Association, http://www.corrassoc.org

The William Moses Kunstler Fund For Racial Justice,
http://www.kunstler.org

Families Against Mandatory Minimums, http://www.famm.org

***

6. Policy Change May Allow for Non-Government Funded Medical
Marijuana Research

(from the NORML Foundation, http://www.norml.org)

May 25, 1999, Washington, DC: Department of Health and
Human Services officials announced new regulations Friday
that may allow researchers access to medical marijuana for
non-federally funded research. The policy change, scheduled
to take effect on December 1, 1999, adopts recommendations
of a 1997 National Institutes of Health (NIH) panel that
urged officials to supply medical marijuana for non-NIH
funded research.

"This is a step in the right direction," NORML Executive
Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. said. "But it is also
further evidence that the wheels of change grind exceedingly
slowly for medical marijuana reform." Health officials said
that the new policy will facilitate medical marijuana
clinical trials. "The goal of this program must be to
determine whether cannabinoid components of marijuana
administered through an alternative delivery system can meet
the standards enumerated under the federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act for commercial marketing of a medical product,"
the guidelines state.

Present NIH policy allows only those funded by the agency to
use marijuana for research purposes. Under the new
guidelines, non-NIH funded researchers must still submit
their protocol to institutional peer review, secure a DEA
registration to conduct marijuana research, reimburse the
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) for the cost of the
marijuana, and gain NIH approval for their study.
Researchers who wish to conduct human trials must also
proceed through the FDA process for filing an
Investigational New Drug (IND) application. Stroup
cautioned that the new policy offers little hope for
individual patients wishing to gain legal access to the
government's supply of medical marijuana. "Despite
recommendations from the Institute of Medicine to allow
single patient medical marijuana trials, the NIH guidelines
rebuff any efforts to allow individual patients access to
the drug," he said. The regulations stipulate that "single-
patient requests for marijuana... would not... be supported
under this program."

In March, the IOM advised the government to treat medical
marijuana patients with chronic conditions as "n-of-1
clinical trials, in which patients are fully informed of
their status as experimental subjects... and in which their
condition is closely monitored a documented under medical
supervision." "Federal officials are selectively
implementing those recommendations from the IOM and NIH that
pose little threat to medical marijuana prohibition, while
ignoring any findings that challenge current federal
policy," Stroup concluded.

***

Editorials will return next week.

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DrugSense Weekly, No. 99 (The original summary of drug policy news from
DrugSense opens with the weekly Feature Article - "How To Legalize Drugs," a
new book by Jefferson M. Fish, Ph.D. The Weekly News in Review features
several articles about Drug War Policy, including - The Zogby New York poll;
Pot politics; Texas heroin massacre; 'Don't do drugs'; College drug arrests
up for sixth year; and, DEA chief announces his resignation. Articles about
Law Enforcement & Prisons include - When they get out; The Rockefeller drug
laws; The racial issue looming in the rear-view mirror; Snitch culture; and,
Of merchant ships and crack-sellers' cars. News about Cannabis & Hemp
includes - U.S. eases curb on medical marijuana research; Hemp campaign gains
momentum; and, Guilty verdict in high-profile pot case. International News
includes - UK: Thousands will lose the right to trial by jury; Eton claims
success in drugs crackdown; and, Australia: Battle lines drawn as summit
deepens. The weekly Hot Off The 'Net column provides URLs for a new site to
aid those charged with drug crimes; and a G.W. Bush drug war parody site. The
Fact of the Week documents the total value of federal forfeitures in 1994.
The Quote of the Week cites a recent comment by Allan Rock, the Canadian
minister of health.)

From: webmaster@drugsense.org (DrugSense)
To: newsletter@drugsense.org
Subject: DrugSense Weekly, May 28,1999, #99
Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 10:28:38 -0700
Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/
Lines: 887
Sender: owner-newsletter@drugsense.org

***

DRUGSENSE WEEKLY

***

DrugSense Weekly May 28, 1999 #99

A DrugSense publication http://www.drugsense.org/

This Publication May Be Read On-line at:
http://www.drugsense.org/dsw/1999/

TO SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, DONATE OR UPDATE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS PLEASE
SEE THE INFORMATION AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS NEWSLETTER

Please consider writing a letter to the editor using the email
addresses on any of the articles below. Send a copy of your LTE to
MGreer@mapinc.org.

***

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

* Feature Article

"How To Legalize Drugs" - A New Book
by Jefferson M. Fish, Ph.D.

* Weekly News in Review

Drug War Policy-

(1) The Zogby New York Poll
(2) Pot Politics
(3) Texas Heroin Massacre
(4) TX: 'Don't Do Drugs'
(5) College Drug Arrests up For 6th Year D.E.A.
(6) D.E. A. Chief Announces his Resignation

Law Enforcement & Prisons-

(7) When They Get Out
(8) The Rockefeller Drug Laws
(9) The Racial Issue Looming in The Rear-View Mirror
(10) OPED: Snitch Culture
(11) Of Merchant Ships and Crack-Sellers' Cars

Cannabis & Hemp-

(12) US Eases Curb on Medical Marijuana Research
(13) Hemp Campaign Gains Momentum
(14) Guilty Verdict In High-Profile Pot Case

International News-

(15) UK: Thousands Will Lose The Right to Trial By Jury
(16) Eton Claims Success In Drugs Crackdown
(17) Australia: Battle Lines Drawn as Summit Deepens

* Hot Off The 'Net

New Site to Aid Those charged with Drug Crimes
G.W. Bush Drug War Parody Site

* Fact of the Week

Asset Forfeiture

* Quote of the Week

Allan Rock, Canadian Minister of Health

***

FEATURE ARTICLE

***

"How to Legalize Drugs" - A New Book by Jefferson M. Fish, Ph.D.

Trying to Start a Debate Over Drug Policy Alternatives.

Like so many others who are convinced that drug prohibition has been a
disaster like alcohol prohibition earlier in the century I wanted to do
something to help. It seemed to me that what we needed most of all was
a debate over alternatives, so that when we finally change course, we
will do so thoughtfully. Unfortunately, in the current climate of
intolerance symbolized by the slogan "zero tolerance" anyone who tries
to discuss the topic is dismissed by the epithet "soft on drugs."

So this is what I did. I assembled a group of thirty leading experts
from a dozen different disciplines, and across the political spectrum,
to create the debate between the covers of one book. (These are heavy
hitters from the vice president for foreign policy of the conservative
Cato Institute to an advisor to the Rev. Jesse Jackson who is a member
of the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union. They
include a Federal District Court Judge and professors from Harvard,
Yale, and other leading universities.)

The book contains a wide range of alternative proposals: nine different
approaches to decriminalization and legalization, from the most limited
to the most sweeping, including a variety of public health/harm
reduction strategies and a variety of civil rights/libertarian
strategies. It also includes all kinds of relevant background
information, from drug education to foreign policy to the effects of
the War on Drugs on minorities, to an examination of Holland's approach
to the issue. And although the book is crammed full of information, it
is written for a general audience.

I gave the book a controversial title "How to Legalize Drugs," and it
was endorsed on publication last fall by former U. S. Surgeon General
Joycelyn Elders and former police chief Joseph McNamara.

So what happened? Thus far, virtually nothing. Apparently thinking
about other options let alone using the "L word" is too upsetting to
discuss in polite company. As one of the chapter authors said when I
asked about his sense of the debate over drug policy alternatives,
"What debate?"

"How to Legalize Drugs" is a major resource pointing the way to a
variety of possibilities for real change. So far I've been unable to
figure out a way to get its message out and start the debate. I'm
Internet naive, but this article is an electronic attempt to foster the
debate over drug policy alternatives. Perhaps someone who reads this
will try to further the debate as well.

Jefferson M. Fish, Ph.D. is Professor and former Chair of the
Department of Psychology of St. John's University in New York City. He
is the editor of "How to Legalize Drugs" (Jason Aronson, Inc.,
Publishers, 700 pages, $70.00 30% discount available from
http://www.Amazon.com/ and http://www.Barnesandnoble.com/

***

WEEKLY NEWS IN REVIEW

***

Domestic News- Policy

***

COMMENT: (1)

The drug war continued to receive poor press, but aside from
influencing public opinion, reform could point to few solid
accomplishments. In violation of its usual policy to limit coverage to
published news and opinion pieces, MAP archived a press release from
Zogby for the cogent reason that its latest New York poll indicated
(for the first time) significant softening in the public's attitude
toward punishment of drug offences.

***

(1) 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.

[snip]

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
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n540.a04.html

***

COMMENT: (2)

A relatively rare press assessment of the reform movement was
published in the Hartford Advocate. Journalist Ken Krayeske, although
friendly to reform, took the movement to task for its lack of cohesion.

(2) 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.

[snip]

...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.

[snip]

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.

[snip]

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
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n532.a01.html

***

COMMENT: (3)

Rolling Stone published Mike Gray's solid investigative piece on the
Plano heroin overdose deaths showing how the typical doctrinal
blindness of the drug war combined with community hypersensitivity to
bad publicity to turn an unfortunate situation into avoidable tragedy:

(3) TEXAS HEROIN MASSACRE

IN 1996, DR. LARRY ALEXANDER, an earnest young medic with sandy hair
and a stylish goatee, came back to Plano, Texas,...a wealthy corporate
nesting round north of Dallas - good schools, big houses, smoked-glass
business parks and a hundred lighted ball fields - and statistically,
the safest city in Texas.

[snip]

Plano was about to pay a terrible price for its splendid isolation, and
one of the first to spot the impending danger was Larry Alexander... In
the fall of 1996,friends at Parkland Health and Hospital in
Dallas...were telling him that heroin was back in style. His first
reaction was that this was a Dallas problem... Then on New Year's Day
1997, he found himself looking at the body of Adam Wade Goforth, a
nineteen-year-old Marine who had come home for the holidays only to die
of a heroin overdose.

[snip]

With the March 30th death of twenty-one-year-old David Allen of
Bedford, the body count for the northern suburbs of Dallas and Fort
Worth rose to at least thirty-four. In Plano proper, the scene is less
frantic, because kids don't bring overdose victims to the hospital
there anymore. They know better. As Larry Alexander points out, the
overdose rate is rising in the surrounding suburbs.

[snip]

Pubdate: Thu, 27 May 1999
Source: Rolling Stone (US)
Copyright: 1999 Straight Arrow Publishers Company, L.P.
Contact: letters@rollingstone.com
Address: 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104-0298
Fax: (212) 767-8214
Website: http://www.rollingstone.com/
Forum: http://yourturn.rollingstone.com/webx?98@@webx1.html
Author: Mike Gray
Note: Mike Gray is the author of "Drug Crazy" (Random House).
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n548.a09.html

***

COMMENT: (4)

Amazingly, right after an ex-Dallas Cowboy became the thirty-fifth
Plano death, the Houston Chronicle was still able to print this
pious wish for "zero tolerance" in local schools:

'DON'T DO DRUGS'

Program Delivers Message To Youths

Illegal drugs sell at every street corner, convenient store parking lot
and school, said David Culbertson, former drug user.

[snip]

To combat the invasion, noted Houston advertising executive Earl
Littman introduced the Drugs Kill program in Fort Bend Independent
School District elementary schools in May. The campaign aims to keep
children drug-free from first grade through high school (and
afterwards) with incentives.

"Today, 50 percent of high school students have tried some type of
illegal substance, but we hope this campaign creates the first
drug-free class of 2010," said Littman.

[snip]

Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 1999
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Page: "This Week" Supplement, page 1
Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle
Contact: viewpoints@chron.com
Website: http://www.chron.com/
Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html
Author: Devika Koppikar, This Week Correspondent
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n548.a07.html

***

COMMENT: (5)

In parallel with the increased number of drug arrests nationwide, an
increased number of college students were arrested for drug and
alcohol infractions, despite a big drop in crime (if arrests have a
deterrent effect on drug use, it hasn't been noticeable- it's been
rising too).

(5) COLLEGE DRUG ARRESTS UP FOR 6TH YEAR

Crime: Officials say enforcement is behind 7% higher alcohol-related
detentions and 4% more illicit-substance violations.

Washington - Drug arrests rose by 7.2 percent and alcohol-related
arrests by more than 3.6 percent on college campuses in 1997, the sixth
consecutive year of increases, according to a survey being released
Monday by The Chronicle of Higher Education, a national newspaper that
covers education and academic life.

In 1996, alcohol-related arrests increased by 10 percent and drug
arrests by 5 percent. As in past years, college law-enforcement
officials and administrators attributed the rise to aggressive
enforcement policies rather than to more use of drugs and alcohol.

[snip]

Pubdate: Sun, 23 May 1999
Source: Orange County Register (CA)
Section: News,page 12
Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register
Contact: letters@link.freedom.com
Website: http://www.ocregister.com/
Author: The New York Times
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n552.a05.html

***

COMMENT: (6)

DEA chief Constantine, who has increasingly been seen as an odd man
out because of his criticism of Mexico's enforcement practices,
created a mild stir by resigning; maybe he's hoping to have the new
Museum named after him.

(6) D.E.A. CHIEF ANNOUNCES HIS RESIGNATION

After 39 years in law enforcement, Thomas Constantine abruptly
announced Monday that he would step down as the administrator of the
Drug Enforcement Administration, which he has headed since March 1994.

[snip]

"It is totally and completely a personal decision," he said, but then
hinted at a sense of isolation in Washington. "I probably could have
stuck around to the end of this administration," he said, "but it would
be disingenuous."

***

Law Enforcement & Prisons

***

COMMENT: (7)

Despite growing media acknowledgment that our courts, law enforcement
agencies, and prisons have been corrupted by the drug war, last week's
news indicated no change in the death grip on power held by those
institutions.

Atlantic Monthly, which, in December, had published Eric Schlosser's
expose of our huge prison industrial complex, ran Sasha Abramsky's
analysis of its implications in the June issue. Look for another flurry
of op-eds similar to the ones inspired by Schlosser.

***

(7) WHEN THEY GET OUT

POPULAR perceptions about crime have blurred the boundaries between
fact and politically expedient myth. The myth is that the United States
is besieged on a scale never before encountered, by a pathologically
criminal underclass. The fact is that we're not.

[snip]

Nevertheless, horror stories have led to calls for longer prison
sentences, for the abolition of parole, and for the increasingly
punitive treatment of prisoners. The politics of opinion-poll populism
has encouraged elected and corrections officials to build isolation
units, put more prisons on "lockdown" status... and generally make life
inside as miserable as possible.

[snip]

Without making contingency plans for it-without even realizing it-we
are creating a disaster that instead of dissipating over time will
accumulate with the years.

Pubdate: June, 1999
Source: Atlantic Monthly, The (US)
Copyright: 1999 by The Atlantic Monthly Company.
Contact: letters@theatlantic.com
Website: http://www.theatlantic.com/
Author: Sasha Abramsky
Page: 30
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n547.a12.html

***

COMMENT: (8)

Although the implications of the size and rapid growth of our prisons
are very disturbing to some, they don't bother everybody. Among those
who couldn't understand the fuss was an anonymous editorial writer at
the Wall street Journal:

(8) THE ROCKEFELLER DRUG LAWS

No one knows for sure why violent crime has fallen so dramatically
nationwide. Whatever we're doing, it's working. We're not complaining,
but it would be good to know just what it is we're getting right.

[snip]

We suppose it's inevitable that too much of a good thing is too much
for some politicians to bear. Why sit still when you can tinker with
success? But it's hard to understand why, in New York state, liberals
and conservatives alike have been calling for drastic revisions to what
are known as the Rockefeller drug laws.

[snip]

And so it looks like the Rockefeller drug laws are going to be with New
Yorkers a while longer. If that means more addicts are going to be
forced into treatment, maybe that's not such a bad thing. Just look at
the crime numbers.

Pubdate: Mon, May 24, 1999
Source: Wall Street Journal (NY)
Copyright: 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Contact: letter.editor@edit.wsj.com
Website: http://www.wsj.com/
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n554.a08.html

***

COMMENT: (9)

Not since the OJ Simpson trial has such attention been paid to the
obvious bias of law enforcement toward people of color, especially
when enforcing drug laws. This post-OJ media scrutiny tends to be more
balanced and rational; a good example appeared in the Washington Post:

(9) THE RACIAL ISSUE LOOMING IN THE REAR-VIEW MIRROR

Activists Seek Data On Police 'Profiling'

Kevin Murray is 39, a successful Los Angeles lawyer who drives a black
Corvette. One night last June, Murray was stopped by police in affluent
Beverly Hills.

Later, the officer would claim she had stopped him because his car
lacked a front license tag. But Murray ... concluded that he was
stopped only because he is black.

[snip]

Meanwhile, many leaders of police organizations wonder what all the
fuss is about. Many deny that racial profiling is a widespread police
practice and maintain that when it has occurred it has been an
exception.

[snip]

Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 1999
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company
Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Page: A3
Author: Edward Walsh, Washington Post Staff Writer
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n538.a03.html

***

COMMENT: (10-11)

Two unfair law enforcement practices- reliance on snitches, and police
seizure of property- were stubbornly upheld by a Federal Judiciary
despite their intrinsic unfairness and rising press hostility.

One wonders how Justice Thomas can remain committed to the "original
intent" of the founders considering what that intent had been in the
case of his ancestors

(10) SNITCH CULTURE

Again and again, the same situation occurs.

In 1974 a jury convicted Joseph Green Brown for murder, rape and
robbery. Testifying against Brown was Ronald Floyd. Several months
after the trial, Floyd admitted he had lied at trial. He said he had
testified to avoid prosecution for the murder and to receive a lighter
sentence on another crime. Brown spent 13 years on death row before
being released.

[snip]

Federal prosecutors have an overwhelming conviction rate in such cases,
prompting Nora Callahan, an advocate for drug war prisoners, to note
that "there are thousands of people sitting in prison because of bought
testimony alone, with no other evidence against them...

[snip]

In January, the full Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the
panel's decision...The panel's ruling, it said, was "patently absurd."
For now, prosecutors are free to go after the big fish, the little fish
and also the innocent.

Pubdate: June 1999
Source: Playboy Magazine (US)
Copyright: 1999 Playboy Enterprises, Inc.
Contact: edit@playboy.com
Website: http://www.playboy.com/
Author: James R. Petersen
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n529.a05.html

***

(11) OF MERCHANT SHIPS AND CRACK-SELLERS' CARS

How is an automobile seized in the 1990s similar to a British merchant
ship in the 1790s?

[snip]

"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..." 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) restoring the nation to what conservatives view as the proper
balance of constitutional safeguards.

[snip]

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
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n528.a06.html

***

Cannabis and Hemp

***

COMMENT: (12-13)

The big news of the week was the decision announced by ONDCP that
Cannabis from the government's Mississippi marijuana farm would be
made available to medical researchers with non-government funded
protocols. Just how this will work in practice remains to be seen;
past federal performance is ample reason for skepticism.

More good news was forthcoming in the quietly unspectacular arena of
hemp agriculture, where last year's decision to allow Canadian farmers
to grow hemp seems to have swept away the DEA's arguments against
similar legislation in the US.

(12) US EASES CURB ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA RESEARCH

WASHINGTON -- Despite intense interest in the medical benefits of
marijuana, few scientists are studying it, because the government has
always required that such work be paid for by scarce grant money from
the National Institutes of Health.

That changed Friday when the Clinton administration eased the
requirement, announcing that it would sell government-grown marijuana
to privately-funded scientists.

The decision was issued as a regulation by the National Institute on
Drug Abuse and is supported by General Barry McCaffrey, who as director
of the Office of National Drug Control Policy has been the
administration's most ardent opponent of the legalization of medical
marijuana.

[snip]

Pubdate: Sat, 22 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: SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n540.a09.html

***

(13) HEMP CAMPAIGN GAINS MOMENTUM

Slowly, the campaign to allow U.S. farmers to grow industrial hemp
again is making progress. North Dakota became the first state to pass
and enact such authorization. Gov. Ed Schafer signed the measure April
19. Virginia and Hawaii also have passed similar legislation and bills
are pending in Idaho, Illinois, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico and
Vermont.

In Wisconsin, the state Assembly's Agriculture Committee has held its
first meeting on the proposal. That hearing was held primarily to let
legislators hear the arguments on the issue. Law enforcement agencies
in the state are opposing the idea because of hemp's identification
with marijuana.

[snip]

Pubdate: Tue, 18 May 1999
Source: United Press International
Copyright: 1999 United Press International
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n528.a02.html

***

COMMENT: (14)

It was a different story in court, where another Californian will be
sentenced to prison for daring to use therapeutic Cannabis. What's
unique in B.E.Smith's case is that it was brought by a federal
prosecutor for cultivation of 87 plants and (of course) no medical
necessity defense was permitted. The trial featured an angry exchange
between Judge Garland Burell, of Unabomber fame, and Woody Harrelson
who appeared as a character witness.

(14) GUILTY VERDICT IN HIGH-PROFILE POT CASE

SACRAMENTO, - A federal jury in Sacramento has handed down a guilty
verdict in a case that could set a precedent for how federal judges
handle a California law allowing the medical use of marijuana.

The jury today convicted 52-year-old B.E. Smith of Trinity County on
drug charges for a 1997 arrest in which police seized an 87-plant
marijuana garden, which Smith claimed he used by prescription for
treatment of alcohol abuse.

[snip]

Pubdate: Fri, 21 May 1999
Source: United Press International
Copyright: 1999 United Press International
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n539.a07.html

***

International News

***

COMMENT: (15-16)

The gradually toughening approach to drug enforcement in Britain was
signalled by Home Secretary Jack Straw's flip-flop on the issue of
jury trials for drug offenses; that the cognitive dissonance between
students, teachers and parents in British schools is little different
than in the US is easily read from between the lines of the next
article.

THOUSANDS WILL LOSE THE RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY

More than 18,500 defendants a year are to be stripped of their
time-honoured right to a jury trial, the home secretary will announce
today. The decision to end the right to elect trial by crown court jury
represents a further blow to Britain's ancient jury system in the wake
of plans to abolish jury trials for complex fraud cases.

Jack Straw, who in opposition said the reform was 'wrong, short-sighted
and likely to prove ineffective', has now swung behind the move. It
comes after pressure from the lord chancellor, Lord Irvine, who sees it
as a measure which could save millions of pounds.

[snip]

Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 1999
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Copyright: Guardian Media Group 1999
Contact: letters@guardian.co.uk
Website: http://www.guardian.co.uk/
Author: Alan Travis, Home Affairs Editor
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n527.a07.html

***

(16) ETON CLAIMS SUCCESS IN DRUGS CRACKDOWN

Eton's tough line on drug use, which has resulted in seven expulsions
in four years, has succeeded in minimizing drug-taking at the school,
its headmaster claimed yesterday.

A 15-year-old pupil was expelled this week after undercover police
caught him trying to buy UKP250 of cannabis in London.

[snip]

Mr Lewis said: "At any time, there are likely to be some boys who are
determined to beat the rules of the school and the laws of the land,
and there is a reasonable chance they may get away with it. We don't
spend all our waking hours thinking about drugs, but we do take it
seriously." Drugs offences accounted for all the school's expulsions in
his first four years in office, he said.

[snip]

Pubdate: Fri, 21 May 1999
Source: Times, The (UK)
Copyright: 1999 Times Newspapers Ltd
Contact: letters@the-times.co.uk
Website: http://www.the-times.co.uk/
Author: John O'leary, Education Editor
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n542.a06.html

***

COMMENT: (17)

A drug policy summit in New South Wales probably resulted in a net gain
for harm reduction, but did little to convince hard line
prohibitionists and, presumably, PM John Howard. As ever, injecting
rooms, heroin trials, and downgrading of Cannabis enforcement were the
key issues.

(17) BATTLE LINES DRAWN AS SUMMIT DEEPENS

The head of Prime Minister John Howard's drugs advisory council came
under fire yesterday as battle lines emerged between conservatives and
reformers at the NSW drug summit.

The Salvation Army's Major Brian Watters maintained his opposition to
any relaxation of drug laws, saying allowing shooting galleries would
lead to the legalisation of heroin, cocaine and amphetamines.

[snip]

Professor Peter Reuter of Maryland University said there was no
scientific evidence to show that US-style zero tolerance policies would
curb the drug problem.

``Beware of Americans bearing certainties,'' he said.

[snip]

Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 1999
Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia)
Copyright: Illawarra Newspapers
Contact: editor@illnews.com.au
Website: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n535.a06.html

***

HOT OFF THE 'NET

***

Dear DrugSense,

Your site is a treasure of information and great inspiration to all.

I just added a link to you on my site, http://www.tixe.com/TIXE
(rhymes with Types) is dedicated to assisting in the defense of persons
accused of drug crimes. We consult with defense counsel in jury
selection and persuasion.

Keep up the good work!
John Lopker
TIXE Trial Consulting

***

G.W. Bush Drug War Parody Site

There's a "Drug Wars" section on http://www.gwbush.com/ that is hilarious
because it is so truthful. The Bush campaign is trying to shut this guy
down by making him register as a political action committee. See that
story at http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB19990520S0025

Editors note: This site seems to be humour and parody oriented. All
articles at this site should be considered in that vein.

***

FACT Of THE WEEK

***

Federal forfeitures totaled approximately $730 million in 1994.

Source: Heilbroner, D., "The Law Goes on a Treasure Hunt," The New York
Times, (1994, December 11), Section 6, p. 70, (quoting the 1992
testimony of Cary H. Copeland, then director of the Justice
Department's executive-office asset forfeiture unit).

***

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

***

"As former attorney general of Canada, I am keenly aware of the right
against self-incrimination in this country. I fully intend to invoke that
right. But one thing I can be very clear about: I never smoked marijuana
for medicinal purposes." - Allan Rock, Canadian Minister of Health

***

DS Weekly is one of the many free educational services DrugSense offers
our members. Watch this feature to learn more about what DrugSense can
do for you.

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

News/COMMENTS-Editor: Tom O'Connell (tjeffoc@drugsense.org)
Senior-Editor: Mark Greer (mgreer@drugsense.org)

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. Become a NewsHawk!

See http://www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm for info on contributing clippings.

***

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
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(800) 266 5759
MGreer@mapinc.org
http://www.mapinc.org/
http://www.drugsense.org/

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