Nov. 14, 2008 #575 |
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- * Breaking News (12/22/24)
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- * This Just In
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(1) Medical Marijuana Advocate Arrested In Sting
(2) Demand For Hemp Soaring, Firm Moves To Bigger Plant
(3) Medical Marijuana Policy Undetermined
(4) Organized Crime Branching Out
- * Weekly News in Review
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Drug Policy-
COMMENT: (5-8)
(5) Column: Parents Resist School Intrusion On Kid's Life
(6) Citing Workload, Public Lawyers Reject New Cases
(7) Sanofi-Aventis, Pfizer End Studies On 2 Diet Drugs
(8) Police, DEA: Vote Won't Stop Pot Busts
Law Enforcement & Prisons-
COMMENT: (9-12)
(9) Melton On Trial
(10) Border Inspector Accused of Allowing 3,000 Pounds of Cocaine into U.S. Over 5 Years
(11) Lighthouse Point Police Upgrade With Millions From DEA Partnering
(12) Hendricks Sentenced To Jail Time
Cannabis & Hemp-
COMMENT: (13-16)
(13) Police Fear New Marijuana Law Will Lead To Increased Use
(14) Record Year For Pot Seizures
(15) Hemp Growers Take Case To Higher Authority
(16) Forfeiture Of Grow-Op Homes Lands On Supreme Court's Docket
International News-
COMMENT: (17-21)
(17) Somsak Kicks Off Northern Drugs Drive
(18) PM Revives War On Drugs
(19) Drug Families To Lose Assets
(20) Canada Funds Wheat Seed As Afghan Poppy Alternative
(21) Eight Out Of 10 Doctors Agree With Sites
- * Hot Off The 'Net
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Pot Policy At The Federal Level: Time To Get To Work! / Paul Armentano
Drug Truth Network
Opportunities For Drug Reform In The Obama Era / Ethan Nadelmann
Obama On Drugs / By Jacob Sullum
Mushrooms, Russia And History
MAPS News - November 2008
- * What You Can Do This Week
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Apply For A Job
- * Letter Of The Week
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War On Drugs Pays Off / Keith Jones
- * Letter Writer Of The Month - October
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Allan Erickson
- * Feature Article
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Milestones / Richard Lake
- * Quote of the Week
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William James
DrugSense needs your support to continue this newsletter and many
other important projects - see how you can help at
http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
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THIS JUST IN (Top)
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(1) MEDICAL MARIJUANA ADVOCATE ARRESTED IN STING (Top) |
Pubdate: | Fri, 14 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Honolulu Advertiser (HI) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The Honolulu Advertiser |
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Author: | Christie Wilson, Advertiser Maui Bureau |
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PA'IA, Maui -- The head of a medical marijuana advocacy group on Maui
and six other men have been charged with running a drug trafficking
ring.
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The suspects were arrested Tuesday following a two-year investigation
surrounding the Patients Without Time organization located on Baldwin
Avenue in Pa'ia, said Capt. Gerald Matsunaga of the Maui Police
Department.
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As part of the investigation dubbed Operation Weedkiller, Maui police,
assisted by other county, state and federal law enforcement agencies,
recovered more than 335 plants, nearly 16 pounds of marijuana, a small
amount of hashish and more than $14,000 in cash from several homes and
businesses, he said.
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"They exploited the medicinal marijuana laws to sell marijuana to turn
a financial profit," Matsunaga said.
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State Rep. Joe Bertram III, D-11th (Kihei, Wailea, Makena), yesterday
defended Patients Without Time and its director, Brian Murphy, 53, who
was indicted on 13 offenses, including criminal conspiracy and
commercial promotion of marijuana. Bertram said the organization
provides marijuana to the disabled and critically ill patients legally
registered under the state's medical marijuana law.
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"It's a godsend to sick people here on Maui. It's heartbreaking. A lot
of people now are left in the lurch. They were getting a medicine
that's safe and reliable and now it's gone," Bertram said.
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"How are these people who have these permits supposed to have access
to this medicine that the state said is available to them? This is
major problem."
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[snip]
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(2) DEMAND FOR HEMP SOARING, FIRM MOVES TO BIGGER PLANT (Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 13 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Winnipeg Free Press |
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Not only is demand for hemp products skyrocketing -- Canadian hemp
seed exports increased by 300 per cent and hemp oil exports by 85
per cent from 2006 to 2007 -- but one of the country's oldest and
largest hemp food producers, Manitoba Harvest Hemp Foods & Oils, is
moving into a new state-of-the-art processing plant this week that
will boost its production capacity by 500 per cent.
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And Wednesday, the federal and provincial governments added icing to
the cake with the unveiling of a new national strategy for
developing the hemp industry in Canada.
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"In the last 10 years, the Canadian hemp industry has grown from an
emerging niche market to a point where we are now being recognized
as a global leader in hemp production," said Mike Fata, chairman of
the Canadian Hemp Trade Alliance ( CHTA ) and president and
co-founder of Manitoba Harvest Hemp.
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"With the province's support, this hemp strategy has given us a road
map to new opportunities and continued growth of the hemp industry
in Canada."
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Fata said the creation of a national strategy gives the industry
instant credibility.
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"It proves the industry is here and it's not just a fad."
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[snip]
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(3) MEDICAL MARIJUANA POLICY UNDETERMINED (Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 13 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | North Wind, The (Northern MI U, MI Edu) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The North Wind |
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Universities across Michigan may soon face trouble enforcing a newly
passed proposal which legalized marijuana for medicinal purposes.
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Proposal 1, which passed in Michigan in the Nov. 4 election,
legalized the possession of up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana with a
valid prescription.
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Carl Holm, director of Housing and Residence Life, said NMU has not
reached a decision on any campus policy towards medical marijuana.
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"I haven't given it any thought," he said. "I don't know how often
we will deal with this. When I think of people who are ( getting
medical marijuana ), I don't think of college-age students."
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NMU Public Safety Sgt. Ken Love said he hasn't been given any
information on how medicinal marijuana would be treated on campus.
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[snip]
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(4) ORGANIZED CRIME BRANCHING OUT (Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 13 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The Vancouver Sun |
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Author: | Kim Bolan, Staff Writer |
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E-Waste Is New Source Of Loot For Criminals, RCMP Commissioner Says
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Organized criminals in Canada still rely on the drug trade for
profits, but are branching out into all kinds of new illegal
businesses, RCMP Commissioner William Elliott said Wednesday.
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Elliott told the Vancouver Board of Trade that some members of the
900 identifiable crime groups in Canada are also involved in
commercial crimes such as vehicle theft, credit card fraud,
trafficking in human organs and even the illegal disposal of
electronic waste such as computers and cellphones.
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"Criminal networks can profit by collecting e-waste in developed
nations and exporting it to so-called recyclers in developing
countries where it is often handled improperly," Elliott said. "This
is a violation of Canadian and international law and it is creating
an environmental and human health crisis."
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As organized crime has grown, it has also become more sophisticated,
subcontracting out some of its illegal activity, said Elliott, who
was appointed to the top job 16 months ago.
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"It is also becoming more fluid," he said. "Crime groups are now
forming temporary alliances with what we refer to as criminal
service providers who perpetrate crime."
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But crime groups are still heavily involved in the drug trade,
particularly in the three largest urban centres in Canada --
Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.
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"Illegal drugs are still the mainstay of organized crime and we see
the deleterious effects in our communities across the country," he
said.
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[snip]
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WEEKLY NEWS IN REVIEW (Top)
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Domestic News- Policy
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COMMENT: (5-8) (Top) |
A school district in Florida really wants students to participate in
drug surveys - so much that a family was denied school pictures for
daring to try and opt out.
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The drug war continues to take a toll on the criminal justice
system, with many public defenders offices declaring that they are
at the breaking point.
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A pharmaceutical drug that was supposed to help users loose weight
by blocking cannabinoid receptors may be finally done as more
research suggests that users face negative psychological effects
from the drug. So, if it's not therapeutic to block cannabinoid
receptors for some people, it seems conversely true that filling
those receptors would be beneficial for other people.
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And in Hawaii, a police chief ignores the will of the voters.
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(5) COLUMN: PARENTS RESIST SCHOOL INTRUSION ON KID'S LIFE (Top) |
Pubdate: | Sat, 08 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | News-Press (Fort Myers, FL) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The News-Press |
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Dustin Worth admits to having a libertarian lean.
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"I'm only registered Republican because the third party is not an
electable option," says Dustin, 38.
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The less government intrusion, the better for him.
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Dustin and wife, Sandra, who live in Lehigh Acres, maintain the same
philosophy about the Lee County School District.
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Educate our children, but refrain from asking unnecessary and
personal questions that are none of the district's business.
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"We are fed up with government schools dictating to parents as to
how they decide what's best for our children," says Sandra Worth,
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The Worths bumped heads with the district in September when their
son, Alec, a sixth-grader at Oak Hammock Middle in Fort Myers, was
not allowed to take his class picture for the school yearbook.
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When Dustin signed off on a release of the directory information
code of conduct for students grades 6-12, he took one exception,
drawing a line through the last sentence.
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The sentence is new to the release this year, according to district
spokesman Joe Donzelli.
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It reads: Permission is also given to allow my child to participate
in anonymous surveys involving the use of tobacco, alcohol and other
drugs.
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The Worths want to know why the district needs to survey students
about smoking, drinking and drugging.
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Dustin sent a letter to Principal Clayton Simmons on Sept. 25,
asking Alec's picture be taken on makeup day. His attorney sent an
Oct. 14 letter to Simmons and staff attorney Robert Dodig with a
similar request. Both were denied.
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[snip]
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(6) CITING WORKLOAD, PUBLIC LAWYERS REJECT NEW CASES (Top) |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The New York Times Company |
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MIAMI -- Public defenders' offices in at least seven states are
refusing to take on new cases or have sued to limit them, citing
overwhelming workloads that they say undermine the constitutional
right to counsel for the poor.
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Public defenders are notoriously overworked, and their turnover is
high and their pay low. But now, in the most open revolt by public
defenders in memory, many of the government-appointed lawyers say
that state budget cuts and rising caseloads have pushed them to the
breaking point.
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In September, a Florida judge ruled that the public defenders'
office in Miami-Dade County could refuse to represent many of those
arrested on lesser felony charges so its lawyers could provide a
better defense for other clients. Over the last three years, the
average number of felony cases handled by each lawyer in a year has
climbed to close to 500, from 367, officials said, and caseloads for
lawyers assigned to misdemeanor cases have risen to 2,225, from
1,380.
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"Right now a lot of public defenders are starting to stand up and
say, 'No more: We can't ethically handle this many cases,' " said
David J. Carroll, director of research for the National Legal Aid
and Defender Association.
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The Miami-Dade case, which is being closely watched across the
country, was appealed by the state, which says that defender offices
must share the burden of falling revenues. On Friday, the Florida
Supreme Court sent the case to an appellate court for a ruling. If
the judge's decision is upheld, it will force courts here to draw
lawyers from a smaller state office and contract with private
lawyers to represent defendants, at greater expense.
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[snip]
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(7) SANOFI-AVENTIS, PFIZER END STUDIES ON 2 DIET DRUGS (Top) |
Source: | San Jose Mercury News (CA) |
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Copyright: | 2008 San Jose Mercury News |
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Author: | Linda A. Johnson, AP Business Writer |
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TRENTON, N.J.--French drugmaker Sanofi-Aventis said Wednesday it is
halting all research on a diet drug sold in Europe, Acomplia, and
rival Pfizer Inc. hours later said it is ending research on an
experimental weight-loss drug in the same class.
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Both drugs work by blocking the pleasure centers that give marijuana
smokers the "munchies"--the cannabinoid type 1, or CB1, receptors.
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Given that obesity and related complications are arguably the
world's biggest public health problem, the demise of both drugs will
be a big disappointment for patients and doctors, and possibly for
investors. The decisions leave New York-based Pfizer, the world's
top drugmaker by sales, and Paris-based Sanofi-Aventis, ranked No.
4, suddenly without drugs in a category all but guaranteed as a
blockbuster.
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"This will significantly affect the perception of their ( future )
revenues," but the companies could overcome that with replacement
drugs down the road, said analyst Steve Brozak of WBB Securities.
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Just four years ago, scientists were touting Acomplia as a Holy
Grail of medical research, saying it showed promise in helping
people lose weight, control blood sugar and other aspects of
diabetes, lower cholesterol, quit smoking and stop abusing alcohol,
marijuana and cocaine.
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Some researchers predicted that once Acomplia got approval for
weight loss or smoking cessation, research would ramp up in those
other areas. But that early promise didn't materialize, it didn't
win approval for smoking cessation and problems began piling up as
psychiatric side effects--now a huge red flag for
regulators--emerged in various studies of Acomplia as a diet drug.
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[snip]
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(8) POLICE, DEA: VOTE WON'T STOP POT BUSTS (Top) |
Pubdate: | Fri, 07 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Hawaii Tribune Herald (Hilo, HI) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Hawaii Tribune Herald |
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Nothing In Ballot Measure Trumps Federal Law, Says Police Chief
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The Police Department won't ease enforcement of marijuana laws
following the passage of a ballot initiative making that the "lowest
law enforcement priority."
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"No. 1, it's not a law. It's a resolution," Police Chief Lawrence
Mahuna said. "No. 2, there will be no change how we prioritize the
enforcement of marijuana.
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"The resolution does not invalidate federal law," Mahuna said. "It
doesn't legalize marijuana. It's still a Schedule 1 controlled
substance.
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"We will continue in our efforts to reduce the availability of
illegal marijuana," he said.
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"Nothing that's in a resolution can nullify and -- to put it simply
-- trump a federal law," Mahuna said. "We can't back a resolution
contrary to federal law. And it's in contravention of state law."
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The initiative took effect upon its approval.
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[snip]
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Law Enforcement & Prisons
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COMMENT: (9-12) (Top) |
The mayor of Jackson, Mississippi got out of local charges that he
overstepped legal boundaries when he supervised the destruction of
an alleged drug house in the city. But now, his federal trial
starts. Elsewhere, more corruption and profiteering.
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(9) MELTON ON TRIAL (Top) |
Pubdate: | Sun, 09 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Clarion-Ledger, The (Jackson, MS) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The Clarion-Ledger |
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Mayor Frank Melton will enter a courtroom this week for the third
time in two years to face criminal charges arising from his cowboy
crime-fighting style.
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This time, he'll face the federal government and charges that could
land him in prison for up to 25 years.
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While Melton's reputation for unorthodox behavior goes back to his
days as a television commentator, as mayor he sounded an early
warning in his July 4, 2005, inaugural address.
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"We will deal with crime in a way you have never seen before," he
said.
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Over the next 14 months, Melton, flanked by his armed police
bodyguards, cruised the city's streets in the Jackson Police
Department's Mobile Command Unit, stopped traffic to conduct
impromptu searches for weapons or drugs, and carried out crusades
against hoodlums, suspected and actual.
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Quickly, the mayor's crusader persona began raising eyebrows among
citizens and state and local officials. Tough talk about crime
devolved into scenes of Melton banging on doors with the butt of a
shotgun and declaring the city to be under a "state of emergency."
He also began consorting with a cadre of young men, some facing
charges for violent crimes.
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On Aug. 26, 2006, after taking in part of a New Orleans Saints
preseason football game at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium,
Melton and his entourage paid the first of two visits that night to
1305 Ridgeway St. That nighttime raid left gaping holes in the
northwest Jackson duplex and urgent questions on whether the mayor
had violated the law and the trust of his office.
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Beginning this week, Melton will defend himself in the second trial
involving the Ridgeway Street duplex.
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[snip]
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(10) BORDER INSPECTOR ACCUSED OF ALLOWING 3,000 POUNDS OF COCAINE (Top)INTO U.S. OVER 5 YEARS
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Pubdate: | Mon, 10 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | New York Times (NY) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The New York Times Company |
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A veteran customs inspector recently arrested in Texas on drug
charges helped traffickers smuggle about 3,000 pounds of cocaine
into the country over five years, according to a court document
filed last week.
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The inspector, Jorge A. Leija, 43, allowed smugglers to drive cars
loaded with cocaine through his entry lane at the Eagle Pass border
crossing, about 140 miles southwest of San Antonio, without
inspection, according to testimony by an unnamed Drug Enforcement
Administration agent.
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Mr. Leija was paid hundreds of thousands of dollars from January
2001 to October 2006, the agent said at a bail hearing on Thursday
in Federal District Court in Del Rio, Tex.
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Court documents said Mr. Leija was also paid $30,000 to make false
statements on an application he submitted in September 2003 to
obtain an American passport for another person.
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Mr. Leija worked as an inspector for 11 years, said Rick Pauza, a
Customs and Border Protection spokesman in Laredo, Tex.
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[snip]
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(11) LIGHTHOUSE POINT POLICE UPGRADE WITH MILLIONS FROM DEA (Top)PARTNERING
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Pubdate: | Mon, 10 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Sun-Sentinel Company |
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The city's police department has received so much money from
partnering on Drug Enforcement Administration task forces, it hasn't
figured out how to spend all the cash.
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"It's a nice luxury to have, absolutely," said Chief Ross Licata,
"and allows us to purchase equipment it would be difficult to find
funding for in these tough times."
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Lighthouse Point police have served on federal anti-drug task forces
for more than a decade, and have $3.3 million total in shared
forfeiture funds for their efforts. It must be spent for specific
purposes, including investigations, officer education and equipment.
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Licata's 32 officers patrol a 2.5-square-mile city of 11,202
residents, where single-family homes have an average market value of
$727,467.
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From September 2007 through September 2008, crime in the city rose
18.5 percent, from 303 incidents to 359. The top three categories
where crime went up were Internet and contractor fraud (39 incidents
in 2007, 71 through September ); drugs ( 12 vs. 28) and petty
larcenies ( 98 vs. 120 ). There were no rape, murder, kidnapping or
arson cases in the past year and Licata reports there was a 50
percent rise in arrests.
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Last year, police used $15,000 of DEA funds for ammunition for 20
new semi-automatic rifles.
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[snip]
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(12) HENDRICKS SENTENCED TO JAIL TIME (Top) |
Pubdate: | Fri, 07 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Galesburg Register-Mail (IL) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Galesburg Register-Mail |
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Felony Could Be Vacated With Completion Of Program
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GALESBURG -- A former Galesburg Police Department lieutenant will
spend the next 180 days in the Knox County jail after pleading guilty
to stealing drugs from the department's evidence locker.
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David W. Hendricks, 50, pleaded guilty Oct. 2 to one count of
possession of a controlled substance and official misconduct.
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In imposing the sentence Thursday in Knox County Circuit Court, Judge
Steven Bordner said Hendricks tarnished the reputation of the police
department and brought shame to himself and the community. He said
failing to impose a sentence of incarceration would further reflect
badly on the police department and justice system.
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Bordner also sentenced Hendricks to TASC probation. Treatment
Alternatives for Safe Communities is a program whereby a non-violent
offender may be sentenced to probation and drug treatment. If the
offender successfully completes conditions of the program, the judge
may vacate the judgment and dismiss the criminal proceedings. If
that would happen, the felony offenses would not be on Hendricks'
record, which would leave him eligible to receive his police
pension.
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[snip]
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Cannabis & Hemp-
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COMMENT: (13-16) (Top) |
Law enforcement officials charged with implementing Question 2 in
Massachusetts are expressing concern that reducing the penalty for
possession from a criminal to a civil offence will encourage teen use
and embolden dealers, contradicting one of their arguments in
opposition to passage of the initiative, that police seldom arrest
anyone for simple possession anyway.
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Police in Los Angeles County topped their record for cannabis plants
eradicated in a single year by 30 per cent in 2008, including a
116,000 plant farm, which they claim is the largest clandestine
cannabis grow discovered in U.S. history. Is this supposed to be
good news or bad news for prohibitionists?
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Hemp is a hardy plant. Long after our species is extinct there will
be hemp plants, but some beleaguered American farmers aren't prepared
to wait that long.
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Speaking of losing the farm, Canadian courts are being forced to
address the constitutionality of relatively recent asset forfeiture
legislation.
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(13) POLICE FEAR NEW MARIJUANA LAW WILL LEAD TO INCREASED USE (Top) |
Pubdate: | Sun, 09 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Eagle-Tribune, The (MA) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The Eagle-Tribune |
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Lawmakers Still Unsure About Implementation
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Nearly 2 million people voted to ease the state's marijuana laws last
week, but to Haverhill Deputy police Chief Donald Thompson, the new
guidelines simply don't make sense.
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Under the new rules, he said, an 18-year-old stopped for a routine
traffic violation who is found to have under an ounce of marijuana on
him would not be arrested. But if the same person has a single,
unopened beer in the car, he would be subject to arrest.
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"I don't think people thought it through," Thompson said of Question
2, which was approved by 65 percent of voters at the polls on Tuesday.
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The ballot question called for the decriminalization of the possession
of small amounts of marijuana. Those caught with an ounce or less will
be forced to give up the drugs and pay a $100 fine instead of criminal
penalties. Those under 18 will be required to complete a drug
awareness program or face a stiffer $1,000 fine.
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Groveland police Chief Robert Kirmelewicz said he fears that under the
relaxed law, drug dealers will take more chances selling marijuana,
especially to younger people. The current penalty for possession of
small amounts of marijuana in Massachusetts is up to six months in
jail and a $500 fine.
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"I feel this will not only encourage the use of marijuana in
communities, but will also empower drug dealers to sell marijuana to
our children, knowing the absence of criminal prosecution,"
Kirmelewicz said. "I am very disappointed with the passing of this
law.
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[snip]
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Thompson, Haverhill's deputy police chief, questioned why state
officials failed to invest in an advertising campaign before the
election to show the public the risks associated with approving
Question 2, chief among them that its passage could lead to more drug
abuse among young people.
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"I'm disappointed the state didn't put up a fight," he said.
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[snip]
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(14) RECORD YEAR FOR POT SEIZURES (Top) |
Pubdate: | Tue, 11 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Pasadena Star-News, The (CA) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Pasadena Star News |
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Sheriff Reports Marijuana Haul Worth $14 Billion
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Los Angeles County sheriff's officials announced Monday the department
seized an estimated $14 billion in marijuana this season, which they
believe is the largest one-year haul ever.
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Found largely in outdoor pot farms in the forest, the plants are
primarily grown by Mexican cartels, officials said.
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"I believe this is probably the highest season in ... history," said
Lt. Joe Nu ez of the sheriff's Narcotics Bureau.
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This year also saw the largest single seizure of pot in United States
history, according to sheriff's officials.
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The Marijuana Enforcement Team team in August found a 116,000-plant
farm in mountains of the Angeles National Forest above San Dimas.
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It took 40 people two days to chop down the crop, bundle it and fly it
out by helicopter.
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The pot was estimated to be worth nearly $500 million, officials said,
and shattered the previous record of about 85,000 plants seized in a
single bust by the MET team in 2007.
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"I believe this is the largest marijuana grow in the United States,"
Sheriff Lee Baca said of the bust.
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Pot was seized in the forest above San Dimas several times this year,
and officials return annually to find new outdoor marijuana grows, Lt.
Phil Abner of the sheriff's Narcotics Bureau said.
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In all, this year saw a 30 percent increase in the amount of marijuana
seized by the Sheriff's Department compared to last year, officials
said.
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[snip]
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(15) HEMP GROWERS TAKE CASE TO HIGHER AUTHORITY (Top) |
Pubdate: | Thu, 13 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Star Tribune |
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Author: | James Walsh, Star Tribune |
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Pot -- or not pot. That seems to be the question.
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Two North Dakota farmers on Wednesday took their battle to grow
industrial hemp to the Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in St.
Paul, where their attorney argued that hemp is so distinct from
marijuana that it should not be subject to federal regulation. At
stake, say hemp sellers and would-be farmers, is a potentially booming
commodity that would help U.S. growers and consumers alike.
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"I get real excited about it because of our economic times. It's a
crop that would be very, very lucrative," said Lynn Gordon, owner of
the French Meadow Bakery, who attended oral arguments at the U.S.
Courthouse in St. Paul. French Meadow makes Healthy Hemp bread,
muffins and bagels -- all big sellers, Gordon said -- but must buy its
hemp from Canada.
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"I pay so much for it now," she said.
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Federal law allows the import and sale of non-drug hemp stalk, fiber,
oil and seeds in the U.S., saying it is separate from marijuana. In
fact, hemp is used in paper, textiles, food and even fuel. But federal
law also lumps hemp and marijuana together -- they both are classified
as Cannabis sativa L. -- when it comes to growing the plants, making
it almost impossible for U.S. farmers to legally raise the crop.
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Garrison Courtney, a spokesman for the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration, the reason for the prohibition is simple -- hemp and
marijuana come from the same plant and all parts of the marijuana
plant contain some level of THC, the narcotic that produces the
"high." THC is a controlled substance under federal law.
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"To get hemp, you have to grow a marijuana plant. To grow a marijuana
plant, you have to be registered with the DEA," Courtney said.
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[snip]
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In the meantime, the North Dakota Legislature amended its law to no
longer require DEA approval. But Hauge and Munson held off planting,
saying they have no desire to run afoul of the feds.
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"I don't want to risk losing my farm," Munson said.
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[snip]
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(16) FORFEITURE OF GROW-OP HOMES LANDS ON SUPREME COURT'S DOCKET (Top) |
Pubdate: | Wed, 12 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) |
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Copyright: | 2008 The Ottawa Citizen |
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Author: | Janice Tibbetts, Canwest News Service |
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Conflicting Rulings Previously Issued By Lower Courts
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Judy Ann Craig, a former realtor with a golden touch for gardening,
will try to convince the Supreme Court of Canada tomorrow that being
forced to forfeit her North Vancouver home for running a marijuana
grow-op is extreme punishment for her crime.
|
Ms. Craig is one of three Canadians -- two from British Columbia and
one from Quebec -- challenging the seizure of homes in which they grew
marijuana, a penalty that has been toughened since federal drug laws
were changed in 2002.
|
The 58-year-old horticulturalist contends that running a small-scale
operation, mainly in her basement, should not warrant the same harsh
penalties imposed for large, sophisticated businesses controlled by
organized crime.
|
"Forfeiture of a residence of someone at retirement age with no record
is severe and destroys hope of rehabilitation," Ms. Craig's lawyer,
Howard Rubin, argues in a Supreme Court brief that describes her as "a
minor cog in a broader sociological problem."
|
Ms. Craig, who says she started growing marijuana at the urging of an
HIV-infected friend a decade ago, pleaded guilty in 2003 after police
seized 186 marijuana plants.
|
She received a conditional sentence and a $115,000 fine, but, since
she had no other assets and owed $250,000 in unpaid taxes from her
ill-gotten earnings, the court ordered the forfeiture of her two-
storey home, valued at $460,000 at the time of her 2005 sentencing.
|
Mr. Rubin will argue that federal forfeiture laws for drug crimes
should not apply to Ms. Craig, whom he described in court testimony as
an "independent" entrepreneur.
|
[snip]
|
|
|
International News
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COMMENT: (17-21) (Top) |
It is a bit like watching a train wreck in slow motion as Thai Prime
Minister Somchai Wongsawat decreed an anti-drug pogrom for Thailand.
the anti drug drive is the political brainchild of ousted PM Thaksin
Shinawatra, who - from exile in Hong Kong - directs policy in
Thailand. This anti-drug push "among the government's top priorities
in its first year in office," won't be like the last one in 2002
(where police slaughtered thousands of drug suspects with no arrests
or trials), the government promises. Thai police are counting the
expected profits from police seizures of property labeled "drug
related assets" in the Asian kingdom.
|
Similarly in South Australia, government there is elated over new
laws allowing police to seize property from people that are simply
"declared" traffickers by police (no conviction needed).
"Previously," reports this week's Advertiser newspaper, "a person
had to be convicted of a crime before their assets could be seized."
|
Canadian newspapers reported this week that Canada will pony up 1.2
million dollars for "wheat seeds and fertilizer for thousands" of
farmers in Afghanistan who already "meet the minimum farm-size
requirement, [and] have the ability to irrigate". This will be done
in hopes of displacing poppy production, which NATO forces claim
funds Taliban insurgents. Reports did not mention if the wheat seeds
distributed would be "terminator seeds," which are patented,
genetically modified seeds designed to be sterile (thus preventing
farmers from saving seeds). In Iraq, U.S. occupiers have dictated
farmers there must use terminator wheat seeds.
|
It's true: four out of five Canadian doctors support Insite, the
supervised injection center in Vancouver credited for saving lives
from overdose, and limiting the spread of HIV. In a Canadian medical
Association survey, 78% of the physicians agreed that
"harm-reduction strategies, including safe-injection sites, should
be part of a publicly funded strategy to treat addiction." The
right-wing Harper government has been severely critical of the
supervised injection center as government approval of drug use.
|
|
(17) SOMSAK KICKS OFF NORTHERN DRUGS DRIVE (Top) |
Pubdate: | Sat, 08 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Bangkok Post (Thailand) |
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Copyright: | The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2008 |
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|
Just Another Populist Push, Govt Critics Say
|
CHIANG MAI : Justice Minister Somsak Kiatsuranond yesterday kicked
off a drugs suppression drive in the North amid concerns that the
revived campaign was just another populist scheme to strengthen the
People Power party's political grip on the region.
|
Concerns were rife at yesterday's meeting which was attended by 500
people to learn about the government's 90-day drugs suppression
operation scheduled to run from this month through to January next
year.
|
[snip]
|
The local bodies were not required to explain the disbursement of
the drug-fighting money.
|
The sources said that certain officials suspected the drug scheme
was part of a government ploy to boost its popularity before the
next general election.
|
It was widely speculated among participants at the meeting that the
government would dissolve the House in mid-December.
|
According to the sources, the anti-drug plan was drafted in Hong
Kong before deposed prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's phone-in to
the Rajamangala Stadium rally last Saturday.
|
[snip]
|
Mr Somsak spent 15 minutes summarising the drug campaign which was
among the government's top priorities in its first year in office.
|
|
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(18) PM REVIVES WAR ON DRUGS (Top) |
Pubdate: | Fri, 07 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Bangkok Post (Thailand) |
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Copyright: | The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2008 |
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|
Concerns Raised Over Human Rights Violations
|
Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat yesterday revived the controversial
war on drugs, kicking off a 90-day campaign and stirring concerns
about a new wave of human rights violations.
|
He played down the deaths of thousands of people in the previous war
on drugs by the Thaksin Shinawatra administration, which drew
condemnation from around the world - deaths Thai authorities blamed
on drug dealers.
|
Delivering an anti-drugs policy to a gathering of about 500
officials at the Army Club, Mr Somchai called on the authorities to
exploit all the resources at their disposal to fight drugs.
|
[snip]
|
"Drugs abound because there is a demand. We have to reduce the
number of buyers. Without buyers, there can be nothing to worry
about, even if the drugs are sold for 25 satang," he said.
|
[snip]
|
Former prime minister Thaksin's war on drugs, launched in 2003, was
criticised by many people in Thailand and abroad. More than 2,500
people were killed.
|
A barrage of complaints and reports claimed many of those who died
had nothing to do with the drug trade.
|
Human rights activists and relatives of many of the dead accused
police of extra-judicial killings.
|
[snip]
|
Thaksin and the police claimed the victims were killed by drug gangs
wanting to cover their tracks.
|
"Police are responsible for the suppression of drugs, not for
killing," Mr Somchai said.
|
[snip]
|
The aim was to reduce supply to users aged 13 to 18 years. Those
caught buying drugs would be treated and rehabilitated at military
camps.
|
Mr Chartchai said arrested addicts who refused to accept compulsory
treatment and rehabilitation would be sent to jail.
|
He said the ONCB expected to seize hundreds of millions of baht in
assets illegally acquired from dealing in drugs next year.
|
[snip]
|
|
|
(19) DRUG FAMILIES TO LOSE ASSETS (Top) |
Pubdate: | Sun, 09 Nov 2008 |
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Source: | Advertiser, The (Australia) |
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Copyright: | 2008 Advertiser Newspapers Ltd |
---|
|
The State Government will launch a fresh assault on drug traffickers
with new laws giving police greater powers to seize their assets.
Planned amendments to legislation will allow assets such as property
or cars controlled by the targeted criminal, but used by another
person, to be seized.
|
Attorney-General Michael Atkinson said that under proposed laws to
be introduced early next year, the Government would be able to
"declare" a person a drug trafficker. "Once declared traffickers,
they can have their assets seized," he said.
|
[snip]
|
The State Government last amended the confiscation-of-assets
legislation in April 2006, giving police enhanced laws to tackle
organised crime figures.
|
Under those changes, police now only have to prove on the balance of
probabilities that a crime has been committed.
|
Previously, a person had to be convicted of a crime before their
assets could be seized.
|
[snip]
|
|
|
(20) CANADA FUNDS WHEAT SEED AS AFGHAN POPPY ALTERNATIVE (Top) |
Pubdate: | Sun, 09 Nov 2008 |
---|
Source: | Calgary Herald (CN AB) |
---|
Copyright: | 2008 Canwest Publishing Inc. |
---|
Author: | Ethan Baron, Canwest News Service |
---|
|
(CNS) - Canada is providing $1.2 million to buy wheat
seeds and fertilizer for thousands of Afghan farmers,
but the Taliban warn they may attack any foreigners who
attempt to distribute the seeds.
|
The money will pay for 293 tonnes of wheat seed, to supply more than
5,000 farmers with 50 kilograms each, and plant a total of 2,000
hectares of land.
|
"We look forward to working with the governor of Kandahar to sow
these seeds of peace," said Elissa Golberg, head of Canadian
development operations in Kandahar province.
|
[snip]
|
Seeds will go to farmers who meet the minimum farm-size requirement,
have the ability to irrigate, and are in need.
|
|
|
(21) EIGHT OUT OF 10 DOCTORS AGREE WITH SITES (Top) |
Pubdate: | Tue, 11 Nov 2008 |
---|
Source: | Ottawa Sun (CN ON) |
---|
Copyright: | 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership |
---|
Author: | Christina Spencer |
---|
|
Canadian doctors overwhelmingly support public funding of safe
drug-injection sites, including a Vancouver clinic roundly condemned
by former health minister Tony Clement.
|
Of 540 physicians surveyed by the Canadian Medical Association, 78%
agree or strongly agree "harm-reduction strategies, including
safe-injection sites, should be part of a publicly funded strategy
to treat addiction."
|
[snip]
|
The project is meant to reduce both overdose deaths and transmission
of blood-borne disease among those who share needles. Insite's
supporters hope it will also encourage users to seek treatment. The
clinic is part of a broader-based approach to drugs called "harm
reduction."
|
[snip]
|
|
|
HOT OFF THE 'NET (Top)
|
POT POLICY AT THE FEDERAL LEVEL: TIME TO GET TO WORK!
|
By Paul Armentano, NORML
|
Three suggestions for how Obama can take immediate, practical steps to
reform America's antiquated and punitive pot laws.
|
http://drugsense.org/url/nxv2DdaM
|
|
DRUG TRUTH NETWORK
|
Century of Lies - 11/11/08 - Cele Castillo
|
Cele Castillo, former DEA agent, Iran-Contra whisteleblower & author
of "Powderburns, Cocaine, Contras & the Drug War" + Terry Nelson
Reports for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
|
http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=node/2131
|
Cultural Baggage Radio Show - 11/12/08 - Eddy Lepp
|
Reverend Eddy Lepp faces 2 life sentences for growing marijuana for
his church, Bruce Mirken discusses advances in marijuana laws on
election day, Sanho Tree discusses Plan Colombia on BBC.
|
http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=node/2132
|
|
OPPORTUNITIES FOR DRUG REFORM IN THE OBAMA ERA
|
By Ethan Nadelmann, Drug Policy Alliance
|
We have an opportunity to re-shape drug policy for a generation.
|
http://drugsense.org/url/ac19xWx9
|
|
OBAMA ON DRUGS
|
By Jacob Sullum
|
Should reformers dare to hope?
|
http://www.reason.com/news/show/130034.html
|
|
MUSHROOMS, RUSSIA AND HISTORY
|
For the first time since its original publication by Pantheon Books in
1957, Robert Gordon and Valentina Pavlovna Wasson's "Mushrooms,
Russia and History" is available for download, free of charge, thanks
to the New Alexandria archive.
|
http://www.newalexandria.org/archive/
|
|
MAPS NEWS - NOVEMBER 2008
|
News from the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies
|
http://www.maps.org/news/
|
|
WHAT YOU CAN DO THIS WEEK (Top)
|
APPLY FOR A JOB
|
MPP Seeks Legislative Analyst And Arizona Campaign Coordinator
|
Legislative Analyst - Candidates should have exceptional oral
communication skills, flawless writing, and a professional
appearance. Candidates should also be highly organized,
self-motivated, and able to accomplish a defined and ambitious set
of goals. Candidates who are lawyers are strongly preferred, as are
candidates with experience working in public policy.
|
The Legislative Analyst is in charge of monitoring all
marijuana-related bills -- and generating letters from the
grassroots for or against the most important bills -- in
approximately 18-21 states.
|
Arizona Campaign Manager - This position is based in Arizona and
runs through November 2010.
|
The overarching goal of the Campaign Manager is to oversee all
aspects of the Michigan statewide ballot initiative campaign,
successfully implementing the campaign strategy from the campaign's
inception through Election Day and ensuring that every possible
measure is taken to win the campaign. All aspects of the campaign
will be overseen by MPP's Director of State Campaigns, with the
Campaign Manager playing a key supporting role to the Director of
State Campaigns and the campaign consultants.
|
This position requires a minimum of two years of statewide campaign
experience in a senior management position, though five or more
years are preferred.
|
For details on how to apply see:
|
http://www.mpp.org/jobs/process.html
|
|
LETTER OF THE WEEK (Top)
|
WAR ON DRUGS PAYS OFF
|
By Keith Jones
|
Regarding your story of Oct. 29 reporting the seizure of $118,000 in
an I-40 traffic stop: Chalk up one more highway robbery to the
mis-named "war on drugs."
|
Let's be real; this is an industry living off of the pretense of
protecting us from ourselves. If you deal in or carry cash, beware!
Ninety percent of the cash in circulation has drug residue embedded
in it and once it is seized, it is your problem to hire the lawyer
and prove your innocence.
|
My client took his mother's life savings of $12,000 that he
retrieved for her from her coffee can in her just-sold New Mexico
house to his Oklahoma house to her as he prepared to care for her in
her last years. He learned a lesson the hard way.
|
So did my car dealer friend with $23,000 in cash, returning with a
bill of sale from Arizona. This industry - just like Senator Ted,
Sheriff Mike or Tulia Tom - love to think they are heroic public
servants while they feed themselves, their friends and their
departments with money for payrolls, fancy equipment, new cars and
"seminar" trips, in the name of protecting us from drugs.
|
Call it by it's real name - highway robbery.
|
Real drug-use reduction will come about the same way it happened
with tobacco - we treated it like the health problem it is; we
arrested no one and educated everyone.
|
Keith Jones
Amarill
|
Pubdate: | Mon, 03 Nov 2008 |
---|
Source: | Amarillo Globe-News (TX) |
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|
|
LETTER WRITER OF THE MONTH -OCTOBER
|
DrugSense recognizes Allan Erickson of Eugene, Oregon for his four
published letters during October, which brings his total published
letters that we know of to 135. Allan is a frequent MAP newshawk and
writes a blog at http://morningdonut.blogspot.com/
|
You may read his published letters at:
|
http://www.mapinc.org/writers/Allan+Erickson
|
|
FEATURE ARTICLE (Top)
|
MILESTONES
|
By Richard Lake
|
Editor's Note: This DrugSense Focus Alert was initially distributed
on Nov. 11.
|
Today is Remembrance Day in Australia and Canada and Veterans Day in
the United States.
|
The symbol of the day is the poppy that grows in Flanders' Fields.
Service members of our three countries are serving today in
Afghanistan, a country where a different kind of poppy, the one
which is the source of opium and heroin is intertwined with the war
- and drug policy - as noted in these news clippings
http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Afghanistan It is a week since a
milestone election in the United States. By now you are probably
aware of how the election results have and could possibly in the
future impact drug policy. We are starting to see that reflected in
some of the news clippings here
http://www.mapinc.org/topic/United+States Reflecting on the election
results we have updated our Questions for Our "Leaders" webpage
http://www.mapinc.org/questions.htm
|
Last Friday marked a milestone for the Media Awareness Project. On
that day our two hundred thousandth news clipping was posted. The
news clipping was 'Pot Activist Loses Bid To Have Charges Stayed' at
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1011/a01.html We thank you for
your support of our efforts. Without you we could not have reached
this milestone.
|
Richard Lake is the Senior Editor for the Media Awareness Project's
news clipping service. He oversaw just about all of the 200,000
clippings that have been posted by MAP.
|
|
QUOTE OF THE WEEK (Top)
|
"A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely
rearranging their prejudices." - William James
|
|
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
|
|
Policy and Law Enforcement/Prison content selection and analysis by
Stephen Young (), This Just In selection by
Richard Lake () and Stephen Young, International
content selection and analysis by Doug Snead (),
Cannabis/Hemp content selection and analysis, Hot Off The Net
selection and Layout by Matt Elrod ().
Analysis comments represent the personal views of editors, not
necessarily the views of DrugSense.
|
We wish to thank all our contributors, editors, NewsHawks and letter
writing activists. Please help us help reform. Become a NewsHawk See
http://www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm for info on contributing clippings.
|
|
|
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.
|
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MAKE A TAX-DEDUCTIBLE DONATION TO DRUGSENSE ON-LINE
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Mail in your contribution. Make checks payable to MAP Inc. send your
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