Archive for the ‘News’ category
Not Cooley
September 5th, 2010August 2010 Activist Newsletter
September 5th, 2010Oppose or Amend S.258
September 5th, 2010They’re At It Again!
September 5th, 2010ASA Activist Newsletter – Sept 2010
September 5th, 2010DEC Medical
September 5th, 2010Happy Trails Medical Cannabis Delivery Service
September 5th, 2010Israel relaxes restrictions on medical marijuana – Ha’aretz
September 5th, 2010![]() Ha'aretz | Israel relaxes restrictions on medical marijuana Ha'aretz The ministry estimates that in 2010 there will be an increase of 66 percent in the permits for medical marijuana, allowing treatment for about 5000 patients ... |
Marijuana may relieve nerve pain when other drugs don’t – USA Today
September 5th, 2010Marijuana may relieve nerve pain when other drugs don't USA Today While recreational users are seeking an altered state of mind, research shows that legitimate medical marijuana users are not looking to get high. ... Does cannabis help patients? Smoking marijuana helps reduce pain, trial shows Marijuana better than pharmaceuticals at treating chronic pain, improving mood |
Rise of a ‘ganjapreneur’ – Daily Review Online
September 5th, 2010Rise of a 'ganjapreneur' Daily Review Online Tempers flared as the evening of July 22 wore on, turning an Oakland City Council meeting into a marathon debate over the future of medical marijuana in one ... |
Emery Prosecutor: Legalize Marijuana Now
September 5th, 2010Special to The Seattle Times
By John McKay
I don’t smoke pot. And I pretty much think people who do are idiots.
This certainly includes Marc Emery, the self-styled “Prince of Pot” from Canada whom I indicted in 2005 for peddling marijuana seeds to every man, woman and child with an envelope and a stamp. Emery recently pleaded guilty and will be sentenced this month in Seattle, where he faces five years in federal prison. If changing U.S. marijuana policy was ever Emery’s goal, the best that can be said is that he took the wrong path.
As Emery’s prosecutor and a former federal law-enforcement official, however, I’m not afraid to say out loud what most of my former colleagues know is true: Our marijuana policy is dangerous and wrong and should be changed through the legislative process to better protect the public safety.
More…
Medical marijuana commercial causes little controversy – Health Jackal
September 4th, 2010![]() Health Jackal | Medical marijuana commercial causes little controversy Health Jackal A TV advertisement for the CannaCare medical marijuana dispensary in Sacramento, California has not stimulated much controversy. The commercial spot lights ... First Medical Marijuana Ad Airs in California First Medical Marijuana Ad Airs in California Medical Marijuana Commercial In California |
Medical marijuana dispensary wins court order allowing it to stay open – Los Angeles Times (blog)
September 3rd, 2010![]() The 420 Times | Medical marijuana dispensary wins court order allowing it to stay open Los Angeles Times (blog) A medical marijuana dispensary that Los Angeles was seeking to shut down under its three-month-old ordinance has won a court order allowing it to stay open, ... Only 41 Los Angeles Dispensaries Qualify To Stay Open New Rules for Medical Marijuana Dispensaries in Colorado LA medical marijuana dispensary can remain open |
LA sheriff says almost all pot clinics criminal – The Associated Press
September 3rd, 2010![]() LAist (blog) | LA sheriff says almost all pot clinics criminal The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles County sheriff has escalated his war of words against California medical marijuana dispensaries, saying as many as 97 percent ... Sheriff Baca says pot dispensaries are a crime target. 'More reason to ... Sheriff Lee Baca says Most Medical Marijuana Dispensaries are Criminal CA Medical Marijuana "Hijacked By Criminals?" |
Latest California Crime Stats Emphasize Need To Pass Prop. 19
September 3rd, 2010
It seems not a day goes by where the staff at NORML doesn’t receive some sort of e-mail or comment arguing that marijuana use is ‘already legal’ in California. Really? Then how do you explain this?
California Marijuana Arrests Remain Near Record Levels in 2009
via California NORMLAccording to data from the Bureau of Criminal Statistics, California reported nearly the same number of marijuana arrests in 2009 as in the previous, record year.
In 2009, there were 17,008 felony and 61,164 misdemeanor marijuana arrests, for a total of 78,172. In 2008, there were 17,126 felonies and 61,388 misdemeanors, for a total of 78,514. This was the highest number of arrests since marijuana was decriminalized in 1976.
So to summarize, this means that there have been more than 122,500 criminal prosecutions in California for the non-medical possession of marijuana of less than one ounce since 2008 (and that’s not counting 2010). Since marijuana possession is a criminal misdemeanor in California, that means that all of these individuals were forced to appear in court, pay court costs, pay an administrative fine, and were subject to either drug treatment or a temporary (2 years) criminal record. And, oh yeah, they also had their marijuana forcefully taken away from them by the full police power of the state.
Since 2008, there were also over 34,000 felony marijuana prosecutions (not counting 2010). Marijuana felonies in California include charges like: growing even a single marijuana plant for non-medical purposes (punishable by up to 36 months in prison), and the sale of any amount of marijuana for non-medical purposes (punishable by up to four years in prison).
Does that sound like legalization to you?
Passage of Prop. 19 would make the adult possession (up to an ounce) of marijuana and the cultivation of marijuana (whatever amount may be harvested from a 25 square foot garden) legal. In other words, it would halt the criminal prosecutions of tens of thousands of Californians who are presently running afoul of the criminal law. It would offer legal protection to the estimated 3.3 million Californians who are presently using marijuana for non-medical purposes. (By contrast, only an estimated 200,000 or so Californians possess a valid doctor’s recommendation to use cannabis lawfully.) And that is why NORML supports this effort.
In a similar vein, I’m also frequently asked the question: ‘Why legalize marijuana? Why not just decriminalize it?’
First, let’s look at what ‘decriminalization’ really means:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/decriminalization
Definition of DECRIMINALIZE
: to remove or reduce the criminal classification or status of; especially : to repeal a strict ban on while keeping under some form of regulation
The term ‘decriminalize’ first came into vogue in 1972 when the Nixon’s Schafer Commission recommended this public policy for marijuana. Their recommendation to Congress was to replace criminal penalties on adult possession with administrative (non-criminal) sanctions, such as a fine — but to keep the commodity defined as contraband and to maintain criminal penalties on its retail sale and production.
As a stopgap measure NORML has supported, and still supports, decriminalization. In fact, we are presently encouraging Californians to contact the Governor in support of Senate Bill 1449, which reduced adult possess penalties from a misdemeanor to a civil infraction.
But any public policy that mandates that marijuana remain, by definition, an illegal commodity (contraband) is woefully insufficient — as by definition it grants the state (law enforcement) the power to forcefully engage with the public in order to legally seize said commodity. That is why, even in places that have ‘decriminalized’ marijuana possession, we still see horrific acts of violence by police upon marijuana consumers like this and this.
By contrast, simply removing marijuana from the entire criminal code in California, which appears to be what some anti-19 Utopians would prefer, would not fall under the definition of decriminalization — which by its very definition still maintains government sanctions and regulations. In fact, it is hard to define any statutory term for such an idyllic change, as virtually all ‘legal’ commodities are defined as such, and are thus subject to rules and regulations. As I’ve written previously, tomatoes aren’t decriminalized; they are legal and thus subject to regulation and taxation when they are commercially produced and sold on the retail market.
I suppose one could argue that dandelions are non-criminal yet they are not subject to government taxation and regulation. But of course dandelions are not a commodity that is bought and sold on the open market. (Yes, like marijuana, dandelions also grow out of the ground. But, of course, so does wheat — which is highly regulated by the government.) And of course it is totally unrealistic to think that a commodity like marijuana, that is ingested and purchased by tens of millions of Americans, would ever be treated like dandelions.
It is foolish for critics of Prop. 19 to demand that marijuana be treated in a ‘legal’ manner, but then at the same time demand that it not be subject to regulation when the fact of the matter is that all legal commodities are regulated in some manner and subject to taxation.
Gasoline is taxed at the state level, federal level, and there’s also an excise tax. How about water? If your house is connected to a sewer your water consumption is taxed, and there are numerous regulations imposed upon it. The state can control what goes into your water (e.g., flouride). The state can even restrict how much water one uses (e.g., water rationing) in one’s own home. And of course there is alcohol. In this case the government regulates who can use it (e.g., age restrictions); where one can use it (e.g., no use in public parks, in motor vehicles, etc.), what time of day one can buy it, where one can buy it, how much one can brew themselves, how it can be advertised, and so on and so forth. Yet does anyone truly think that these commodities are not ‘fully legal’ because there are taxes and regulations associated with them? Does anyone really think that water should be ‘decriminalized, but not legalized?’
Ultimately, the question is: what is the preferable policy for adult marijuana use — not the Utopian. Right now the state has the power of a gun to seize an adult’s marijuana — even marijuana that is used in the privacy of one’s home home — and to sanction that adult with criminal prosecution and a criminal record if their use is for non-medical purposes. Under Prop. 19, an individual would no longer face these criminal sanctions for their private activities, as long as their private use was limited to possession and cultivation within certain limits. That, in NORML’s opinion, is a net gain — not a net loss.









