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. . . a weekly service for the
media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
May 8, 1997
Medical Marijuana Supporters Challenge Arizona Measure Restricting Physicians' Ability To Prescribe Marijuana
May 8, 1997, Phoenix, AZ: Medical
marijuana proponents in Arizona are challenging a move by the
state legislature to indefinitely delay the implementation of a
voter-approved medical marijuana law.
A group called The People Have Spoken (TPHS) have taken out a
referendum petition from the Secretary of State's office to
reverse a law signed by Gov. Fife Symington on April 21 mandating
that physicians may only prescribe marijuana after the drug has
been approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration (H.R.
2518). Voters in November overwhelmingly endorsed
permitting doctors to prescribe marijuana to seriously ill
patients if two licensed physicians agree on the use and offer
supporting research.
Sam Vagenas, spokesman for TPHS, called the legislature's support
of H.R. 2518, "The ultimate act of political
arrogance. ... It is a callous disregard of the will of the
voters."
NORML's Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq.
said, "The actions of the Arizona state legislature and Gov.
Symington have left activists no choice but to use the referendum
process to bring this compassionate reform to the state."
The referendum will block the legislature's recent changes if
56,481 registered voters sign petitions by July 20, placing it on
the November 1998 general election ballot. Because H.R.
2518 failed to receive support from at least two-thirds of the
state legislature, it may be taken directly to the electorate as
a referendum.
Vagenas explained that TPHS is also preparing an additional
referendum that will bar legislators from changing initiatives
for two years after they are passed by the voters.
"The politicians have said repeatedly that the people of
Arizona are stupid," Vagenas told The Arizona Republic.
"We're going to prove that the people are not so dumb after
all."
For more information, please contact Sam Vagenas of The
People Have Spoken @ (602) 222-6639.
NORML, Others Testify Against D.C.
Effort To Re-Impose
Mandatory Marijuana Penalties
May 8, 1997, Washington, D.C.: NORML's
Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. joined a coalition of
criminal justice and drug policy groups yesterday to testify
against D.C. Council Bill 12-12, the "Distribution of
Marijuana Amendment Act of 1997." The bill, introduced
by interim Council Chair Charlene Drew Jarvis (D), seeks to make
the possession of more than one and one-half ounces of marijuana
a felony offense and to reinstate mandatory-minimum sentences for
various drug offenses. Backers of the measure claimed that
enhanced penalties are necessary to combat an alleged increase in
violence associated with marijuana trafficking in the city.
Stroup called the proposal a classic example of "bait and
switch." He noted that the bill would impose mandatory
prison terms for all marijuana distribution and
possession-with-intent-to distribute offenses regardless of
whether any violence was associated with the event.
"If violence is the reason for imposing harsh and unyielding
mandatory sentences, the legislation should be targeted at
violent offenders," Stroup argued.
Stroup further testified that the Jarvis bill was unnecessary
because the U.S. Attorney's office already decides which District
drug cases are most serious and should be prosecuted in federal
court, and which are less serious and will be prosecuted in
Superior Court. Those prosecuted under federal law are
subject to the rigid sentencing guidelines and to all the
mandatory penalties adopted by Congress, Stroup explained.
"It [is] disingenuous for [D.C. prosecutors] to suggest that
[their] hands [are] tied by the absence of mandatory penalties
under D.C. law," he said.
Stroup also argued that passage of the Jarvis bill will increase
the number of non-violent offenders sent to prison in the
District, and strip judges of their ability to mete out fair
sentences that "reflect the individual facts of the case and
the culpability of the individual defendant."
NORML was joined by Drug Policy Foundation
President Arnold Trebach, Families Against Mandatory Minimums
President Julie Stewart, Mary Jane DeFrank of the Washington
Capitol area American Civil Liberties Union, and a number of
other witnesses.
For more information, please contact R. Keith Stroup, Esq. of
NORML @ (202) 483-5500.
Activists Charge Oregon's Largest Newspaper Sides With The DEA In Promoting Marijuana Recriminalization Bill
May 8, 1997, Portland, Oregon: Drug
reform activists fighting to save the state's marijuana
decriminalization law have charged The Oregonian with
being a willful participant in the "War on Drugs" after
the paper ran an editorial endorsing recriminalization that
relied almost exclusively on a Drug Enforcement Administration
handout.
The May 3 editorial supporting the current legislative effort to
recriminalize marijuana in Oregon (H.B. 3643) stated that the
"marijuana available today is maybe 60 times as potent as
that of the 1960s." This statement is almost identical
to language that appeared in chapter one of a 1994 DEA pamphlet:
"Drug Legalization: Myths and Misconceptions."
Ironically, annual evidence gathered from the National Institute
on Drug Abuse's Potency Monitoring Project indicates that
marijuana potency has remained relatively stable for almost the
entire 20+ years it has been measured. According to a 1995
pamphlet from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
entitled Marijuana: Facts Parents Need to Know,
"Most ordinary marijuana has an average of 3 percent
THC." This is virtually the same figure that NIDA
reported in 1982 (3.34 percent).
The Oregonian editorial also relied heavily on the 1994
assumptions of Dr. Richard Schwartz of Georgetown University who
argued in an unpublished paper that marijuana decriminalization
encourages marijuana use. Schwartz's findings also appeared
in the DEA handout. However, according to the only
federal study ever conducted regarding the impact of marijuana
recriminalization on use (Monitoring the Future
Occasional Paper 13: Marijuana Decriminalization: The Impact on
Youth 1975-1980), Schwartz's assumption is incorrect.
The study's conclusions are as follows:
# The data show "absolutely no evidence ... of any increase,
relative to the control states, in the proportion of the age
group who ever tried marijuana."
# "The degree of disapproval young people hold for marijuana
use, to the extent which they believe such use is harmful, and
the degree to which they perceive the drug to be available to
them ... [was] found to be unaffected by
[decriminalization.]"
# There exists no evidence "of an increase in the frequency
of use in the marijuana-using segment of the population.
... In fact, both groups of experimental states showed a small,
cumulative net decline in lifetime prevalence as well as in
annual and monthly prevalence after decriminalization.
Prior to the May 7 editorial, The Oregonian also printed
a quote from Darin Campbell, lobbyist for the Oregon Association
Chiefs of Police, who falsely implied that Oregon was the only
state that maintains marijuana decriminalization. In
reality, 10 of the 11 states that decriminalized the possession
of small amounts of marijuana in the l970s continue to remain
decriminalized. These states presently represent one-third
of the U.S. population.
"What justifies such bias and misleading
sensationalism," asked Portland NORML activist Phil Smith, a
former writer for The Oregonian. "When will The
Oregonian stop begin part of the problem and start being
part of the solution?"
For more information, please contact Sandra Burbank of Mothers
Against Misuse and Abuse @ (808) 298-1031 or Richard
Cowan of The Medical Marijuana Magazine at
(213) 512-1527.
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