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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF
MARIJUANA LAWS
1001 CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW
SUITE 1010
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
TEL 202-483-5500 * FAX 202-483-0057
E-MAIL natlnorml@aol.com
Internet http://www.norml.org/
... a weekly service for the media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
January 18, 1996
U.S. Supreme Court To Review Double Jeopardy Case
January 12, 1996, Washington, DC:
The United States Supreme Court has agreed to review the case
that has virtually halted civil forfeitures across the country
and resulted in thousands of convicted individuals asking courts
to vacate their convictions.
In United States v.
$405,089.23 in U.S. Currency, the Court of Appeals for the
9th Circuit ruled that civil forfeitures constitute punishment
for the purpose of double jeopardy. Soon thereafter, courts
across the country were flooded with petitions from inmates
claiming that they had been punished by civil forfeiture and
demanding that their convictions must be vacated. Consequently,
prosecutors throughout the nation have been besieged with
litigation which requires that they defend cases they thought
they had already won.
Criminal forfeiture statutes allow the government to simply
combine the forfeiture and the criminal prosecution in the same
case. However, civil forfeitures are preferred by the
government because the property owner is presumed guilty and
because prosecutors have the added benefit of impoverishing the
property owner as he or she faces a criminal prosecution.
Should the Supreme Court affirm the 9th Circuit's decision, even
in part, many convictions and civil forfeitures will have to be
undone.
Both the government and the property owners urged the Supreme
Court to take this case to resolve a host of issues which have
arisen in the 6 years since the Court ruled in 1989 that civil forfeiture
could be considered punishment for double jeopardy purposes.
For more information on civil forfeiture, please contact
counsel for the property owners: Jeffrey Steinborn (206)
622-5117, or Jeffrey Finer (509)455-3700.
Exiting Drug Czar Takes "Pot" Shot At New Hemp Shoe
January 13, 1996, Washington, DC:
The name of Adidas' new hemp-based sneaker has fallen under
staunch criticism from exiting drug czar, Lee Brown. In a
January 5 letter addressed to Adidas America President Steven
Wynne, Brown asserts that the product's brand name -- "The Hemp"
-- was specifically chosen to glorify and capitalize on the drug
culture. "On behalf of the children of
America...," Brown writes, "I call upon you not to
market [this] shoe."
In response to the drug czar's sharp reproach, Wynne answers that
the shoe's brand name was chosen simply as a way to call
attention to the industrial material used to construct the
shoe. "Adidas ... is working to produce products that
are environmentally responsible," responds Wynne.
"One such material is hemp. ...Consistent with this
direction, we have produced a shoe using hemp. ..."
... [Furthermore,] products made from fiber hemp, including our
shoes have no drug qualities. I don't believe you will
encounter anyone smoking our shoes anytime soon."
This past Friday, Brown shot off a second letter to Wynne,
chastising the "sarcastic" tone of his previous
response and again repeating his demand that Adidas find another
name for its shoe. "What the shoe is made of is not
the problem," Brown counters. "The problem is
what you call it. ...I do not think it is in the goal of
curbing drug abuse to imply that drugs are cool."
Adidas spokesman John Fread says the company has not yet decided
whether it will respond to Brown's latest letter. The
controversial Adidas shoe hit stores in December, but has not yet been
publicly advertised.
For more information on the uses of industrial hemp fiber,
please contact Allen St. Pierre of NORML @
(202) 483-5500.
Florida Schools To Consider Drug Testing Students
January 12, 1996, Fort Myers, FL:
The Lee County school board is considering whether to impose
random drug tests on its entire upper level student body as a way
to deter teen drug use. The proposed tests would be given
regardless of reasonable suspicion and would extend to all students
in middle and high school. School board members intend to
decide on the issue before the next school year.
"I think there is a [drug] problem," board member Pat
Riley told the Fort Myers News Press. "When I mention
it to students, they jokingly say: 'There goes the whole
basketball team, or the whole football team.' I don't think
that's funny.
Lee County school officials note that the schools already undergo
random searches by drug dogs of students' lockers, although few
drugs have been found. Nevertheless, Superintendent Bobbie
D'Alessandro states that results of a survey of 5,000 Lee County
high school students demonstrate that there is a drug problem.
For more information on student drug testing, please contact
either Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of NORML
@ (202) 483-5500.
Clinton Administration Close To Naming New Drug Czar
January 17, 1996, Washington, DC:
Army Lt. Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey is a leading contender to be the
nation's next drug czar, reports a recent story in The Washington
Post.
The Post article quotes an unnamed senior administration official
who said McCaffrey is "looking good" for the
position. McCaffrey is one of the country's most decorated
generals and in the past has taken a hard-line stance against
drugs. He recently criticized the United States' current drug
interdiction efforts during a public forum at the Heritage
Foundation, a Washington DC Republican think-tank.
Many political analysts speculate that appointing a tough,
no-nonsense military figure to head the federal "war on
drugs" would be a wise strategic move for the Clinton
administration, which has often been criticized for appearing
"soft" on the illegal drug issue.
If McCaffrey is selected for the position, he would be the
nation's fourth drug czar, after William Bennett, former Florida
governor Bob Martinez, and Lee Brown.
San Francisco D.A. Refuses To Charge Drug Offenses Under The Three Strikes Law
January 17, 1995, San Francisco, CA:
The city's new top prosecutor will not charge nonviolent crimes,
such as drug offenses, under the state's tough three strikes law.
A drug violation is "not something someone should be going
to prison for 25 years for," says District Attorney Terence
Hallinan. The Associated Press reports that drugs are
involved in 63 percent of the three strikes cases in San
Francisco.
Hallinan's office is currently working out the details of his
more lenient policy.
For more information on mandatory minimum sentencing, please
contact Julie Stewart at Families
Against Mandatory Minimums @ (202) 457-5790.
NORML Chapter To Run Month Long Hemp Exhibit
January 15, 1996, Norman, Oklahoma:
University of Oklahoma NORML will be running a month long hemp
exhibit in the display case of the Norman (OK) Municipal Public
Library starting on February 1.
Initially, the NORML chapter's request to gain access to the
display case was denied by library management. UO NORML
challenged this decision and contacted the ACLU alleging that the library
was engaging in discrimination. Library officials
eventually consented last summer following the ACLU's involvement
and UO NORML President Eric Copenhaver reports that the scheduled exhibit
will be taking place next month as planned.
For more information on the Norman Municipal Library hemp
exhibit, please contact Eric Copenhaver of University of Oklahoma
NORML @ (405) 366-7610.
-END-
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