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The Motherlode's Cannabis Information Headquarters. Calaveras Cannabis actively supports expanded Medicinal Marijuana use as a safe holistic alternative to countless ailments and supports the legalization of marijuana for all adults. Why do we drive people to drink when a safe natural non addictive substance is available? more

Friday, May 28, 2010

With Majorities Supporting CA's Marijuana Legalization Initiative, Victory Is in Grasp

Less than six months from election day, the CA initiative to legalize marijuana has the support of half the voters, according to two polls.
According to two different polls released last Wednesday, the Tax Cannabis California marijuana legalization initiative is ahead but not by much, making the path to victory in November a rough one. Both polls show the initiative winning, but just barely, and both polls show the initiative hovering around 50% support. On the other hand, polling also shows remarkably high support for the concept of marijuana legalization in some form -- especially when the word legalization is not used.

In an internal campaign poll, when voters read either the ballot measure's title or the attorney general's summary of it -- all voters will see when they cast their votes -- the initiative garners 51% and 52%, respectively, with opposition at 40%. In a Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) poll, 49% approved of the initiative, while 48% opposed it.

The standard wisdom among initiative veterans is that campaigns should begin with support around 60%. They argue that once a campaign begins, opponents will find ways to shave off percentage points, and if you are starting with only half the voters on your side, losing any support means you lose.

With such a tight margin, expect both proponents and opponents to be energized in the six months between now and the November vote. Initiative organizers have to be concerned with the narrowness of their lead, especially given that attacks on the whole notion of pot legalization in general and on specific provisions of the initiative will only mount between now and then.

Drug War Chronicle / By Phillip S. Smith at Alternet >>


Thursday, May 27, 2010

Oaksterdam U Goes Union

potlede.jpgThough we've never been in one ourselves, we gather that joining a union isn't all it's cracked up to be: you have to pay dues, hold signs outside of drug stores, and often run afoul of politicians and mainstream media when the going gets tough. But union membership can also be a strategic masterstroke, and a magic pill to salve bad news. This appears to be the case for "cannabis college" Oaksterdam University, where organized labor and the burgeoning marijuana industry are converging for - we believe - the very first time.

Last week it was revealed that Tax Cannabis 2010 - the ballot measure and brainchild of Oaksterdam founder Richard Lee - was polling at a dangerously marginal 50 percent. But that was without the pledged support of organized labor, which is now on Oaksterdam's side after 100 employees at the cannabis-centered business - which includes a cannabis dispensary and a plant nursery as well cultivation classes - turned in their union cards and joined Local 5 of the United Food and Commercial Workers, school and union officials confirmed Wednesday.

What's this mean for labor, and for the medical cannabis movement? It means at least in the eyes of union organizers, medical marijuana is legitimate and it's not going away any time soon (and any cannabis business would, of course, grow exponentially should adult recreational use be approved). UFCW won a major coup by securing the first-of-its-kind arrangement with Oaksterdam, which now can boast of connections and political clout it couldn't just last week.

"It's a very big deal," said Mike Henneberry, communications director for Local 5's Hayward office, the local shop for Oaksterdam, who said Oaksterdam's newly-minted union members turned in their cards about three weeks ago, at a ceremony oversaw by Oakland City Council member Rebecca Kaplan.

More at SF Appeal>>


LA Times Related Story: Workers at 3 Oakland marijuana businesses unionize>>

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

SLO Settles Medical MJ Lawsuit for $20,000


Full Story

A Los Osos woman has received $20,000 from the county after her medical marijuana was improperly destroyed by the Sheriff’s Department, her attorney said Tuesday.

San Luis Obispo lawyer Louis Koory said that his client, Kimberley Anne Marshall, 46, of Los Osos, filed a claim against the county after deputy sheriffs searched her home based on a probation search for her son.

Koory stated that deputies located the 18-month supply of marijuana in a locked closet and seized it; they later destroyed it after the District Attorney’s Office decided not to prosecute the case.

Marshall suffers from hepatitis, and back and lumbar injuries, Koory said. She’s qualified by state law to have up to six pounds of medical cannabis, he said.

The settlement amount represents the dollar amount for the roughly six pounds of medical marijuana that his client had, Koory said.

The sheriff received an order from Superior Court Judge Dodie Harman to destroy the cannabis, but Koory said Marshall had a constitutional right to recover her property.

Federal law prohibits possession of marijuana, while state law allows it for qualified recipients who use it for medical purposes.

“The sheriff destroyed the property while aware that no criminal charges would be filed and that (Marshall) had a physician’s recommendation for medical cannabis,” Koory wrote.

The Sheriff’s Department has yet to review the settlement offer and has asked for a review of the case, said Rob Bryn, the department’s public information representative.

Even so, the $20,000 was paid to Marshall on Monday, Koory said.



Monday, May 24, 2010

Alaska's Example: cirtually Legal Marijuana for 35 years

Warning, hope for state in Alaska pot protection

Kevin Fagan, Chronicle Staff Writer

If Californians want a glimpse of how the landscape might look should a November ballot initiative to legalize marijuana pass, they could turn north.

They would see complication. And a cautionary lesson. And maybe hope for those who want pot smoking legitimized.

For 35 years, it's been virtually legal in Alaska, with its fiercely frontier mentality, to smoke marijuana at home and grow small amounts there - currently up to 1 ounce - just as proposed in California's Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act.

It's the most liberal pot policy in the nation, made that way under a 1975 Alaska Supreme Court ruling that said that what a person does in his home is protected under an unusually strong privacy provision in the state's Constitution.

Both sides look to Alaska

Californian advocates point to Alaska as proof that pot can be legal for recreational use with no catastrophic consequences to society. Opponents counter that the state has long had one of the highest substance abuse rates in the nation.

"Alaska's been a big social laboratory for 30 years, and we've shown that there has been no big crime surge because of marijuana use in the home," said Bill Parker, 65, one of the founders of Alaskans for Rational Marijuana Policy, a group formed this month to push for full legalization of pot.

"I think it's a great example for California."

A former state legislator and a retired deputy state prison commissioner, Parker said he regularly smokes marijuana. But his group's argument for stripping away the core remaining regulations against pot in Alaska goes further than simple enjoyment.


Snipped from SF Chronicle>>

Sunday, May 23, 2010

A look back at Hemp History Week

Let U.S. farmers grow hemp! This is the battle cry of those who recognize the value and history of hemp and lament the fact that domestic farmers have been unable to legally grow it for over 50 years. In an effort to change this, Vote Hemp and the Hemp Industries Association have announced May 17-23, 2010, as Hemp History Week, a time when patriotic Americans are encouraged to anchor and organize events in their hometown as part of a national grassroots, media and public education campaign about hemp.

Contrary to popular belief, hemp is not marijuana. At least not Cannabis sativa L., the kind that has been grown worldwide for food and industrial purposes for thousands of years. A look back at American history reveals that hemp was also widely grown and used by early Americans.

To set the record straight, cannabis sativa L. has no drug value. Its seed contains no tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive component of marijuana. Cannabis sativa L. will not cause a person who consumes it to test positive on a drug test. It is a completely different plant than the marijuana plant.

As far as functionality, there are literally thousands of uses for hemp. Its seed and oil are powerful superfoods and its fiber is useful in a host of various textile applications. For example, hemp is used to make clothing and paper, and is also used in composite door paneling, fiberboard and concrete foundations.

For food, hemp seeds are a rich source of highly-digestible essential fatty acids (EFAs), or omega-3s. In fact, they contain a perfectly balanced omega-6/omega-3 ratio of 1:3, which many believe is perfect for the human body. Hemp seeds have a nutty flavor similar to that of pine nuts, and they can be used in all sorts of food applications.

Hemp oil is delicious and nutritious as well. Unlike flax and fish oil, hemp oil is rich in Super Omega-3 Stearidonic Acid (SDA) and Super Omega-6 Gamma Linolenic Acid (GLA) which together help to reduce inflammation and improve mental functionality. These also assist in improving the metabolization of necessary fatty acids.

As opposed to cotton, which accounts for nearly 25 percent of the world's pesticide use in order to grow it, hemp requires no pesticides or agricultural chemicals in order to thrive. It is an entirely non-toxic, renewable resource that actually helps to suppress weeds and regenerate soil naturally. It is a favorite among farmers who use it as a rotation crop.

Back in the early days of America's founding, hemp was a commonly grown and used resource. America's hemp heritage includes the following little-known facts...

More at Natural News>>

Friday, May 21, 2010

Latest Poll: 49% Favor Legalization


49% of California voters back legalizing pot, poll finds

With 48% opposed, legalization effort faces a difficult challenge, pollster says.

May 20, 2010|By John Hoeffel, Los Angeles Times

Californians likely to vote in November are evenly split over whether to legalize marijuana, with only a small percentage of the electorate still undecided about the controversial issue, according to a poll conducted last week by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California.

The poll, which surveyed 1,168 likely voters, found that 49% think marijuana use should be made legal, 48% do not and 3% do not know, suggesting that the proponents of the legalization measure will have to wage an expensive and persuasive campaign.

Mark Baldassare, the institute's president and pollster, said the results show the legalization campaign faces serious challenges: "It's always hard to start out when you're not even at 50%."

The Tax Cannabis 2010 campaign, which sponsored the initiative, also released a poll Wednesday that found a similar level of support for the measure among registered voters, but with a much higher percentage undecided. Conducted earlier this month by an independent firm, the survey showed 51% of 800 voters support the initiative, while 40% oppose it and 9% are undecided.

"All the polls continue to show that voters remain interested in replacing a failed policy with a more honest, commonsense solution," said Dan Newman, a campaign spokesman.

More at LA Times>>

Marc Emery - Prince of Pot - On U.S. Soil


VANCOUVER -- Vancouver's Prince of Pot, Marc Emery was extradited Thursday morning to the United States for selling marijuana seeds by mail to U.S. customers.

Emery, 51, has allegedly been selling marijuana seeds over the internet and shipping them to the U.S since 1994. He was arrested in 2005 after Canadian and American authorities found that he was distributing seeds to the U.S. and was associated with illegal growing operations in multiple states including Indiana, California, Florida and New Jersey

Emery is facing a plea-bargained five-year prison term. He will appear in court Monday in a change of plea hearing.

Vancouver Sun >>

Protests Organized by Cannabis Culture >>

Thursday, May 20, 2010

News Blunts from May 20

Obama Moves to Imprison Unimpaired Drivers

If you smoked marijuana last week or even last month and you drive a car, you may be sent to prison under new guidelines drafted by the federal government.

The Obama administration released its National Drug Control Strategy guidelines last week. The federal government wants all of the states to adopt its authoritarian and draconian diktat and expand the drug war. From the guidelines:

More at Prison Planet >>


Martinez Works on Dispensary Regulations
MARTINEZ — Martinez has had an ordinance on the books for 10 years that allows medical marijuana dispensaries, but has never approved one. In response to Police Chief Tom Simonetti's call for a ban, the Public Safety Subcommittee has been crafting a less restrictive ordinance, with significant input from groups hoping to open a dispensary.

Residents who use medical marijuana have complained about having to travel to Oakland or Berkeley to get their medicine.

The draft medical marijuana ordinance would change the permit for a dispensary from a conditional use permit, tied to the property, to a nontransferable license. The license would be valid for one year and would be eligible for annual renewal.

Other key provisions of the proposal include criminal background checks for licensees, requirement for on-site security personnel and cameras and set hours of operation. The draft ordinance also would ban on-site consumption; and prohibit dispensaries from opening within 1,000 feet of schools, churches with schools or day care centers, facilities serving young people or another dispensary. Dispensaries would have to be located in commercial zoning districts no closer than 300 feet to residential parcels.

Snipped From SJ Mercury - More >>


Marijuana May Extend Life of Lou Gehrig’s Disease Patients

By Paul Armentano

Cannabis therapy may reduce symptoms and prolong survival in patients diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS aka Lou Gehrig’s disease), according to a scientific review published online last week by the American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Medicine.

Investigators at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle and Temple University in Pennsylvania reviewed preclinical and anecdotal data indicating that marijuana appears to treat symptoms of ALS as well as moderate the course of the disease.

Authors wrote: “Preclinical data indicate that cannabis has powerful antioxidative, anti-inflammatory, and neuroprotective effects. … Cannabis also has properties applicable to symptom management of ALS, including analgesia, muscle relaxation, bronchodilation, saliva reduction, appetite stimulation, and sleep induction. … From a pharmacological perspective, cannabis is remarkably safe with realistically no possibility of overdose or frank physical addiction. There is a valid, logical, scientifically grounded rationale to support the use of cannabis in the pharmacological management of ALS.”

They added, “Based on the currently available scientific data, it is reasonable to think that cannabis might significantly slow the progression of ALS, potentially extending life expectancy and substantially reducing the overall burden of the disease.”

Investigators concluded, “There is an overwhelming amount of preclinical and clinical evidence to warrant initiating a multicenter randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of cannabis as a disease-modifying compound in ALS.”

More at Opposing views>>

U.S. Must Wean Law Enforcement from Marijuana Arrest Addiction

By George Rohrbacher, Member, NORML Board of Directors
Opinion
by NORML


In America since 1965, there have been 21 million arrests for marijuana, 9 out of 10 for quantities of an ounce or less. Over 800,000 were arrested for pot last year, with people of color and the young being arrested and incarcerated in hugely disproportionate numbers. Under current Washington State law, if arrested for possession of even the tiniest amount of cannabis, a person faces a mandatory night in jail, handcuffs, mugshots, fingerprints, and a criminal record that, thanks to the internet and data-mining, might follow a person for the rest of their life.

The Mexican Cartels have murdered tens of thousands of people in their own country and now their violence is spilling over the boarder into America. Sales of marijuana in the US are estimated to account for half of the Cartels’ revenue stream. By simply legalizing pot, by taking the business and the profits of marijuana out of the hands of these criminals, taxing and regulating cannabis would be a devastating blow to organized crime. And at the same time, regulation would ensure our citizens that standards of purity and potency had been met.

California, Oregon and Washington have all had marijuana legalization initiatives filed this year. California’s initiative already has enough signatures to qualify for the ballot, and recent polling of likely voters found that 56% plan to vote, “Yes”, on the measure come November. California’s Board of Tax Equalization has estimated that the legalization of cannabis will bring $1.4 billion in new tax revenues to the state’s cash-strapped municipalities.

This month, a Pew Charitable Trust poll found that 73% of all Americans are in favor of legal access to marijuana as medicine. Used as medicine for over 4,500 years, the DEA’s own Chief Administrative Law Judge, Francis L. Young ruled: “Marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man…” Without even holding a hearing, and over the objections of the American Medical Association, all uses of cannabis were outlawed by Congress in 1937. Since California’s passage of Prop 215 in 1996, 14 states have now taken back their medical marijuana rights from the Feds. Much safer than aspirin (gastric bleeding, death) or Tylenol (liver damage, death), marijuana is safer than virtually every other over-the-counter and prescription medicine for sale in America. Cannabis is also far safer, as a recreational drug, than either the very speedily deadly alcohol or the slowly lethal tobacco. Marijuana is not only safer for the individual, but it is safer for the society, too. A Seattle Police Sgt. patrolling Seattle Hempfest’s cannabis-imbibing 100,000 person crowd told me, “…compared to the crowds coming out of Safeco or Quest field after a game, patrolling Hempfest is like patrolling a Girl Scout picnic.”

Through my own recreational use, I discovered marijuana the all-natural non-toxic pain medicine with far less severe side-effects than the prescription alternatives. I believe cannabis should be legal for medical, recreational, food and fiber uses. Cannabis should be legal for American farmers to grow. If cannabis is legal for all, sick people will be able to get it. Ending this prohibition, America must also wean law enforcement from its 70-year-old marijuana arrest addiction. Cannabis use didn’t turn either Michael Phelps or Barack Obama into a couch potato or a loser. It’s time to legalize it. Tax and regulate marijuana…Now.

George Rohrbacher is a retired cattle rancher, former WA state senator (R), former Commissioner of Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, currently serving on the NORML Board of Directors (For additional information please review the titles of two of the blogs I’ve written for the NORML blog: “Confessions of a Medical Marijuana Patient” and “Marijuana Prohibition and Fatherhood”)

This essay was originally published in the Peninsula Daily News on May 4th.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Tax Cannabis Q & A Wednesday!

There will be a live online "Open for Questions" event tomorrow -- Wednesday, May 19 -- at 5:30 p.m. with campaign spokesperson Dale Clare.

You can watch the event live at www.taxcannabis.org/live or on Facebook at http://apps.facebook.com/taxcannabis/live.

To receive a reminder about the event tomorrow, simply click here.

We hope you can join us for tomorrow's live discussion!



Rand Paul Wins Senate Primary!

KENTUCKY: In a victory for the Tea Party and libertarian ideals over the left leaning G.O.P. establishment, Rand Paul has won the Republican primary for the Senate defeating G.O.P. favorite and party liner Trey Grayson.

Paul, a 47-year-old Bowling Green eye surgeon, had never before run for office and is the son of former presidential candidate U.S. Rep. Ron Paul.

Why is this being hailed on a cannabis blog? These are some quotes by the forward thinking gentleman:

Paul Criticized The Gonzalez v. Raich Decision Which Allows For Federal Enforcement Against California Medicinal Marijuana Crops. “But from those decisions we kept widening and widening, and now we have sort of the Gonzalez v. Raich decision where they say, California wants to allow medical marijuana, and the federal government comes in and says, ‘Oh no, that defies the commerce clause also because that marijuana looks like other marijuana that could be sold interstate.’ So therefore even though you’re growing it, your own plants and using it for medicinal uses, that that somehow qualifies as interstate commerce.”(AntiWar.com’s “Antiwar Radio With Scott Horton,” www.youtube.com, 5/15/09)

On the Drug Enforcement Administration: “I Would Favor A More Local Approach To Drugs.”

“Paul said that on federal drug laws, he believes ‘most policies of crime and punishment should be and are addressed at the state level.’ He wouldn’t say if the U.S. laws should be done away with or if the Drug Enforcement Administration should be disbanded, but he said, ‘I would favor a more local approach to drugs.’” (Joseph Gerth, Op-Ed, “Can Paul Win Kentucky Senate Race?” The [Louisville, KY] Courier-Journal, 10/19/09)

On Marijuana Legalization: “It’s a state issue"

WASHINTON WIRE: So do you think drugs should be legalized? RAND PAUL: “It’s a state issue. All issues of crime are better addressed at the state level.” (Peter Walsten, “Q&A with Rand Paul,” Wall Street Journal’s Washington Wire Blog, 11/12/2009)


Congratulations Mr. Rand Paul!

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

ABC Debate: Marijuana Legalization

ABC News Twitter Cast - Legalization Debate featuring Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive Director
part 1: http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/vide...alize-10669238

part 2: http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/vide...alize-10669269

part 3: http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/vide...alize-10669334

part 4: http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/vide...alize-10669366

Washington Legalization initiative gains ground

The statewide legalization of marijuana is the subject of a proposed initiative in Washington state that, if the necessary requirements are met, will be on the ballot in November.

As read from the initiative itself, “This measure would remove state civil and criminal penalties for persons 18 years or older who cultivate, possess, transport, sell, or use marijuana. Restrictions and penalties for persons under 18 would be retained.”

Initiative 1068 is officially sponsored by the group Sensible Washington and was co-authored by Seattle attorneys Doug Hiatt and Jeffrey Steinborn, Vivian McPeak, founder of Seattle’s Hempfest, Ric Smith, Cannabis Defense Coalition spokesman and former Seattle Weekly contributor Philip Dawdy, who also serves as the movement’s campaign director.

“We waste about $100 million a year enforcing outdated marijuana laws,” Dawdy said. “Considering the harmlessness of the substance we’re talking about, the state is really wasting a lot of money.”

Dawdy stated that if passed into law, I-1068 would also allow farmers to grow hemp and would clean up medical marijuana laws, which he believes “are a disaster.”

In order for this initiative to be on the ballot in November, a statutory requirement of 241,153 signatures from citizens who are registered to vote by July 2 is needed, though Sensible Washington has set a goal of approximately 320,000 signatures to make up for invalid signatures.

“My boss has not authorized me to give the exact number of signatures we have, but I can tell you we’re about one-third of the way there,” said Dawdy. “We’re positioned right where we want to be; most signatures come in June.”

More at the Olympian>>

Marijuana legalization leads all candidates in Colorado!

Poll: Marijuana Legalization Tops All Colorado Gubernatorial and Senate Candidates

According to a statewide poll released this week by Rasmussen Reports, marijuana legalization is more popular in Colorado than any of the candidates running for governor and the U.S. Senate.

According to Rasmussen, a full 49 percent of Coloradans support legalizing and taxing marijuana, and only 39 percent think it should remain illegal. With the remaining 13 percent undecided, these new numbers might give a likely new legalization ballot measure this year some real ammunition.

Marijuana legalization -- 49%

Senate
Jane Norton (vs. Bennet) -- 48%
Ken Buck (vs. Bennet) -- 48%
Tom Wiens (vs. Romanoff) -- 45%

Governor
Scott McInnis (vs. Hickenlooper) -- 47%
John Hickenlooper (vs. McInnis) -- 41%

Snipped from the Huff!>>

Friday, May 14, 2010

A 40 years, $1 Trillion dollar Failure: The Drug War

Fox: After 40 years, $1 trillion, US War on Drugs has failed to meet any of its goals

MEXICO CITY (AP) — After 40 years, the United States' war on drugs has cost $1 trillion and hundreds of thousands of lives, and for what? Drug use is rampant and violence even more brutal and widespread.

Even U.S. drug czar Gil Kerlikowske concedes the strategy hasn't worked.

"In the grand scheme, it has not been successful," Kerlikowske told The Associated Press. "Forty years later, the concern about drugs and drug problems is, if anything, magnified, intensified."

This week President Obama promised to "reduce drug use and the great damage it causes" with a new national policy that he said treats drug use more as a public health issue and focuses on prevention and treatment.

Nevertheless, his administration has increased spending on interdiction and law enforcement to record levels both in dollars and in percentage terms; this year, they account for $10 billion of his $15.5 billion drug-control budget.

Kerlikowske, who coordinates all federal anti-drug policies, says it will take time for the spending to match the rhetoric.

"Nothing happens overnight," he said. "We've never worked the drug problem holistically. We'll arrest the drug dealer, but we leave the addiction."

His predecessor, John P. Walters, takes issue with that.

Walters insists society would be far worse today if there had been no War on Drugs. Drug abuse peaked nationally in 1979 and, despite fluctuations, remains below those levels, he says. Judging the drug war is complicated: Records indicate marijuana and prescription drug abuse are climbing, while cocaine use is way down. Seizures are up, but so is availability.

"To say that all the things that have been done in the war on drugs haven't made any difference is ridiculous," Walters said. "It destroys everything we've done. It's saying all the people involved in law enforcment, treatment and prevention have been wasting their time. It's saying all these people's work is misguided."

In 1970, hippies were smoking pot and dropping acid. Soldiers were coming home from Vietnam hooked on heroin. Embattled President Richard M. Nixon seized on a new war he thought he could win.

"This nation faces a major crisis in terms of the increasing use of drugs, particularly among our young people," Nixon said as he signed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act. The following year, he said: "Public enemy No. 1 in the United States is drug abuse. In order to fight and defeat this enemy, it is necessary to wage a new, all-out offensive."

His first drug-fighting budget was $100 million. Now it's $15.1 billion, 31 times Nixon's amount even when adjusted for inflation.

Using Freedom of Information Act requests, archival records, federal budgets and dozens of interviews with leaders and analysts, the AP tracked where that money went, and found that the United States repeatedly increased budgets for programs that did little to stop the flow of drugs. In 40 years, taxpayers spent more than:

— $20 billion to fight the drug gangs in their home countries. In Colombia, for example, the United States spent more than $6 billion, while coca cultivation increased and trafficking moved to Mexico — and the violence along with it.

— $33 billion in marketing "Just Say No"-style messages to America's youth and other prevention programs. High school students report the same rates of illegal drug use as they did in 1970, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says drug overdoses have "risen steadily" since the early 1970s to more than 20,000 last year.

— $49 billion for law enforcement along America's borders to cut off the flow of illegal drugs. This year, 25 million Americans will snort, swallow, inject and smoke illicit drugs, about 10 million more than in 1970, with the bulk of those drugs imported from Mexico.

— $121 billion to arrest more than 37 million nonviolent drug offenders, about 10 million of them for possession of marijuana. Studies show that jail time tends to increase drug abuse.

— $450 billion to lock those people up in federal prisons alone. Last year, half of all federal prisoners in the U.S. were serving sentences for drug offenses.

At the same time, drug abuse is costing the nation in other ways. The Justice Department estimates the consequences of drug abuse — "an overburdened justice system, a strained health care system, lost productivity, and environmental destructiBlockquote

on" — cost the United States $215 billion a year.

Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron says the only sure thing taxpayers get for more spending on police and soldiers is more homicides.

"Current policy is not having an effect of reducing drug use," Miron said, "but it's costing the public a fortune."

More at Fox News>>

Obama's ever expanding drug war

Obama Drug Policy Calls for Drugged Driving
Charges for Unimpaired Marijuana Users


More tax and spend gimmicks -

From the Obama Administration's recently released National Drug Control Strategy (hat tip to NORML reader Glen):

Encourage States To Adopt Per Se Drug Impairment Laws [ONDCP]

State laws regarding impaired driving are varied, but most State codes do not contain a separate offense for driving under the influence of drugs (DUID). Therefore, few drivers are identified, prosecuted, or convicted for DUID. Law enforcement personnel usually cite individuals with the easier to prove driving while intoxicated (DWI) alcohol charges. Unclear laws provide vague signals both to drivers and to law enforcement, thereby minimizing the possible preventive benefit of DUID statutes. Fifteen states have passed laws clarifying that the presence of any illegal drug in a driver's body is per se evidence of impaired driving. ONDCP will work to expand the use of this standard to other states and explore other ways to increase the enforcement of existing DUID laws.


Here are the states President Obama would like the others to emulate:


1. Arizona: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites, mandatory 24 hours jail, up to 6 months upon conviction.

2. Delaware: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites.

3. Georgia: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites, mandatory 24 hours jail, up to 12 months upon conviction.

4. Illinois: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites, up to 12 months upon conviction.

5. Indiana: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites, up to 60 days upon conviction.

6. Michigan: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites, up to 93 days upon conviction, vehicle immobilization for up to 180 days.

7. Nevada: 15 ng/ml for cannabis metabolites.

8. Ohio: 15 ng/ml for cannabis metabolites, mandatory 72 hours in jail, up to 6 months upon conviction, 6 month to 3 year license suspension.

9. Pennsylvania: DUID for cannabis metabolites, amount unclear.

10. South Dakota: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites for persons under the age of 21.

11. Utah: Zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites, mandatory 48 hours jail, up to 6 months upon conviction.


Nine of the fifteen states cited have "zero tolerance for cannabis metabolites". What this means is that if the inactive (read: non-impairing) THC metabolite (THC-COOH) is detected in the urine of a driver, that driver is impaired in the eyes of the law. (There are actually 17 states that have per se DUID laws, but Iowa, Minnesota, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Virginia, and Wisconsin exclude metabolites of cannabis.) Nevada and Ohio have 15 ng/ml levels which are very low; most workplace pre-employment screenings set the initial screening limit at 50 ng/ml. At the confirmation level of 15 ng/ml, the frequent cannabis user will be positive for perhaps as long as 15 weeks.

Of course, faithful NORML readers and most of the public know that cannabis metabolites can remain detectable in the urine for up to 100 days or longer for a regular cannabis consumer and up to fifteen days for the casual consumer, even after quitting cold turkey. Metabolites in urine don't tell you a driver is actually impaired, they tell you someone used cannabis, but not when. Even the US Department of Transportation admits that a positive test for drug metabolites is "solid proof of drug use within the last few days, it cannot be used by itself to prove behavioral impairment during a focal event."

More at huffington post >>

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Prohibitionists Hold Anti-Reform Campaign Event on Public Dime

Law enforcement officials from all over the nation have descended upon San Diego, California this week to attend a conference for the National Marijuana Initiative (NMI) and the California Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP). We’ve been pointing out the futility of marijuana “eradication” campaigns like CAMP and NMI for years but don’t expect conference attendees to spend any time rethinking their failed prohibitionist policies while enjoying their stay in sunny San Diego.

The agenda for the publicly funded conference, held at the prestigious U.S. Grant Hotel from May 10 through May 13, is not available to the public. In fact, the conference is under the close guard of about a dozen San Diego Police officers and even some military personnel.

We do know that former U.S. Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey was a featured speaker. According to his press release, McCaffrey laid out talking points against California’s Tax Cannabis 2010 initiative. That’s right, your tax dollars are essentially being used to hold an anti-reform campaign rally behind closed doors.

There’s also no doubt that conference attendees are patting themselves on the back for their work in the largest and most expensive weed abatement project of all time. Since 2003, CAMP’s marijuana plant seizures have grown by 500% but nevertheless have had no effect on marijuana’s availability or cost, which has actually decreased slightly since CAMP’s inception in 1983. Programs like CAMP are actually making matters worse by driving illegal marijuana operations deeper into harder-to-reach and environmentally sensitive areas on our public lands.


More at Marijuana Policy Projected >>

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Just another casualty in the criminal war on drugs

It's certainly not the worst crime committed in the name of the war on drugs.

That title probably belongs to the countless innocent people killed in botched raids. Or the police officers who died in pursuit of the impossible. Or the lives lost to easily preventable overdoses, adulterations, and blood-borne diseases. Or the funding handed on a silver platter to thugs, terrorists, and guerrillas, like those killing our soldiers in Afghanistan. Or the civil liberties eroded, the corruption fostered, the chaos spread. Or maybe it belongs to the hundreds of billions of dollars governments have squandered in a mad, futile, and destructive crusade.

Next to all that, the extradition of Marc Emery to the United States is no great travesty.

Emery is the Vancouver activist who has spent most of his life campaigning for the legalization of marijuana. To fund his efforts, he ran a little seed company similar to thousands of other little seed companies, except when Emery's seeds were put in soil, watered, and given sunlight, they grew into cannabis plants.

Showing rare good sense, Canadian officials decided that prosecuting a man for selling the seeds of a common plant is not a public priority. In effect, they permitted Emery's business, and others like it, to operate. Health Canada officials were even known to direct those licensed to possess medical marijuana to Emery, so patients could grow their own medicine in the kitchen window.

But such modesty and pragmatism smacks of heresy to the holy warriors of prohibition. Verily, the plant is Evil unto the last seed.

In 2005, Emery was arrested by Canadian police acting at the behest of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Innocent Americans had been lured into purchasing Emery's wicked wares, the DEA alleged.


More on this pathetic event at Ottawa Citizen >>

D.C.'s medical marijuana law has problems but is a step in the right direction

Thursday, May 13, 2010

The risk with the District's new medical marijuana law isn't that the city will become another California with hundreds of pot shops and doctors who'll approve it for people feeling just jittery or blue. Instead, the worry is that the statute is so restrictive there won't be enough legal weed to meet demand.

Fearful that Congress might kill the law, the D.C. Council approved what cannabis advocates say is probably the least-permissive measure in the country.

No growing at home. Only five to eight "dispensaries" to sell it. Licensed cultivators are limited to 95 plants. They have to grow indoors, which means smaller plants.

The limits could mean that people with ailments such as cancer and multiple sclerosis would have to use the black market to get marijuana for relief from nausea, muscle spasms and other symptoms.

Other controversies are likely. Competition will be fierce among would-be pot entrepreneurs eager for lucrative licenses to operate dispensaries or grow plants. Unsettling r?sum?s will abound, such as from big operators outside the state and local people who've been in the business illegally for years.

"They're calling wondering, who do I need to grease? Who do I need to show our support to?" said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws.


More at Washington Post>>

How Cannabis Works - BBC Documentary

This is a very interesting BBC documentary on how cannaboids work.


Evidence Missing in the Jay Smith Case?

Jay Smith, represented by Ean Vizzi, was held to answer in Calaveras Superior Court by Judge James E. Cadle, finding probable cause that Jay Smith of San Andreas committed felony distribution, possession for sales, and cultivation of marijuana charges. His next hearing is June 7 at 9:00 am in Dept 1 before Hon. John E. Martin.

We are still seeking further details on exactly what transpired in the court room.

At this point we have several reports that District Attorney Seth Mathews admitted to the defense that several pieces of evidence, including recordings and photographs in the case were lost. Deputy Steve Avila, the lead investigator in the case admitted such on the stand. It is also reported the Vizzi grilled Avila on his knowledge of the law and his training on the medical marijuana subject and Avilla admitted to having little training and never having read several key pieces of information on the subject, such as the Attorney General's Guidelines on Medical Marijuana.

Anyone who was there may email me information at calaverascannabis@gmail.com or simply post it here.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Obama firmly opposes legalizaton


"When I was a kid I inhaled frequently. That was the point" Barack Obama

The Obama administration said Tuesday that it "firmly opposes" the legalization of any illicit drugs as California voters head to the polls to consider legalizing marijuana this fall.

The president and his drug czar re-emphasized their opposition to legalizing drugs in the first release of its National Drug Control Strategy this morning.

"Keeping drugs illegal reduces their availability and lessens willingness to use them," the document, prepared by Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske, says. "That is why this Administration firmly opposes the legalization of marijuana or any other illicit drug."

President Barack Obama has repeatedly expressed opposition to legalizing illicit drugs, though California voters could buck the federal government when it comes to legalize pot.

Voters in the state are set to take up a ballot initiative this fall that would legalize the drug under state law for recreational use. The measure has being sold as a way to close the state's massive budget gap, since the drug would be taxed and regulated for Californians over the age of 21.

More at The Hill >>

Medical Pot Shops Firebombed

Two medical cannabis businesses were firebombed in Billings, Montana in the days leading up to a city council vote on a medical pot moratorium. The two attacks, which took place early Sunday and early Monday, were nearly identical. In each case a rock was used to break the store windows and a bottle filled with gasoline was lit and tossed inside. Additionally, in each case the arsonists spray-painted the message “Not in our town” on the storefronts.

More at Hightimes.com >>

Monday, May 10, 2010

A pathetic day in US History: Prince of Pot Extradited



Canada's 'Prince of Pot' ordered extradited to US

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — The lawyer for Canada's so-called Prince of Pot said Monday that his client has been ordered extradited to the United States.

Marc Emery has sold millions of marijuana seeds around the world by mail over the past decade, drawing the attention of U.S. drug officials, who want him extradited to Seattle.

Emery's lawyer, Kirk Tousaw, said Canada's Minister of Justice Rob Nicholson signed off on his extradition shortly after the marijuana advocate turned himself in on Monday to authorities.

The justice minister's spokeswoman, Carole Saindon, would not comment on the order or the timing of his surrender, saying only that Emery has the option of a court appeal of the order.

The department said Emery's extradition was sought on charges of conspiracy to manufacture marijuana, conspiracy to distribute marijuana and conspiracy to engage in money laundering.

Emery reached a plea deal with U.S. prosecutors last year, agreeing to plead guilty to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana in return for a sentence of five years in prison.

The charges are in connection with his Vancouver, British Columbia-based seed-selling business.

Emery's wife, Jodie Emery, said she was appalled that the Canadian justice minister would order the extradition.

"It's the worst option. We didn't even entertain it as an option," she said. "I'm just stunned."

She accused Nicholson of wanting "to silence the most vocal opponent of the drug war."

Marc Emery has long maintained that the prosecution was politically motivated in the U.S. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has repeatedly denied that.

More of this story at AP >>




CannabisCulture.com: It's Official: Conservatives Extradite Marc Emery


CANNABIS CULTURE - The extradition order to send marijuana activist Marc Emery to the United States for an expected five-year prison term has been signed by the Canadian Minister of Justice, Rob Nicholson.

Cannabis Culture has learned that Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party of Canada made their decision shortly after Emery turned himself in to Canadian authorities this morning: The Prince of Pot will be handed over to the United States for selling marijuana seeds over the Internet.

READ THE JUSTICE MINISTER'S LETTER CONFIRMING HIS DECISION (PDF)

"I am absolutely devestated that this Conservative government has opted to send my husband, a Canadian citizen, to the United States for a 'crime' that amounts to a $200 dollar fine in Canada," said Marc's wife Jodie Emery. "This case is about silencing my Husband for his marijuana activism. This Conservative government has declared a culture war in Canada and my husband is it's latest victim."

Marc spoke to reporters outside of the downtown Vancouver Law Courts before turning himself in, and said orders to extradite him would be the equivalent of outsourcing our justice system. He said he hopes some good comes from his imprisonment.

"If he sends me away, it will anger millions of Americans and millions of Canadians," he told the press. "I need them to be angry, otherwise we won’t get any change on this drug war."

Marc's lawyer and fellow marijuana activist Kirk Tousaw told Cannabis Culture that in all likelihood, Marc would be sent south across the border by the end of the week where he will eventually appear before a sentencing judge. Marc is expected to be sentenced to five years as part of a plea deal arranged with American prosecutors.

More at CannabisCulture>>

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Preliminary hearing for Calaveras medical marijuana collective operator: Mon Dept 3 @ 1:30 Gvmt Center

CALAVERAS: The most significant medical marijuana case to be heard in Calaveras County and perhaps the entire Motherlode in a over a decade begins in earnest Monday. Jay Smith is facing felony distribution, possession for sales, and cultivation of marijuana charges. His preliminary hearing is set to be heard in Department 3 before retired San Joaquin County visiting judge Hon. James E. Cadle at 1:30 pm. The defense has filed a brief asserting Smith's rights under state law as a medical marijuana patient and collective grow operator. The defense outlines statutory and case law and requests case dismissal. The defense has also filed a motion to compel the District Attorney to provide discovery, contending that the prosecution is failing to provide copies of the evidence in this case. No response by the DA was filed as of last week.

At the preliminary hearing, the prosecution must show that there is probable cause to believe that a crime was committed and probable cause that Smith likely did committed that crime. If the judge agrees with the prosecution, the case will be bound over for trial and the defendant held to answer to the charges.

Click below to view a complete summary of the case.

Hannity and Former New Mexico governor and potential presidential candidate Gary Johnson's thoughts on marijuana legalization. A refreshing true conservative.


Abuse of power in police killing of two dogs

National organizations have turned their focus on Columbia after the widespread circulation of a video showing a February raid of a southwest Columbia home.

COMPLETE COVERAGE

For more on the February SWAT raid, please visit our complete coverage page.

Video: Police video of the Feb. 11 SWAT raid

Online discussions have gained the attention of groups with political and social agendas against the “war on crime” and Special Weapons and Tactics, or SWAT, policy. The video was released to the Tribune a week ago in response to a public records request.

Advocates with Students for a Sensible Drug Policy — a national organization with a University of Missouri chapter — have taken notice of the Feb. 11 raid of Jonathan Whitworth’s home, where a SWAT team found a misdemeanor amount of marijuana and shot two dogs, one fatally. Associate Director Jonathan Perri said the war on crime is a failure because of the violence associated with the illegal activity of distributing marijuana. The legalization of the drug would take the criminal aspect out its distribution, he said.

“By making it illegal, you are making it criminal,” Perri said. “If a local liquor store breaks a law, you are not going to see a SWAT team raid the place and kill a dog. … You still have the alcohol abuse but don’t have people killing each other over it.”

David Borden, the executive director of Americans for Swat Reform, said his organization’s philosophy is that SWAT teams should be used rarely. SWAT’s participation in the execution of search warrants, he believes, is an abuse of authority.

Video of raid and more info at Missouri Trib>>

Illinois House Could Vote on Medical Marijuana This Week

An Illinois state Rep says he's close to having enough votes to pass a medical marijuana bill.

State Representative Lou Lang says he's secured 56 of the 60 votes he needs.

LANG: Interestingly, there are close to 90 members of the House who tell me they hope the bill passes, but many of them don't have the intestinal fortitude it takes to vote for this bill, although I don't understand why.

Dan Linn is from the Illinois Cannabis Patients Association. He says many sick people could benefit from marijuana.

More at Chicago Public Radio>>

Manteca adopts unconstitutional medical marijuana guidelines

Maggie Gutierrez was concerned that Manteca’s new laws restricting marijuana use would make it illegal for her husband to get the only “medicine” that has been effective at easing pain from a severe back injury that used to keep him bed ridden.

Larry Teunissen was worried that the new city laws would make it impossible to grow medicinal marijuana in his back yard.

City leaders Tuesday assured those who are complying with Proposition 215 won’t be impacted with Manteca’s move to prohibit pot dispensaries from opening up within the city limits as well as rules designed to prevent medicinal marijuana growers form becoming victims of criminals when they grow their own pot.



The ordinance stipulates:

• only allow qualified patients, persons with medical identification cards, and primary caregivers to cultivate medical marijuana.

• such marijuana must be cultivated inside a secured, locked and fully enclosed structure that includes side walls, a ceiling, and roof. No outdoor cultivation will be permitted within the city limits.

• A maximum of 12 plants with a maximum of six mature plants will be allowed unless a collective cultivation is allowed under an extensive set of rules outlined in the ordinance including the concern being non-profit and not within 1,000 feet of any residential district, school, recreation center, or youth center.

• Smoking of medical marijuana will not be allowed any place smoking is prohibited by law, in or within 1,000 feet of the grounds of a school, youth center, or recreation center (unless the use is for medical purposes within a residence), on a school bus, or while in a motor vehicle or boat that is being operated.

The full article at Manteca Bulletin>>


CalaverasCannabis Note:

The California Supreme Court unanimous ruled People v. Kelly, striking down what it considered unconstitutional legislative limits on how much medical marijuana patients can possess and cultivate.

Obviously, Manteca's ordinances are likewise unconstitutional.

On Mothers Day: Moms4Marijuana

Activists enlisting moms for legalizationpush
By KRISTEN WYATT, Associated Press Writer

DENVER – Moms got tougher drunk-driving laws on the books and were directly responsible for passing and then repealing alcohol Prohibition. Now marijuana activists are trying to enlist the nation's mothers in legalization efforts with a sales pitch that pot is safer than booze.

The nation's largest marijuana legalization lobby recently started a women's group. The Moms4Marijuana website draws thousands. And just in time for Mother's Day, a pot legalization group in Denver has created a pink-carnation web card asking moms to support legalization.

These marijuana moms argue that pot is no worse than alcohol, that teens shouldn't face jail time for experimenting with it and that marijuana can even help new mothers treat postpartum depression.

"I know so many mothers who support this but aren't willing to come out and say it," said Sabrina Fendrick, head of the Women's Alliance at the Washington-based National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML.

Marijuana activists say they need more moms to publicly back pot use if they are to succeed with public officials.

"The mother is the first teacher, who you turn to for direction in life," said Serra Frank, a 27-year-old mother of two in Boise, Idaho, who founded Moms4Marijuana in 2005. It has no formal membership, but Frank says its website has had more than 12,000 visitors.

More at Yahoo! News>>


CityWise: Oakland officials lining up in favor of pot legalization

OAKLAND — City Attorney John Russo last week endorsed the state's ballot initiative to legalize marijuana, and the City Council seems poised to do the same soon.

Californians this November will vote on a measure that would legalize adult use and personal cultivation of marijuana. Russo called it an overdue change in the state's policy on marijuana.

"What we've been trying to do is fight a raging fire with a watering can," Russo said. "The better way is to cut off the oxygen."

Marijuana remains outlawed by the federal government. But Russo and others compare the ban on the drug to the country's failed prohibition against alcohol, saying it emboldens criminals dealing California's largest cash crop.

"You don't see anyone running across the border with a six pack" of beer, said Mauricio Garzon, a campaign coordinator working for the passage of the initiative. "You don't see people shooting people (over alcohol) in Chicago like you did during Prohibition."

Garzon said Russo is the state's first city attorney to back the measure publicly, though he said the campaign expects others will come forward soon and do the same. A number of retired law enforcement officials also support the measure.

More at insidebayarea.com>>

Federal Ruling May End Goverment Marijuana Lies

The Most Important Court Decision You Never Heard Of ..

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has quietly affirmed the ability of the public to hold their government accountable. Specifically, the court effectively held that agency decisions under the Data Quality Act (aka the Information Quality Act) are subject to judicial review.

The DQA gives affected persons to right to "seek and obtain" correction of information disseminated by federal agencies which does not meet OMB's standards for quality, objectivity, utility and integrity."

The most immediate implication of the decision may be for the Americans for Safe Access medical marijuana DQA case pending in the 9th Circuit.

More at Watchdog.org>>

The Governments Annual Epic Failure: CAMP - planning meeting this weekend



This week, from May 10-13 at the U.S. Grant Hotel in San Diego state and federal troopers begin planning for the annual epic failure "Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP)".

To fail as miserably as they do every year to eradicate marijuana takes some of the top minds in law enforcement. That is no small task. The remarkable part, is each year they succeed in failing worse than they did the previous year.

You know, at least you guys get to wear cool hats and costumes.




which has failed annually since 1983 to achieve its stated goal: reducing cannabis use and availability by "eradicating" illegal grow sites.

Could marijuana save California?

In the 60s hippies fled to the backwoods of northern California to grow pot. There they have been joined by growers of 'medical marijuana' – available with a doctor's recommendation – as well as by Mexican drug cartels. With cannabis now its largest cash crop, the state will soon vote on whether to legalise it fully – and even Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is thinking the enormous tax revenues might just solve his budget deficit…

'When I see that, it's like looking at a shed full of cows. I see a whole lot of work," says Jim Hill, opening the little gate into his humid greenhouse in which a forest of marijuana grows, and from which a pungent, heady scent exudes at gale force. Not work as in hard labour, emphasises Hill – though there is a bit of that – but expertise growing some of the most potent weed on the planet.

Nearby there are vineyards and horses graze the sun-stroked farmland, but this verdant hillside near the town of Potter Valley in northern California lies in an area called the Emerald Triangle: three counties bordered by mountains to the east and the Pacific to the west that connect the lyrical terrain north of San Francisco with the wilderness of the Oregon state line. This breathtakingly beautiful corner of earth is the marijuana capital of the western hemisphere thanks to three conspiring factors: its perfect climate; the pervading culture; and topography – this is a maze of mountain dirt roads, locked access gates, isolated villages, secluded slopes and wooded glades, far from prying eyes.

More at Guardian.co.uk>> (also a great pic!)

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Preliminary hearing for Calaveras Medical Marijuana collective operator set for Monday

The most significant medical marijuana case to be heard in Calaveras County and perhaps the entire Motherlode in a over a decade begins in earnest Monday. Jay Smith is facing felony distribution, possession for sales, and cultivation of marijuana charges. His preliminary hearing is set to be heard in Department 3 before retired San Joaquin County visiting judge Hon. James E. Cadle at 1:30 pm. The defense has filed a brief asserting Smith's rights under state law as a medical marijuana patient and collective grow operator. The defense outlines statutory and case law and requests case dismissal. The defense has also filed a motion to compel the District Attorney to provide discovery, contending that the prosecution is failing to provide copies of the evidence in this case. No response by the DA was filed as of last week.

At the preliminary hearing, the prosecution must show that there is probable cause to believe that a crime was committed and probable cause that Smith likely did committed that crime. If the judge agrees with the prosecution, the case will be bound over for trial and the defendant held to answer to the charges.

Click below to view a complete summary of the case.

Friday, May 7, 2010

High Times: World Hemp Expo - Coming Memorial Day Weekend!

Judge rules San Jose can threaten landlords of dispensaries

A judge on Friday ruled San Jose officials may continue to threaten landlords of medical marijuana cooperative with fines of up to $2,500 daily, a practice that has resulted in the eviction of at least one cannabis club.

Although Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Kevin Murphy ruled against the medical marijuana collectives, citing a lack of sufficient evidence to issue a ban on city officials from sending the letters, he did not throw out the case entirely. Murphy will listen to arguments from both sides at a hearing June 25.

The two San Jose medical marijuana collectives that filed the lawsuit, claiming the city's practice of threatening landlords of pot clubs with fines and citations is a violation of state law, viewed the decision as a victory. Their attorney, J. David Nick, said the city sought to have the lawsuit thrown out completely.

"We maintain the city's actions are unlawful," said attorney J. David Nick, who represents two San Jose collectives. "State law contradicts what they are doing."

San Jose's code enforcement office has sent threatening letters to the landlords of 20 dispensaries, resulting in the departure from the premises of the city's first, San Jose Cannabis Buyer's Collective. Another cannabis collective, Pharmer's Health Center Cooperative, is facing an eviction hearing May 13.

"The city hates these people," Nick said. "They will do what it takes to run these people out of town."

But City Attorney Rick Doyle said it is not San Jose's intention to drive out all the cooperatives, but instead to focus attention to "shops that are clearly a nuisance." He said the city has received complaints about some of the cooperatives, including their proximity to schools and residential areas, parking issues, and kids hanging out near the shops.

"Those are the ones we'll put on notice," Doyle said.

More at San Jose Mercury>>

The Man Behind Legalization - Richard Lee

Man behind California pot initiative is a force in 'Oaksterdam'

May. 4, 2010 - 12:00 am |

For much of his life, Richard Lee needed neither liberation nor a cause.

The Oakland medical pot entrepreneur, who spent $1.3 million to qualify this November's initiative to make recreational pot use legal in California, once lived for thundering his Harley-Davidson motorcycle down Texas highways.

His father, Bob Lee, said his son used to ride to a Houston airport, climb into an ultralight airplane and soar above the rice fields, "playing tag with the seagulls."

Lee's close friend Kurt Calivoda, with whom he worked in a Houston stage lighting business, remembers a wiry, athletic man "who could climb on anything."

No more.

Lee, 47, was paralyzed in a fall 20 years ago. Today, he's emerged as the unlikely protagonist in a marijuana legalization push that is changing California's cultural and political landscape.

He now surges forward in a wheelchair, pumping hard in fingerless gloves through an Oakland business district dubbed "Oaksterdam." He is credited with reviving the area with a medical pot network born from California's 1996 initiative legalizing medical marijuana use.

Combined, he said, his Oaksterdam University marijuana trade school, a medical marijuana dispensary, coffee shops and other businesses generate $5 million a year.

Read more at SacBee.com >>

Thursday, May 6, 2010

A message from the Judge: The Honorable Jim Gray

Dear Friend,

I served as a Superior Court judge in Orange County for 25 years, so I was on the front lines of California's war on cannabis for a long time.

Here's what I learned:

California simply can't afford to continue to waste hundreds of millions of dollars and countless hours of law enforcement time targeting non-violent cannabis consumers who have hurt no one.

That's why I strongly support the Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010.

In order to spread the word about the November initiative, I've recorded a one-minute video called "Prioritize." I hope you'll take a moment to watch it -- and just as importantly, share it with your friends and family.

Click here to watch the video!

Watch the video!

It isn't every day that conservative columnist George Will and liberal pundit Arianna Huffington agree on something. But they do agree that our war on cannabis has failed. That's because no matter what political lens you look through, it's crystal clear that our current cannabis policies are wrong.

Our police waste countless hours targeting and arresting non-violent cannabis consumers. Those arrested are then sent to court, where judges waste countless hours hearing their cases and sentencing them. Then they wind up in jail, where we waste hundreds of millions of dollars incarcerating them.

On top of this, we have thousands of people in state prisons simply because they smoked marijuana while on parole. This often puts their families back on welfare when they are placed back in prison.

Yet none of this stops anyone from consuming cannabis. It doesn't make our communities safer. It just doesn't make sense.

California has an historic opportunity in November to change all of this. We've got to seize it.

Please take a moment to watch my short video -- and then forward this email to your friends and family.

I'm optimistic that we can win in November, but only if we get active and educate California voters about the initiative.

Sincerely,

Judge Jim Gray (ret.)
Proponent, Control & Tax Cannabis 2010

Donate today!


3662 Marijuana Plants Erradicated in Calaveras

COPPEROPOLIS: Calaveras narcotics officers eradicated nearly 3,700 plants in an isolate grow located in the area of Copperopolis. Judging by the time of year, we speculate these must have been fairly new plants. Deputies speculate that Mexicans Nationals were cultivating the garden.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

The Big Talk? Feel Good Movie of the Year

It's All About Drug War Money: Humboldt accepts Federal Eradication Grant

For the cops, the drug war begins and ends with money for enforcement. Whenever you hear a law enforcement officer talk about the "evil" marijuana, their point of view is fueled by the money they get. As reported:

Humboldt
county officials have said that federal money for marijuana eradication is of value to the community and the enforcement it buys will continue to be necessary even if marijuana is legalized.

At its April 20 meeting, the Board of Supervisors unanimously voted to accept a $170,000 grant from the federal Drug Enforcement Agency to help pay for the county’s marijuana law enforcement efforts. The grant covers a year that will include a statewide vote on whether to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana.

Sheriff Gary Philp said that if the marijuana legalization measure passes this November, police agencies will still have a role. And he likened legalization to the current situation with medical marijuana.

“(The measure) is very specific, that it will be up to the counties and cities to define what the laws are,” Philp said. “That kind of puts us in the position we’re at right here today – although it could become legalized, it would have limitations on its use.”

More at Arcata Eye>>

To law enforcement, the drug war is about money. In November vote, because it is your money and rights that they want.

Tehama Approves Pot Garden Fee
Tehama County Supervisors Tuesday approved a $40 registration fee required for medical marijuana gardens.

Unfortunately for Tehama, if this is challenged, it will not hold up in court. Tehama has no authority to modify a voter approved amendment and there is no provision in Prop 215 to allow a county to require a permit to cultivate.

In November Tehama County can support the Tax Cannabis Act 2010 - If approved, that amendment will allow us to put the Marijuana industry to work for our stressed county coffers.


Cash Crop: The Golden State Gone Green
All the chatter today is about the upcoming release of Cash Crop: The Golden State Gone Green, by film producer-director Adam Ross of Sierra Films. This full length feature documentary takes a close up look at the worlds 6th largest economy, California, and our largest cash crop - Marijuana. This film takes you on the road from the Mexican border to the Emerald Triangle and the Green Queen Mendocino County. A remarkable state wide enterprise at 35 Billion dollars strong.

This movie is definitely promising to be the feel good movie of the year and begs the question, wasteful prohibition or can we harness this crop?



Berkeley looking to Tax Medical Marijuana
It looks like Berkeley is joining Sacramento in seeking to tax the booming medical marijuana industry. This speaks volumes towards the Tax Cannabis 2010 act. While some contend that you cannot tax the marijuana industry, locality after locality, using sensible regulations are doing exactly that. A press release from the Berkeley City Council states in part:

The council will (vote) on whether to approve language for a ballot measure for Nov. 2010 to amend the Business License Tax Ordinance to tax certain medical cannabis uses.

City Attorney Zach Cowan has suggested that one way to balance the city's current deficit is to increase the business tax on medical cannabis dispensaries from 1.12 percent to 1.8 percent, which is expected to bring in $330,000 in 2011.


D.C. finally to join the 14 other Medical Marijuana states
It has been a long road for Washington D.C. It took 10 years for the U.S. Congress to approve a referendum overwhemingly supported. Tuesday, following a green light from the feds, Washington D.C.'s City Council approved Medical Marijuana. It now goes to the desk of Mayor Adrian Fenty, where he is expected to sign it into law. A great day!




Illinois Lawmakers struggle with Medical Marijuana
This is why this needs to be a people's issue you you need to vote!:

While lobbying at the Illinois State Capitol on Monday, supporters of legislation that would legalize the medical use of cannabis in Illinois said they hoped it would be voted on before the week’s end.

Dan Linn, executive director for the Illinois Cannabis Patients Association, was in Springfield on Monday to begin a weeklong effort to gain state legislators’ support for the bill.

Although he was uncertain, Linn – who has been advocating for the legalization of medical cannabis for seven years – said he hoped the House would vote on the bill this week, and was “cautiously optimistic” about the bill’s passage.

The Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Pilot Program Act, as the bill is titled, has been in the Illinois House since May 27 of last year after barely passing through the Senate with a 30 to 28 vote. Almost one year later, the bill’s chief sponsor, Rep. Lou Lang, D-16, said he is close to having a majority but does not yet want to put it up for vote in order to prevent the bill from failing.

“I believe I’m a couple of votes short, and I don’t intend to call it for a vote until I think I have those votes,” he said.

More at the Daily Illini>>


L.A. Orders closure of 439 medical marijuana dispensaries
Los Angeles city prosecutors began notifying 439 medical marijuana dispensaries Tuesday that they must shut down by June 7, when the city's ordinance to regulate the stores takes effect. It's the first step in what could be a lengthy and expensive legal battle to regain control over pot sales.

The letters, which were sent to both dispensary operators and property owners, warn that violations of the city's laws are a misdemeanor and could lead to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine. Collectives that stay open after the deadline could also face civil penalties of $2,500 a day.

More at LA Times >>