Updates from October, 2009

  • Get Up, Stand Up: Ammiano Introduces Marijuana Legalization Bill to the Press

    Richard James Rawlings 12:02 am on 10/16/2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: AB 390, Betty Yee, California, Judge James Gray, legal, , Tom Ammiano

    By Joe Eskenazi

    Monday, Feb. 23 2009 @ 11:21AM

    ammianoweed-little.jpg

    Assemblyman Tom Ammiano’s press conference this morning announcing his marijuana-legalization bill started punctually and stayed relentlessly on-point — thereby denying a barb to every journalist present.
    Ammiano and the assembled speakers at San Francisco’s State Building also spoke calmly and methodically, at one point being drowned out by a floor-waxer. The famously funny lawmaker reined himself in, presenting "The Marijuana Control, regulation and education act (AB 390)" as a simple matter of fiscal common sense. If you believe Ammiano and his straitlaced panel, it is. In a nutshell, here’s what the bill would do: "Remove all penalties under California law for the cultivation, transportation, sale, purchase, possession, and use of marijuana, natural THC and paraphernalia by persons over the age of 21," "prohibit local and state law enforcement officials from enforcing federal marijuana laws (more on that later)" and establish a fee of $50 an ounce on marijuana on top of whatever pot will cost in a legal future — which legalization advocates say is about half what it costs now. This tax rate figures at about a buck a joint.

    Ammiano addresses the crowd

    Betty Yee, the chairwoman of the Board of Equalization, called Ammiano’s proposal "a responsible measure on how to work out the regulatory framework of the legalization of marijuana." Her board’s research indicated $1.3 billion in tax dollars could immediately head into the state’s coffers from the fee on marijuana and the sales tax on medical pot. She figured the halving of marijuana’s street price would cause a consumption increase of 40 percent, but the $50 per ounce levy would cut use by 11 percent. Steve Gutwillig, the state director of Drug Policy Alliance, noted that regulatory measures like Ammiano’s bill can work: Teen smoking is way down, and he claims juveniles report it is easier to obtain marijuana than purchase smokes. "Marijuana arrests actually increased 18 percent in California in 2007 while all other arrests for controlled substances fell," he said. "This costs the state a billion dollars a year and taxpayers are footing the bill. Meanwhile, black marketers are laughing all the way to the bank."

    But the morning’s most forceful speaker was Judge James P. Gray, who retired from his 25-year post on the Orange County Superior Court six weeks ago. With his gray suit, tasseled loafers, and conservative salt-and-pepper haircut, he looked like central casting’s offering for "Republican candidate for higher office." Not surprisingly, Gray did run as a Republican for Congress against Bob Dornan and Loretta Sanchez and Senate vs. Bill Jones and Barbara Boxer. He now says he’s "not a politician — and I have the votes to prove it." "I served 25 years on the bench and I’ve seen the results of this attempted prohibition. It doesn’t make marijuana less available, but it does clog the court system," he said. "The stronger we get on marijuana, the softer we get with regard to all other prosecutions because we have only so many resources. And we at this moment, have thousands of people in state prison right this minute who did nothing but smoke marijuana."

    Gray noted that anyone who tokes up while out on parole can immediately be sent right back to prison, at great cost to the taxpayers. "You and I as adults can go home tonight and drink 10 martinis. It’s not a healthy thing to do but it’s not illegal. Someone who smokes marijuana and goes to bed risks jail," continued the judge. "I don’t smoke marijuana and if you legalized it today and gave it away at every street corner I’m still not going to. But the most harmful thing about marijuana today is prison – and also the most expensive. I take President Obama at his word – he said let’s look at what’s working and what is not, and jettison those programs that are not working."

    Obama also wrote in his autobiography that he did "a little blow" and Ammiano is hopeful the new president will look upon this issue differently than his predecessor (it warrants mentioning that those fighting against torture and rendition also hoped that – and were disappointed).

    Judge James Gray notes that quaffing 10 martinis is perfectly legal

    Ammiano told SF Weekly that he doesn’t expect his bill to pass "overnight," but doesn’t see it as merely a "placeholder." As far as superseding federal law, he pointed to a similar bill recently introduced in Congress by Rep. Barney Frank; hopefully the law of the land will change. If not, Ammiano hoped to exploit "fuzziness" regarding state and federal laws and the low priority this state has given to busting marijuana users entitled by Proposition 215.

    He predicted that, in these dire economic times, "support will fall all over" for his bill. Perhaps, perhaps not. But this much is certain: If Ammiano pulls this off, there’s a place for him reserved on the Mount Rushmore of Pot Gods, right between Cheech, Chong, and Bob Marley.

    http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2009/02/get_up_stand_up_ammiano_introd.php

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  • Marc Emery's Prison Potcast - Episode #2

    Richard James Rawlings 4:22 pm on 10/15/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , podcasts, ,

    By Cannabis Culture – Thursday, October 15 2009

    CANNABIS CULTURE – The Prince of Pot talks about life behind bars from his prison cell in Episode #2 of Marc Emery’s Prison Potcast.

     

    Download Potcast (Right Click and Save)

    Subscribe on iTunes

    In this episode, Marc brings listeners up to speed on conditions at North Fraser Pretrial, discusses the people he’s meeting on the inside, and talks prison politics.

    Emery, who is current locked up at the North Fraser Pretrial Centre, is awaiting extradition to the United States where he could serve a 5-year prison sentence after being targeted by the government for selling marijuana seeds over the Internet and using the money to fund activist organizations.

    Click here to read more about Political Prisoner Marc Emery.

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  • U.S. Farmers Plant Hemp In The DEA’s Front Yard

    Richard James Rawlings 3:55 pm on 10/15/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Farmers, ,

     

    http://www.youtube.com/user/votehemp

     

    Where to Go to Sow Protest? DEA Grass

    Activists Dig Into Symbolism in Effort To Legalize Hemp

    By David Montgomery

    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, October 14, 2009

    You want to dig a garden, you need a shovel. You want to dig a guerrilla garden of illegal hemp on the front lawn of Drug Enforcement Administration headquarters and get arrested for the cameras, you need a symbol.

    Shortly before they all were happily handcuffed Tuesday, the farmers took one look at what the activists had brought to dig with, and just shook their heads.

    The symbolic shovels were shiny, chrome-plated affairs, the kind for turning the earth in a Washington photo op, stamped with slogans: "Reefer Madness Will Be Buried." When the shovel blades were experimentally pressed into the mulch outside the group’s hotel, they bent like toys.

    "You’ll have a real hard time getting through the grass," observed Wayne Hauge, 51, a North Dakota farmer whose previous interactions with police amount to a ticket for driving an overloaded truck of lentils. "Not exactly the divot I was thinking of."

    But never mind.

    Time to leave for the demonstration, the protest, the blow against the empire of DEA regulations.

    They piled into a 1985 Mercedes-Benz painted the color of a Granny Smith apple. Its diesel engine had been converted to run on waste cooking oil supplied for free by a restaurant in Columbia Heights. For the adventure, Adam Eidinger, communications director for the advocacy group Vote Hemp and owner of the Mercedes, spiked the cooking grease with waste hemp oil. He was wearing pants, shirt, socks and shoes all made from hemp.

    The hemp mobile purred over the Potomac River on the road to Arlington.

    Farmers and activists say that industrial hemp, as they call it, will not get you high. It has minuscule levels of THC compared with marijuana. But unlike governments in Canada, Europe and China, the DEA will not allow it to be cultivated in the United States, much less on its own front lawn across from the Pentagon City mall. So the expanding industry, estimated at $360 million annually by advocates, is based on imports.

    Hauge has been certified to grow hemp by North Dakota. He thinks the crop will help his fourth-generation family farm thrive. He has a federal case on appeal to force the DEA to yield to the state law.

    Also in the car was Will Allen, 73, an organic sunflower and canola farmer from East Thetford, Vt. He has been arrested for protesting the Iraq war, he said. He wants to add organic hemp in rotation with his other crops.

    The other passenger, tall and lanky in a pinstripe suit with Alcatraz cuff links, was not a farmer. He was David Bronner, 36, president of Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps in Escondido, Calif.

    CONTINUED

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  • 'Timing is right' for hemp, state senator says

    Richard James Rawlings 10:30 am on 10/13/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ,

    Bill would promote plant’s use for fuel and fiber

    By Valarie Honeycutt Spears – vhoneycutt@herald-leader.com

    Within the next three weeks, State Sen. Joey Pendleton plans to take a group of Kentucky farmers to study the industrial hemp trade in Canada where the crop has been grown legally for the past 10 years.

    Pendleton, D-Hopkinsville, has introduced a bill for 2010, renewing a push to legalize industrial hemp in Kentucky as a cash crop and as a source for alternative fuels.

    "The timing is right," Pendleton said. "It would give farmers another crop to raise." Production of hemp is already legal for research purposes in Kentucky but is untried due to federal barriers.

    091008hemp016

    Mark Cornelison | Staff

    Margaret McCauley of Versailles holds hemp fiber used to make rope. She favors the renewal of hemp production in Kentucky.

    . 

    Pendleton’s bill comes at a time when federal legislation decriminalizing hemp for industrial use has been introduced in Congress and proponents are encouraged by stances taken by the Obama Administration.

    In Versailles, where the remnants of an old hemp processing plant still stand on property that Margaret McCauley’s family owns, McCauley said she hopes Pendleton is successful.

    "I think industrial hemp would do a lot for the farming community," said McCauley, who has preserved artifacts from decades ago when hemp was grown legally in Kentucky.

    McCauley said she hopes lawmakers won’t confuse industrial hemp with its controversial cousin, marijuana.

    Although industrial hemp comes from the same plant species as marijuana, industrial hemp does not have enough THC, the psychoactive chemical in marijuana, to produce the "high" marijuana users feel, proponents say. Hemp and marijuana look alike. But hemp is grown for fiber found in the stalk while marijuana is grown for leaves and flower buds.

    Industrial hemp is used in alternative automobile fuels and in such products as paper, cloths, cosmetics, and carpet.

    091008hemp056

    Mark Cornelison | Staff

    A hemp processing plant from around 1908 still stands on land owned by Margaret McCauley’s family in Versailles. She preserves artifacts from the era when hemp was legally raised in Kentucky

    Pendleton’s bill would require that individuals wanting to grow or process industrial hemp be licensed by the state Department of Agriculture. The legislation would require criminal history checks of growers and would require sheriffs to monitor and randomly test industrial hemp fields.

    The bill calls for an assessment fee of $5 per acre for every acre of industrial hemp grown, with a minimum fee of $150, to be divided equally between the state and the appropriate sheriff’s department.

    Phillip Garnett, a Christian County farmer, said he plans to go to Canada with Pendleton to investigate industrial hemp farming as a potential "new source of income and energy." Pendleton said he’d pay for his portion of the trip.

    Garnett who raises tobacco, corn, wheat, and soybeans, said he wants to know more about the economics before he would consider raising industrial hemp. But he said "I’m always looking for alternative crops, and it sounds like it makes sense."

    Because of current federal law, all hemp included in products sold in the United States must be imported.

    Federal law includes industrial hemp in the definition of marijuana, and prohibits American farmers from growing hemp.

    But the Industrial Hemp Farming Act, introduced in Congress in April by Reps. Barney Frank, D-Mass., and Ron Paul, R-Texas, would require the federal government to respect state laws allowing hemp production.

    Pendleton says he sees new hope that federal barriers will be lessened, pointing to positions taken by the Obama administration.

    In February, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said the federal government was going to yield medical marijuana jurisdiction to states. As a state lawmaker in Illinois, Barack Obama voted for a resolution urging Congress to allow the production of industrial hemp.

    In addition to production of hemp, research on hemp has been affected. A federal permit is required for industrial hemp research, Laura E. Sweeney, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Justice, said Friday.

    The University of Kentucky would probably grow industrial hemp for research if allowed in the future, said Scott Smith, dean of the UK School of Agriculture.

    When UK applied for a federal permit to grow a research plot of industrial hemp after Kentucky passed the 2001 law allowing analysis, the federal government denied permission, Smith said.

    Kentucky is one of eight states that allows hemp research or production.

    The federal government has given North Dakota State University permission to grow industrial hemp for research purposes under strict security measures, but money has been an issue.

    In Kentucky, a similar bill filed in the 2009 General Assembly by Pendleton was not given a hearing.

    But for 2010, state State Sen. David P. Givens, R-Greensburg, the chair of the Senate Agricultural Committee, said he is interested in seeing new economic studies.

    The most prominent studies on the profitability of industrialized hemp in Kentucky are a decade old. They reached conflicting conclusions.

    A study released in 1998 included work by researchers at UK’s Center for Business and Economic Research. It showed that had hemp production been legalized at that time, Kentucky would have benefitted, with farmers making profits of between $220 and $605 an acre.

    The returns would have fallen somewhere between tobacco and other crops that were already grown in Kentucky, the research showed.

    However, a study released in 1997 by the UK College of Agriculture did not find much of a market for Kentucky hemp.

    Smith, who served on an industrial hemp study commission convened by then Gov. Brereton Jones in the 1990s, remains skeptical of the potential profits from hemp.

    Givens said he is also interested in hearing from law enforcement officials, who have expressed misgivings in the past.

    Christian County Sheriff Livy Leavell Jr. said additional revenue for sheriff’s departments "would be a plus" and that he hoped members of the Kentucky Sheriff’s Association would take a close look at the legislation.

    Reach Valarie Honeycutt Spears at (859) 231-3409 or 1-800-950-6397, ext. 3409

    http://www.kentucky.com/latest_news/story/973092.html

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  • Mom-and-pop pot growers cut cartels’ profits

    Richard James Rawlings 3:26 pm on 10/08/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , cartel, , , Mexico, ,

    Mexican traffickers face economic battle as U.S. marijuana production rises

    By Steve Fainaru and William Booth

    updated 4:03 a.m. CT, Wed., Oct . 7, 2009

    Image: Marijuana eradication operation in the Angeles National ForestARCATA, Calif. – Stiff competition from thousands of mom-and-pop marijuana farmers in the United States threatens the bottom line for powerful Mexican drug organizations in a way that decades of arrests and seizures have not, according to law enforcement officials and pot growers in the United States and Mexico.

    L. A. Sheriff’s Dept. via AP

    This image provided by the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department shows a marijuana eradication operation on Sept. 12 in the Angeles National Forest near Los Angeles. Cultivation of marijuana, often by Mexican drug cartels, is rife in California’s national forests.

    Video

    State law boosts pot as a cash crop
    Jan. 21 – Mendocino marijuana expert and Grow magazine publisher Eric Sligh tours Northern California’s ‘Emerald Triangle,’ which has become a fertile site for entrepreneurs who are permitted to harvest a limited amount of marijuana.

    Learn more about how Mexican drug cartels are extending their reach farther into the U.S.

    Slideshow

    BLOODSHED IN JUAREZ

    Mexico under siege
    The death toll is spiraling throughout Mexico as a war between the country’s government and the drug cartels intensifies.

    Story continues

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  • Marc Emery's Prison Potcast - Episode #1

    Richard James Rawlings 2:54 pm on 10/07/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,

    By Cannabis Culture – Wednesday, October 7 2009

    FREE MARC EMERY

    FREE MARC EMERY

     

    CANNABIS CULTURE – Prince of Pot Marc Emery talks about his first week in jail in Episode #1 of Marc Emery’s Prison Potcast.

    Marc talks to Cannabis Culture Editor Jeremiah Vandermeer and discusses getting used to life behind bars, the hypocrisy of the Conservative Party of Canada, and some of his new creative projects.

    Emery, who is current locked up at the North Fraser Pretrial Centre, is awaiting extradition to the United States where he could serve a 5-year prison sentence after being targeted by the government for selling marijuana seeds over the Internet and using the money to fund activist organizations.

    Click here to read more about Political Prisoner Marc Emery.

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  • Prison Vigil for 'The Prince of Pot' Started Saturday,

    Richard James Rawlings 4:50 pm on 10/06/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , ,

    Source: http://www.cannabisculture.com

    A vigil for marijuana activist Marc Emery was held this Saturday, October 3, from 2-4pm at North Fraser Pretrial Centre, and continues every day until he is freed starting Monday.

    WHAT: Marc Emery Prison Vigil
    WHERE: North Fraser Pretrial, 1451 Kingsway Ave. Port Coquitlam
    WHEN: Every Day

    The vigil will take place at the jail for six hours each day. Some signs, banners, and information handouts will be provided. Those who plan to stay for a number of days will be compensated for their work. Please come out and show support for Marc and demand his freedom! Contact Jacob@JacobHunter.org to get involved.

    CLICK HERE to see a photo gallery of the Vigil on Cannabis Culture’s Flickr Page

    Marc Emery is a political prisoner, put behind bars by the Conservative government of Canada until he is handed over to American authorities to serve a 5-year prison term – all for using the funds from selling marijuana seeds to finance peaceful, democratic political groups. The US Drug Enforcement Administration admitted that it was political, as seen in the press release at http://www.NoExtradition.net

    Find out more about Marc Emery and his extradition to the US for selling marijuana seeds IN CANADA.

    Marc Emery is available for interviews from prison. Please contact Jodie Emery at 604-818-4201 to arrange an interview with Marc.

    For more information, contact Jacob Hunter, at 604-803-4085, or jacob@jacobhunter.org

    FREE MARC EMERY

    !North Fraser pretrial centre

    North Fraser pretrial centre

    http://www.cannabisculture.com/v2/content/prison-vigil-prince-pot-tomorrow

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  • Richard James Rawlings 1:02 pm on 10/05/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , David Malmo-Levine, David Malmo-Levine, , , , ,

    David vs. Goliath

    DML

    Pot activist David Malmo-Levine, founder of the Vancouver Herb School, has been slugging it out with Canadian authorities and fighting for plant freedoms in a B.C. courtroom.

    http://www.cannabisculture.com/v2/content/david-vs-goliath

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  • Legalize It!

    Richard James Rawlings 11:23 am on 10/05/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , ,

    A look at issues surrounding the law and marijuana

    http://www.foxnews.com/video/index.html?playerId=011008&streamingFormat=FLASH&referralObject=10301836&referralPlaylistId=playlist

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  • AMW – John Boone

    Richard James Rawlings 9:46 pm on 10/03/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , John Boone, Kentucky, , , , ,

    Johnny Boone an American Hero!!!

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