Updates from January, 2010

  • Richard James Rawlings 11:33 pm on 01/06/2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , ,

    Where do the Illinois governor candidates stand on medical marijuana?

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Candidates for Illinois governor cover a wide spectrum of opinions on allowing marijuana use for medical purposes.

    A+ Green Party candidate Rich Whitney backs general legalization of marijuana. He says he’d sign a bill to legalize medical marijuana as “a positive first step.”

    F- On the opposite end of the spectrum is Republican Sen. Bill Brady, who opposes any easing of rules on marijuana.

    “Yep the rules we have now are working so well…arresting nearly a million people a year and making criminals out of them for using a drug safer than alcohol. And making a lot of money for doing so!

    We the people need to stop the townships, cities, counties, states, and the Fed. Government from making money off non-violent people that just like to use marijuana!” Richard Rawlings

    F- To Republican Sen. Kirk Dillard, enforcement is the key. He opposes medical marijuana, saying authorities are concerned about how they will police the law.

    “Yep enforcement has worked well for us…In this almost 80 year old war (The longest running war in America’s history) we now have more marijuana, marijuana users, marijuana dealers, and more prisons than ever before in Illinois State history. If you want to make criminals out of people that are not, enforcing marijuana laws work great!” Richard Rawlings

    F- Andy McKenna, former Illinois Republican Party chairman, said he would have opposed legislation that legalizes medical marijuana.

    “Why Andy?” Richard Rawlings

    F- DuPage County Board Chairman Bob Schillerstrom opposes the idea because of what he cites as a lack of research.

    “Bob search the internet the research is in…marijuana for the most part is a harmless drug that helps our sick and dying! There are FDA approved drugs that thousands of people OD on every year! Not one person has died from a marijuana OD! Again Bob, Zero deaths from a THC overdose!” Richard Rawlings

    http://www.bnd.com/326/story/1072988.html

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
    Share This Post
     
  • 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

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)
    Share This Post
     
  • 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

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
    Share This Post
     
  • 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

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)
    Share This Post
     
  • 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!!!

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)
    Share This Post
     
  • Police Play Wii Bowling During Drug Raid (VIDEO)

    Richard James Rawlings 11:08 am on 09/22/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Nintendo, Nintendo Wii, Police Play Wii, Police Who Played Wii, Police Wii, Police Wii Drug Raid, Technology News, Video, Wii, Wtf

    First Posted: 09-22-09 07:45 AM   |   Updated: 09-22-09 08:03 AM

    New security camera video shows police officers in Florida bowling on a Nintendo Wii for hours during a drug raid at a suspect’s home.

    Tampa Bay Online has details:

    With guns drawn and flashlights cutting through darkened rooms, Polk County undercover drug investigators stormed the home of convicted drug dealer Michael Difalco near Lakeland in March.

    As investigators searched the home for drugs, some drug task force members found other ways to occupy their time. Within 20 minutes of entering Difalco’s house, some of the investigators found a Wii video bowling game and began bowling frame after frame.

    URL: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/22/police-play-wii-bowling-d_n_294405.html

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
    Share This Post
     
  • Marijuana Found at Michael Jackson's Home

    Richard James Rawlings 10:51 pm on 08/27/2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , diazepam, lorzaepam, , Michael Jackson, temazepam

    By Howard Breuer

    Originally posted Thursday August 27, 2009 07:20 PM EDT

    Michael Jackson Photo by: Carlo Allegri / Getty

    Marijuana Found at Michael Jackson's Home | Michael Jackson

    Marijuana and numerous empty drug bottles were found by police officers at Michael Jackson’s home shortly after he died, according to search warrants unsealed on Thursday.
    Two bags of marijuana, a bottle of temazepam (used to treat sleeplessness), empty bottles of the sedatives lorzaepam and diazepam were discovered during the search. They also found four other empty pill bottles with no indication as to what may have been in them.
    Detectives were concerned that, when Jackson died, he had "received injection of an unknown medication, prior to his death," the warrants say. Other documents revealed that Jackson’s doctor, Conrad Murray, had been giving the singer the anesthetic propofol intravenously.
    The search warrants were served on June 29, four days after the singer was pronounced dead at UCLA Medical Center, where Murray was less than forthcoming. Murray, according to documents, left the hospital "against the objections of the investigating officers" and they were not able to talk with him in the days that followed.
    The warrant also says that, on the day of Jackson’s death, as investigators were at the house, "family members of the decedent notified Los Angeles County Coroner’s Assistant Chief Ed Winter that they had located a quantity of tar heroin in [Jackson's] bedroom on the second floor of the residence. Winter notified LAPD detectives of the found evidence." There is no mention in the warrant if the evidence really turned out to be heroin.
    Winter told PEOPLE on Thursday that he cannot discuss the evidence or say when the results of Jackson’s autopsy will be revealed.

    http://www.people.com/people/package/article/0,,20287787_20300946,00.html

    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: 1.0/10 (1 vote cast)
    VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
    Rating: -1 (from 1 vote)
    Share This Post
     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
esc
cancel