Drug Policy Forum of Kansas: Useful Election Information and More
October 25, 2006
October 25, 2006
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE : OCTOBER 26, 2006 Event Punishment: The U.S. Record Punishment: The U.S. Record
A Social Research Conference at The New School on Thursday, November 30 and Friday, December 1, 2006 Blog You Canât Spell âPotentialâ Without PotThey said marijuana causes cancer, but now weâve learned that THC may prevent it. They said marijuana makes you sterile, but today I learned that it can increase fertility. Event Medical Marijuana Panel: Amendment 44 and Low-Income PatientsâMedical Marijuana Panel: Amendment 44 and Low-income Patients,â featuring Sensible Coloradoâs Brian Vicente, renowned I-100 âTest Caseâ defendant Damien LaGoy and other patients. This free event is at noon on Wednesday, November 1 at the University of Denver Law School, room 125.
Chronicle Web ScanLegalization, prison overcrowding, forfeiture, initiatives, more...
In The Trenches Senate Staff Briefing - Friday, October 27, 2006 - The 20-Year Legacy of Crack & Powder Cocaine SentencingSenate Staff Briefing - Friday, October 27, 2006 - The 20-Year Legacy of Crack & Powder Cocaine Sentencing
Sponsored by the Justice Roundtable
Friday, October 27, 2006
12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.
226 Dirksen
Event THE 20-YEAR LEGACY of CRACK & POWDER COCAINE SENTENCING: Senate Staff BriefingSenate Staff Briefing Sponsored by the Justice Roundtable
Friday, October 27, 2006
12:00 â 1:00
226 Dirksen
(Bring your brown bag lunch)
On October 27, 1986 President Ronald Reagan signed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986. The lawâs mandatory penalties for crack cocaine offenses are the toughest ever adopted for low-level drug offenses. A defendant convicted with five grams of crack cocaine (the weight of less than two sugar packets) is subject to a five-year mandatory minimum sentence. The same five-year penalty is triggered for powder cocaine only when the offense involves 500 grams, 100 times the minimum quantity for crack. Twenty years later it is time to re- evaluate the implications of this law and determine whether the lawâs application reflects Congressâs intent in 1986 when the legislation was enacted. Panelists will discuss the effects of the legislation on drug abuse and public safety, as well as a range of proposals for reform.
Chronicle Editorial: A Grim AnniversaryToday marks a grim anniversary in US drug policy, the enactment 20 years ago of unjust federal mandatory minimum sentences.
Event RESTORING JUSTICE - The Crisis of Incarceration and the Journey of Re-Entry: The Faith Community RespondsLEARN ABOUT THE CRISIS, HOPEFUL POSSIBILITIES FOR CHANGE and
WHAT YOU and YOUR CONGREGATION CAN DO!!
Opening Speaker: Dr. James A. Forbes, Jr., Senior Minister of The Riverside Church
Additional Key Presenters (list not complete):
Latest News
Chronicle Europe: Belgian MP Joins Growing Cannabis Social Club MovementEurope's nascent Cannabis Social Club movement gained a prominent new face this week when a Belgian Member of Parliament signed on.
Chronicle Canada: Supreme Court Overturns Conviction of Medical Marijuana ActivistCanada's Supreme Court on Thursday threw out the conviction of medical marijuana activist Grant Krieger because of a judge's overreaching jury instructions.
Chronicle Web ScanMandatory Minimum Reports, Election Guides, More...
Chronicle Feature: Nail-Biting Time for South Dakota's Medical Marijuana InitiativeWith November 7 drawing near and drug warriors on the campaign trail, prospects for South Dakota's medical marijuana initiative are "iffy."
Blog Survivor of the Arkansas bi-partisan corruption cesspool running for governorSam Smith's Progressive Review summarizes the beguiling story http://prorev.com/2006/10/fading-days-of-asa-hutchinson.htm of Barry Seal, a major cocaine smuggler who operated undisturbed in Mena, Arkansas while Asa Hutchinson was the Republican United States Attorney and Bill "Vacuum Cleaner Nose" Clinton was Governor.
Chronicle Feature: Lowest Law Enforcement Priority Marijuana Initiatives Face the Voters in Five CitiesThree California cities and one in Arkansas have lowest law enforcement priority marijuana initiatives on the ballot. We check in to see how they're doing as the final countdown begins.
Chronicle Weekly: This Week in HistoryEvents and quotes of note from this week's drug policy events of years past.
Chronicle Feature: The Next Prohibition? Poll Finds Nearly Half of Americans Favor Banning CigarettesA poll released Thursday finds that nearly half of Americans support making cigarettes illegal.
Blog 13,000 JointsThat's what a South Dakota sheriff just told me you could get from one marijuana plant. Hmmm, if a joint is somewhere between one-half gram and one gram, that comes to somewhere between 6,500 and 13,000 grams, or 15 to 30 pounds.
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