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Police Raid Innocent Couple Because Their Son Had a Misdemeanor Marijuana Charge
Radley Balko has the details of yet another ridiculously excessive drug raid, this time in Carroll County, MD. From the victim:
As awful as that sounds, itâs actually worse. The kid a) didnât even live there anymore, and b) had already been to court for the marijuana charge. What they were they doing raiding his parents? Itâs just absurd. Whoever signed that warrant should be fired, if not jailed for reckless endangerment.
And if thatâs not enough, it appears that Carrol Countyâs judges have been signing warrants like this routinely. Sounds like a good reason to pass legislation requiring better documentation of drug raids in Maryland.
After reviewing the search warrant I was horrified to realize these "hut-hut" men came in with M-16s in the middle of the night because my son had been arrested for a misdemeanor marijuana charge. The affidavit filed for the search warrant stated that "it had been the officerâs experience that persons who are arrested with illegal drugs continued to use, abuse and/or distribute illegal drugs". This was the probable cause.
As awful as that sounds, itâs actually worse. The kid a) didnât even live there anymore, and b) had already been to court for the marijuana charge. What they were they doing raiding his parents? Itâs just absurd. Whoever signed that warrant should be fired, if not jailed for reckless endangerment.
And if thatâs not enough, it appears that Carrol Countyâs judges have been signing warrants like this routinely. Sounds like a good reason to pass legislation requiring better documentation of drug raids in Maryland.
Blog
Maryland Legislation Seeks to Address Out-of-Control SWAT Raids
Following the botched drug raid death of his two dogs, Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo has gone from drug war victim to hero of justice. His dreadful experience â and dignified response â has inspired two Maryland legislators to introduce a bill that will improve data collection on aggressive police raids:
Donât be at all surprised when law enforcement interests in Maryland bitterly oppose any effort to document their activities. They are going to completely freak out about this. You know why? Because police in Maryland conduct unnecessarily violent drug raids all the time, endangering innocent people routinely and without consequence. Naturally, they would prefer that such conduct not be scrutinized.
All the bill does is require each local police department to submit a monthly report of any SWAT activities, with details of time, place, evidence seized, arrests, and any injuries. "This bill is an important first step that doesnât restrict [SWAT] use," Calvo said. "It merely brings transparency." Transparency should be the least the public demands with regard to the use of potentially deadly force. [Examiner]
Donât be at all surprised when law enforcement interests in Maryland bitterly oppose any effort to document their activities. They are going to completely freak out about this. You know why? Because police in Maryland conduct unnecessarily violent drug raids all the time, endangering innocent people routinely and without consequence. Naturally, they would prefer that such conduct not be scrutinized.
Chronicle
Encarcelación: Jueces federales ordenan que California liberte a decenas de miles de prisioneros
California ha estado adicta a la encarcelación masiva durante los últimos 25 años. Ahora parece que algunos jueces federales estadounidenses van a hacer que el estado corte en seco la adicción. Decenas de miles de prisioneros pueden ser puestos en libertad porque California no puede o no quiere pagar para tratarlos conforme a las exigencias de la Constitución de EE.UU.
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ONDCP: Nombran al jefe Gil Kerlikowske de la PolicÃa de Seattle nuevo fiscal de la droga
Los reformadores de las polÃticas de drogas esperaban que una persona de la salud pública â no un policÃa ni un soldado â fuera nombrada fiscal de la droga. Un policÃa nos han dado, pero un policÃa de una ciudad liberal. ¿Será un jefe de policÃa (posiblemente) progresista igualmente bueno como fiscal de la droga?
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Free Screening of "Waiting to Inhale: Marijuana, Medicine, and the Law"
*FREE REFRESHMENTS*
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Support Safe Access for the Seriously Ill - Benefit Concert
A Benefit for Berkeley Patients Group's James R. Russell Memorial Hospice Program. A Program that brings free medicine to those who need it most.
Chronicle
Policial: Las historias de policÃas corruptos de esta semana
Puede que algo huela a podrido en la brigada antidroga de Filadelfia, seguro que algo huele a podrido en Boston y, sÃ, cae otro agente penitenciario.
Event
Rally, Concert and Lobby Day to End Cannabis Prohibition
Rally, Concert and Lobby Day to demand an End To The Prohibition of Marijuana!
Lobby Noon - 2 p.m.*, Rally & Concert 2 p.m. - 6 p.m., Dead show doors 6 p.m.
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Benefit for MassCann and NORML
Event: 4/20 Preparty at Harperâs Ferry with Graveyard BBQ, Prospect Hill and more!
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Peaceful Protest for Charles C. Lynch and Medical Marijuana
PLEASE JOIN US! Show your support for Charles C. Lynch, his family & the hundreds of others facing Federal prosecution.
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Meetup to Free Ryan Frederick!
Don Tabor, on behalf of the Tidewater Libertarian Party, will address the city council to request a citizen review of police procedures used in the investigation and the raid on Ryan's home. Dr.
In The Trenches
Action Alert: Protest Rule Changes for Medical Cannabis Caregivers
Action Alert: Protest Board of Health Proposed Rules Changes for Medicinal Cannabis Caregivers
Compiled by: Colorado Citizens for Compassionate Cannabis
March 2: Written Comments Deadline
Feb 20: Pre-Public Hearing "Conference" and Silent Protest
March 18: Public Hearing
The Colorado Board of Health is proposing sweeping new rules to regulate medical cannabis that contradict the intent of Article 18, Section 14 of the Colorado Constitution, Colorado's medical cannabis law that was approved by voters in 2000. These proposed rules only serve to make it more difficult for patients to get their medicine by forcing them back into the black market. The Board of Health should be compassionate and helpful towards these sick and dying people and not put more obstacles in their way.
Currently, patients with a debilitating medical condition and approval of their physician may legally possess up to two ounces of cannabis and grow up to six plants. If they are unable to grow the medicine themselves, the Constitution allows them to appoint a primary caregiver to provide the medicine for them. The Constitution does not set limits on how many patients for whom a person can be the caregiver, nor does it set limits on the type of person that can be considered the patient's caregiver.
The Board of Health's proposed new rules set limits on caregivers that are clearly unconstitutional.
1) The Board of Health wants to require caregivers to provide other services to the patient besides cannabis-related ones. The other services required would amount to those of a full-time nursing assistant and would have to include transportation, housekeeping, meal preparation, shopping and making medical care arrangements for the patient.
Currently, a person can be a medicinal cannabis caregiver without providing other services. The Constitution only states that the caregiver must have "significant responsibility for managing the well-being of a patient", which would include providing them with medicine. It does not impose any other requirements on caregivers
2) The Health Department is proposing a 5-patient-per-caregiver limit on the number of patients for whom a caregiver could provide.
Currently, a caregiver can provide for many patients. Most patients do not have the knowledge or are too sick to grow their own cannabis. It takes years of practice to learn how to grow an adequate supply of cannabis for one patient with only the 6 plants allowed by the Constitution. Cannabis cultivation experts have been enlisted to serve as caregivers and have not been limited on how many patients they are able to serve. As reported in Westword, therapeutic cannabis dispensaries have formed all over Colorado to provide for multiple patients. The dispensaries are able to produce medicines in quantities large enough to keep the cost to the patient at a minimum and to create edible forms of cannabis, such as cookies, brownies and other foods. Cooking with cannabis requires a much larger amount of the raw substance than smoking cannabis does. However, eating medicinal cannabis food is a far healthier way to ingest the medicine than inhaling its smoke is, especially for those with chronic conditions.
In fact, having caregivers provide for multiple patients has been the only way that poorly-written Article 18, Section 14 of the Colorado Constitution has worked at all. At the time, the out-of-state authors of Colorado's Medicinal Cannabis Law were widely criticized for not addressing the issue of cannabis dispensaries clearly enough and for not providing any legal way for patients to obtain medicinal cannabis outside of the black market. This left a gray area in the law that the Health Department has since tried to exploit in order to deny patients their Consitutionally-protected medicine. In the nine years since the law was approved by voters, the state of Colorado has been more concerned with putting roadblocks in the way of patients instead of trying to help implement the law.
The possible upcoming change in federal policy concerning medicinal cannabis makes it the perfect time for Colorado to develop a plan to provide safe access to cannabis for patients. President Obama has made repeated campaign promises that he would stop the federal prosecution of cannabis patients and create a "green economy." . Recently, the White House reiterated their intention to change federal policy to allow states to regulate cannabis without federal intervention.
In light of this new federal policy, it is time for Colorado to regulate medicinal cannabis statewide in a way that provides safe and inexpensive access to cannabis. The Colorado Board of Health should be issuing rules that encourage and regulate cannabis dispensaries, just like any other pharmaceutical manufacturer. Or alternatively, they could enlist the aid of the Colorado Department of Agriculture and the Ag School at CSU to create a regulated state-run cannabis dispensary program.
We are urging Colorado Governor Bill Ritter to form the Colorado Therapeutic Cannabis Commission, as described in the Compassionate Therapeutic Cannabis Act, an initiatve that was proposed as an alternative to the flawed Article 18, Section 14 of the Colorado Constitution. The Colorado Therapeutic Cannabis Commission would be a statewide panel of experts charged with the duty of ensuring patients can obtain an affordable and adequate supply of therapeutic cannabis.
The key to successful implementation of Article 18, Section 14 of the Colorado Constitution is to put the patient first and find a way to provide them with medicine in a safe and cost-effective manner without endangering them by forcing them to deal with the black market.
Event
12 Day Ayahuasca Healing Workshop
The Temple of the Way of Light is a shamanic healing centre offering intensive Ayahuasca retreats with female shamans (curanderas).
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