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Announcement

Health Board votes down pot restriction (We Won!)

[Courtesy of Sensible Colorado]

A Stunning Victory for Patients' Rights


Late last night the Colorado Board of Health rejected a series of controversial restrictions to the state's medical marijuana law.  The proposals were met with vast opposition from across the state, with approximately 1000 opponents attending the hearing.  Hundreds testified against the changes including lawyers, doctors, care providers, veterans, and numerous health-care and religious organizations.

Learn more about the Hearing here.


"This is a historic victory for patients' rights and safe access to medicine," said Brian Vicente executive director of Sensible Colorado, the non-profit organization which headed opposition to the plan. "Please help us continue our successful work on behalf of medical marijuana patients and providers by becoming a Sensible Colorado monthly donor today.  As little as $5 a month can make a huge difference in our ability to fight for patients' rights and sensible drug reform."

Many thanks to the hundreds of individuals and organizations who attended the Hearing or submitted written comments.  Your grassroots support absolutely helped sway the vote in the right direction.  Special thanks to our coalition partners SAFER, MPP, ASA, and Norml.  

CBC Hosts "Rethinking Federal Sentencing Policy" Symposium

The Congressional Black Caucus
 Community Re-Investment Taskforce and the
Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice
at Harvard Law School
invite you to attend

"Rethinking Federal Sentencing Policy"
25th Anniversary of the Sentencing Reform Act
 
Wednesday, June 24, 2009 at 4:00 p.m.
 
U.S. House of Representatives
Committee on Ways and Means
1100 Longworth House Office Building
Washington, D.C.

 

Program

Welcome and Opening Remarks by
Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX)
 Rep. Danny Davis (IL)
Rep. Charles Rangel (NY)
 
Welcome and Introduction of Attorney General by
Rep. John Conyers (MI)
 
Remarks by
Eric Holder, Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice
 
Introduction of Justice Breyer
Charles J. Ogletree, Jr. Executive Director, 
Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice,
Harvard Law School
 
Hon. Stephen Breyer, Associate Justice
Supreme Court of the United States
 
Kate Stith, Acting Dean
Yale Law School
 
Mandatory Minimums
 
Panel One: Rep Maxine Waters (CA)
History of Mandatory Minimums
 
Nancy Gertner, Judge, U.S. District Court for the
District of Massachusetts
Hon. J. Spencer Letts, Judge, U.S. District Court,
Central District of California
Eric Sterling, President, Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
 
Panel Two: Rep. Bobby Scott (VA)
The Need for Repeal, Including Legislative Update
 
A.J. Kramer, Federal Defender, Federal Public Defender of the
District of Columbia
Julie Stewart, President, Families Against Mandatory Minimums
Marc Mauer, Executive Director, The Sentencing Project
Margaret Love, Former Pardon Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice
 
Disparity Between Crack and Powder Cocaine
 
Panel Three: Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (TX)
 
Hon. Reggie B. Walton, Judge, U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia
Hon. William Sessions, Vice Chairman, U.S. Sentencing Commission
Bruce Nicholson, Legislative Counsel, American Bar Association
David Kirby, Former United States Attorney for the
District of Vermont
 
Good Time, Community Corrections and Reentry
 
 Panel Four: Rep. Danny K. Davis (IL)
Hon. Ann Aiken, Chief Judge, U.S. District Court of the
District of Oregon
Loretta S. Martin, Chief Probation Officer for the Central
District of California
Harley G. Lappin, Director, Federal Bureau of Prisons
            Jane Browning, Executive Director, International Community Corrections Association
Kristen Mamer, Director Public Affairs, FedCure
Isaac Fulwood, Jr., Chairman, U.S. Parole Commission (Invited)
 

Contact: Bernard Moore, PhD, Senior Policy Fellow
Office of Congressman Danny K. Davis
202-360-7551
[email protected]

Medical Marijuana: UCSF School of Medicine's Continuing Medical Education

Patients Out of Time's 2008 conference is now on the UCSF School of Medicine's Continuing Medical Education for physicians and other health care professionals to view and earn their continuing education units. Link: http://www.medicalcannabis.com/OnlineEducation/ PDF: http://medicalcannabis.com/Online%20Education%20UCSF%20PRINT.pdf Image: http://medicalcannabis.com/medical-education.html Direct Link: http://www.cecity.com/ce-bin/owa/bel?cc=CECA&aid=14422

Safe Streets Arts Foundation: International Publicity for Our Prison Art Show

Canadian Radio Station Interview about our Upcoming Pano Prison Art Show

(Listen to It at Your Leisure)

Gallery logo

 

Listen to our interview

 live on Monday, June 8, 10:30 pm Eastern time on a prominent Vancouver, Canada radio station at www.coopradio.org or, if you miss it, listen to the podcast at www.rabble.ca.

 

The subject of the radio interview is

 our upcoming free art show featuring "Pano" art created in prisons across America. This is a special show called "Pano in American Tradition" at Takoma Park Community Center (Gallery 3), 7500 Maple Ave, Takoma Park, Maryland from June 12 to July 25, 2009. The art is part of the collection of the Safe Streets Arts Foundation, which operates the Prison Art Gallery in Washington DC. The opening reception will take place on June 12 from 6 to 9 pm, and will feature live music by ex-prisoner guitarist Dennis Sobin, who has performed at the Kennedy Center.
 
Paño art draws on the deepest emotions of prisoners whose artistic expression is limited only by the materials at hand. The word paño (Spanish for cloth or handkerchief) has come to mean the art form itself -- a ball point pen or colored pencil drawing on a handkerchief.
 
Scholars have yet to determine the origin of paño art but some believe that it emerged in the 1940s among Chicano prisoners in the Southwestern United States who drew on the handkerchiefs or torn bed sheets. They do this because finding materials for artistic expression is difficult.
 
The portable and economical aspects of the Paño (handkerchief) allow prisoners to share their work with family and friends, use in bartering, and to mentally escape prison life. Today paño art is associated with Chicano inmates around the country, both male and female, who neatly fold paños into envelopes and mail them to loved ones.
 
Paños typically depict prison life, loved ones, dreams, memories, or personal experiences. Paño artists take much of their imagery and inspiration from the larger visual arts vocabulary of Chicano art conspicuous in murals, posters, low rider cars, graffiti, and tattoos. 
 
Most prisons offer handkerchiefs for sale in the commissary and tacitly sanction the art. Panos are collected in great numbers by convict patrons. The Smithsonian Museum has a pano collection, recognizing the uniqueness of this art form.
 
The Safe Streets Arts Foundation, incorporating both the Prisons Foundation and the Victims Foundation, is the sponsor of the annual From-Prison-to-The-Stage Show at the Kennedy Center and the Prison Art Gallery in Washington, DC. It is supported through the generosity Lloyd S. Rubin, ex-prisoner and international arts consultant.


For more information about the free Pano art show sponsored by the City of Takoma Park and taking place at the Takoma Park Community Center (Gallery 3) from June 12 to July 25, 2009, contact Stéphan Janin at:  [email protected]

witherspoon

"The Safe Streets Arts Foundation, incorporating both the Prisons Foundation and the Victims Foundation, is proud to sponsor the annual From-Prison-to-The-Stage Show at the Kennedy Center and the Prison Art Gallery at 1600 K Street. NW, Suite 501, Washington, DC, three blocks from the White House."

ASA Sponsored Resolution Calls for Federal Change


Dear ASA Supporter,

California Senator Mark Leno (D-SF) introduced Senate Joint Resolution (SJR) 14 yesterday. This ASA-sponsored resolution calls on the President and US Congress to end medical cannabis raids in California and to "create a comprehensive federal medical marijuana policy that ensures safe and legal access to any patient that would benefit from it." If adopted, SJR 14 will be the first time a state legislature has officially called for a change in federal medical cannabis policies.

Please help ASA get SJR 14 adopted by making a special contribution of $100 today.

The President and US Attorney General Eric Holder have talked about a new federal policy concerning medical cannabis, but there is still a lot of work to do in defining what that policy will be. SJR 14 supports ASA's National Policy Agenda and is part of our strategic campaign to shape a more reasonable and compassionate federal policy - one that ensures safe and legal access for all patients nationwide.

The resolution calls on the President and the US Congress to (1) end federal raids, intimidation, and interference with state medical cannabis laws; (2) adopt policies and laws to encourage advanced clinical research trials into the therapeutic use of cannabis; (3) provide for an affirmative defense to medical cannabis charges in federal court; and (4) to create comprehensive federal medical cannabis policy that ensures safe and legal access for patients.

SJR 14 is an opportunity for the California legislature to influence the development of the new federal policy, defend the state's right to choose and regulate medical cannabis, and to defend the compassionate will of the voters. But, we only have a short time to get this resolution through committees and floor votes in the State Senate and Assembly.

Please support ASA by donating today so that we can get SJR 14 adopted right away!

Thank you for your help,

Rebecca Saltzman
Chief of Staff
Americans for Safe Access

P.S. For more information on SJR 14, visit www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/SJR14

The War on Drugs is Over? Lets Celebrate!

Last week the new White House Drug Czar called for an end to the "War on Drugs", signaling a new, more sensible path for drug policy.  See here.                                                           

Come celebrate this sea change with Colorado's preeminent drug policy reformers at the Sensible Colorado 5th Anniversary Gala this Saturday (5/23) from 6-9pm.                                                    

We are happy to announce our special guest speaker for this event will be Don Duncan, California Director of Americans for Safe Access.  Don is one of the longest-running and most respected medical marijuana dispensary operators in America, and has been featured on "60 Minutes" and on other national programs.                                                  

This FREE event is open to the public and will feature speakers, awards, food and drink.                                              

What:  Sensible Colorado's 5th Anniversary Gala

Where:  Atlantis Community Center (201 S. Cherokee Street, Denver CO 80223)

When:  Saturday, May 23 from 6-9pm.                                         

*This event is non-smoking and fully disabled accessible.                                  

Thanks to generous donors, this event is free to all.  If you can't make it, but would like to support Sensible Colorado's work, please make a donation today:  DONATE HERE

Sensible Colorado: Two Ways to Help

Here are two ways to get active in Colorado's vibrant reform community: (1) Sensible Colorado's 5th Anniversary Gala Help us celebrate our fifth year of advocacy on behalf of sensible marijuana reform. This FREE event is open to the public and will feature speakers, awards, food and drink. What: Sensible Colorado's 5th Anniversary Gala Where: Atlantis Community Center (201 S. Cherokee Street, Denver CO 80223) When: Saturday, May 23 from 6-9pm. *This event is non-smoking and fully disabled accessible. -AND- (2) Solidarity Event to Protect Safe Access Its back....the Colorado Board of Health is once again considering restricting patient access to medical marijuana. At a hearing in July, the Board will be voting on a rule which would rip patients out of safe caregiver relationships and force them onto the streets in search of medicine. Show your support on July 20th by attending the Hearing and Board vote. What: Solidarity event to protect safe access Place: Tivoli Student Union, Conference Room 250. Auraria Campus, 900 Auraria Parkway, Denver, CO 80204. Time: 8:30am on Monday, July 20, 2009 What else: This is NOT a rally. This is a formal Hearing and we need supporters to dress nice and act in a professional manner. NOTE- Many of you have already submitted written comments to the Board of Health. Thank you. Any new or additional comments need to be submitted by May 15.

Meet the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers

Dear Friends:

As you know, the "War on Drugs" has been a tragic policy failure, degrading public order and public health and eroding trust in the justice system and respect for the law.  Now you have a chance to participate in an intensive national effort underway to bring about a fundamental shift in our drug control policies.   

If you haven't already met, let me introduce you to the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers!  The VCL is working successfully across the nation to amplify the voice of the legal profession, calling for a serious examination of the "War on Drugs" and its harmful consequences.

 

During National Alcohol Prohibition in the 1920s, a respected group of New York lawyers founded the original Voluntary Committee of Lawyers, building a national network to set up the state constitutional conventions that eventually led to the repeal of Prohibition in 1933.  The modern VCL is organizing lawyers and judges around the country today to criticize our current prohibition-style drug policies and to suggest workable alternative approaches.  Through state and loc al bar associations in New York, Colorado, Alabama, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Washington and other states, the VCL is spurring important discussions in professional circles that wield considerable influence in the policymaking process.  

We are approaching a historic turning point in the drug policy debate.  In these troubling times, the fiscal strain of excessive incarceration is leading states to shift their criminal justice policies.  Violence from illegal drug markets is about to spill across the Mexican border.  Leading newspapers regularly highlight the disaster of the "War on Drugs."  The Obama Administration has also made some important signals recently.  Now is the time for the VCL to leverage its deep history and advance the mature legal dialogue about shifting to a more rational drug control policy.

Thanks to your support we can continue this important work.

We are expanding the VCL as a membership organization of lawyers, judges and other professionals, strengthening the call for an exit strategy for the "War on Drugs."  You are invited to join our growing network by becoming a member of the VCL today.  Click here.

To learn more about the VCL and its membership and activities, please join us on Law Day, Friday, May 1st, at the Culture Center on Manhattan's Upper West Side for a reception and presentation of the VCL's Joseph H. Choate, Jr. Award for Leadership to U.S. District Court Judge Robert Sweet.  Then get dinner with us afterward and continue what is sure to be an evening of engaging discussion.

We welcome you to join the VCL and help us push for sanity in our drug control policies.  Thank you very much for your support, and we look forward to working together with you!

Very truly yours,

Roger E. Goodman

Executive Director

Important 4th Amendment Supreme Court Victory

Dear Friends:

Today, the Supreme Court handed down a great ruling in Arizona v. Gant, which increases 4th Amendment protection against warrantless vehicle searches. We've been following the case for a while, and this outcome is exciting.

Please visit our blog for FYR Associate Director Scott Morgan's analysis on the decision's likely impact.

Sincerely,                                                                                                                     

signature

Steve Silverman

P.S. Flex Your Rights is the only organization focused solely on defending the 4th Amendment and teaching citizens to understand their rights during police encounters. If you support our efforts, please consider making a one-time tax-deductible donation today. As you know, we can't do this important work without your support.

© 2009 Flex Your Rights Privacy Policy

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Please Join Us - May 1st Reception in NYC for Voluntary Committee of Lawyers

Dear Friends:
 
You are invited to a special Law Day reception in New York City on Friday, May 1st, sponsored by the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers.  I really hope you can join us for this special event.  Please see the announcement below.
 
Come and learn more about the VCL's exciting initiatives across the country to foster important discussion and debate about our arcane and failed War on Drugs.  As we approach a national "tipping point" in drug policy reform, the VCL's work is ever more important as we move the professional community to wield its influence to get drug policy reform on the legislative agenda.
 
Please join us in the late afternoon on May 1st.  Please also take the time to visit the VCL's website, at www.VCL.org. See you on May 1st!
 
Roger
 


 

Save the Date!

 

The Board and Officers of the

Voluntary Committee of Lawyers

request the honor of your company at our

 

Law Day Reception

and presentation of the

Joseph H. Choate, Jr. Award for Leadership

to

 

Judge Robert W. Sweet

United States District Court

Souther District of New York

 

May 1, 2009

5:30 PM to 7:30 PM, remarks at 6:30 PM

 

at the

Culture Center

410 Columbus Avenue (between 79th and 80th Streets)

New York NY

 

Hors d'oeuvres and hosted bar

 

RSVP to Rachel Kurtz at 206-267-7069 or [email protected].

 

Donations appreciated.

The VCL is a 501(c)(3) corporation.  If you cannot make the event but would still like to support the VCL, visit us here.

www.VCL.org

  

 

Organization logo

 

 

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