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VCL Brief - Winter 2010


VCL Brief

Winter 2010

 

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 Winter has arrived, and as we conclude another decade, we are optimistic about the future.  This last year saw many advances in drug policy reform, including an official statement by the federal government to stop raids on medical marijuana patients and providers in compliance with state law, reforms to New York's Rockefeller drug laws, and the repeal of the federal ban on needle exchange.  With such great momentum, 2010 promises to generate even more positive reforms.

 

Legislators Participate at International Drug Policy Reform Conference 

The VCL arranged for key state legislators from around the U.S. to attend and participate in the 2009 International Drug Policy Reform Conference in Albuquerque, which attracted more than 1,500 reformers from around the world.  Legislators from California, Wisconsin, Maryland, Rhode Island, New Mexico and Washington gave their “insider’s view” of legislative efforts to reform drug laws in their respective states.  The VCL also convened a special luncheon at the conference for the legislators to discuss their efforts with one other and to strategize for the future.  (Pictured: Maryland Delegate Curt Anderson, VCL Executive Director and Washington Representative Roger Goodman, Wisconsin Senator Lena Taylor.)

 

Gathering of International Reformers 

The 2009 International Drug Policy Reform Conference also provided an opportunity for the VCL to bring together two dozen of the world’s leading drug policy reformers for a working dinner full of lively discussion of international drug policy trends, “messaging” strategies and plans for future collaboration.  Much of the discussion centered around the release of a seminal report by the British organization, Transform, entitled, After the War on Drugs: Blueprint for Regulation.

 

State Highlight 

Reform in Colorado

The Colorado Commission on Criminal & Juvenile Justice issued recommendations in November 2009 to reduce penalties for possession of cannabis and other illegal drugs.  Key recommendations include reducing possession of up to 4 ounces of cannabis from a misdemeanor to a petty offense, and possession of 8 to 16 ounces from a felony to a misdemeanor.  The Colorado Legislature w ill likely enact many of the Commission’s recommendations in the upcoming legislative session.  The Commission’s work was the result of years of effort by the Colorado Bar Association’s Criminal Sentencing Project, an initiative formed and pursued with the guidance of the VCL.  The VCL continues to consult very closely with leading legislators in Colorado to bring about further reforms.

 

Donate Now for 2009 Tax Deductible Contribution 

The VCL heartily appreciates your support to continue our important work organizing lawyers, judges, legislators and other opinion leaders from across the country and around the world.   Without your generous support and participation the VCL could not carry on its timely reform efforts at this critical time.  The drug policy environment is rapidly transforming and we eagerly look forward to 2010, with numerous events being planned, including by the State Bar of Wisconsin, the New York City Bar Association, the Massachusetts Bar Association and other legal and professional groups in other states.  Please help further our efforts with a year-end donation, which will be deductible from your 2009 tax return.

 

Upcoming Events 

In This Newsletter

First Thursday Open Houses

Legislators Participate at Conference

Gathering of International Reformers

Reform in Colorado

Donate Now for 2009 Tax Deduction

Upcoming Events

 

Quick Links

Our Website

Donate Now

Open Letter

Email Us

 

First Thursday Open Houses 

Thursday, January 7th, 2010
3:00pm to 6:00pm

The VCL is committed to a vigorous public dialogue about our drug policies and workable alternatives.  We encourage you to stop by and chat with us, borrow from our extensive drug policy library or come to our monthly open house gatherings.  Each First Thursday of the month, in conjunction with Seattle’s First Thursday Art Walk in Pioneer Square, the VCL welcomes you to stop by the office to share intelligence with other lawyers and reformers and brainstorm on strategies for positive change. 


Please visit our website at www.VCL.org.

The Voluntary Committee of Lawyers is a 501(c)(3) organization.


 

Help Change the World While Helping Yourself

Help Change the World While Helping Yourself

You know that the "War on Drugs" is wrong, counterproductive, immoral, stupid, expensive, and cruel. Perhaps you realize that changing the policies toward this one issue has the potential to: change the world; heal the sick; stop ruining lives and families; balance budgets; and so much more...

YOU hold the power of change in your hand. It involves just few clicks of your mouse. Please donate to DrugSense right now. http://www.drugsense.org/donate. By donating, you are taking a stand in support compassionate, common sense, and cost effective policies.

And while you're supporting polices that help change the world, you are also helping yourself. As a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit, your donation to DrugSense is tax-deductible, something you'll appreciate at tax time.

Donating is also simple and secure. Just visit http://www.drugsense.org/donate

You can also donate by check made payable to:

DrugSense/MAP
14252 Culver Dr #328
Irvine, CA 92604-0326

Or you can donate toll free by calling 1-800-266-5759.

REMEMBER: You can select a monthly plan to provide us with automatic, recurring support. Please sign up for whatever you can afford. http://www.drugsense.org/donate

LOW INCOME? You don't need cash to change the world. Volunteer! Please visit our volunteer signup form, http://www.mapinc.org/volunteers/ and we'll help you find something to fit your schedule and interests.

Fund the change you want to see in the world - donate to DrugSense today!


Mark Greer
Executive Director

Cheech & Chong and more: a sneak peak at our gala program

Dear friends:

Our 15th Anniversary Gala, on January 13 in Washington, D.C., will honor the dedicated legislators, celebrities, and patients who have fought for an end to marijuana prohibition. Have you reserved your ticket yet?

Here are just a few highlights from our program for the night:

  • Comedy icons Cheech and Chong will be honored with the Trailblazer Award for drawing attention to the movement.
  • Former Gov. Gary Johnson of New Mexico — a fierce advocate for medical marijuana access — will speak about his vision for ending marijuana prohibition.
  • We'll present awards to legislators, a patient, and a physician for outstanding advocacy and leadership in marijuana policy reform.

Please join us in toasting 15 years of remarkable progress. Reserve your ticket to our 15th Anniversary Gala today.

I look forward to seeing you on January 13.

Sincerely,

null

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

P.S. There are only eight days left in our matching campaign! A major philanthropist has committed to match the first $2.35 million that MPP can raise in 2009. Make twice the impact and donate today.

2010: The Year Dispensaries Died?

 

 

 

Do you want to see dispensaries die in Colorado?  If not, please DONATE TODAY. 

Since 2005, Sensible Colorado has been the leading voice for safe access to medical marijuana in this state.  Without our lawsuits and advocacy campaigns, dispensaries would not exist in Colorado-- and patients would be forced to go to alleys to get their medicine.  

2010 may be our toughest fight yet.  Law enforcement is planning to run a statewide bill to SHUT DOWN DISPENSARIES.  Please give whatever you can to help us fight this bill and secure safe access once and for all. 

To ensure a lasting contribution, become a MONTHLY DONOR today. Your support will help us continue the fight in 2010 and beyond.  Donations are fully tax-deductible.  Join the fight today!

How Chase Bank cheated drug policy groups out of $25,000

Chase cheated SSDP out of $25K.
Boycott Chase!

Friends,

Recently, I asked you to vote for Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) in a competition on Facebook that would have earned us $25K and a shot at $1 million. Thousands of you took action, catapulting SSDP into fourteenth place. We needed to place within the top 100 to win, so victory was assured.

Or so we thought. As the New York Times reported this Saturday, during the final days of the contest, Chase rigged their own system to obscure the vote count and then revoked the winnings of a few groups, including SSDP and the Marijuana Policy Project!

Clearly, Chase can't be trusted to handle our money. This morning, I canceled my credit card account with Chase, and I hope you'll join me. Please make the Chase Boycott Pledge at http://www.ChaseBoycott.com

To be clear, this isn't sour grapes over not receiving a grant -- this is about demanding honesty and accountability of a corporation that handles billions of dollars of American assets. The banking giant had every opportunity to disqualify us from the start if they disagreed with our mission. Instead, they used our social networks to generate free advertising for their brand, and then revoked the winnings after the contest was over without providing an explanation. When asked by SSDP and the New York Times to produce a vote tally, they smugly refused.

Chase executives are not only out of touch with the principles of honesty and transparency, but they are also out of touch with the majority of Americans when it comes to drug policy. Did you know that 75% of Americans think the War on Drugs has failed and that 53% support legalizing marijuana? This is a mainstream issue that's gaining more support every day.

By boycotting Chase, you'll be sending a message to corporations that they need to earn your trust before they earn your money. http://www.ChaseBoycott.com

And by making a donation to SSDP today, you'll be sending a message that organizations like ours don't need to rely on grants from big banks so long as we can rely on the generosity of supporters like you.

If you donate $25 today, and 999 others take a stand with you, we'll raise the $25,000 that Chase revoked. With more than 400,000 supporters on our e-mail list and Facebook networks, we can make that happen.

Will you step up and help us reach that goal by making a donation of $25 right now? http://www.ssdp.org/donate

Never defeated,
Micah

Micah Daigle, Executive Director
Students for Sensible Drug Policy

Disenfranchisement News: 2009 In Review

Disenfranchisement News

Sentencing Project

In this issue

·         Policy Reform» GO

·         Media » GO

·         International » GO

·         Litigation » GO

·         Research » GO

·         Organizational Support & Advocacy » GO

 

Contact Us

Send an email to
The Sentencing Project.

The Sentencing Project
514 Tenth Street, NW
Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20004
202.628.0871

 

December 22, 2009

Disenfranchisement news:
Year in Review

Disenfranchisement reform received a great deal of attention throughout 2009, spurred in part by the excitement behind a historic presidential race at the close of 2008. Advocacy campaigns and media coverage gave light to the many individuals throughout the nation who were able to vote for the first time after having their rights restored. More than a decade after The Sentencing Project began to campaign on this issue, disenfranchisement reform has won editorial support in the media, gained legislative momentum from policymakers, and has been highlighted as a key area of research in the academic community.
 
The following is a selection of the highlights of disenfranchisement activity during 2009 in the areas of policy change, media attention, international reform, litigation, organizational support and advocacy, and research.

Policy Reform

The Democracy Restoration Act of 2009 was introduced, a federal measure that would restore voting rights to millions of Americans with felony convictions. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) and Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution Chairman Russ Feingold (D-WI) introduced the bills in both chambers of Congress. An estimated 5.3 million citizens cannot vote as a result of felony convictions, and nearly 4 million of these individuals are living and working in their communities. The Democracy Restoration Act of 2009 would establish a uniform standard restoring voting rights in federal elections to anyone who is not incarcerated throughout the nation, even if individuals are barred from voting in state elections.
 
A broad advocacy coalition pushed hard for the Wisconsin Democracy Restoration Act and it is expected to advance in the Legislature. The legislation, SB 240, would immediately return the right to vote to residents once released from prison. If passed, the law would affect more than 41,000 persons on probation or parole. Along with many other organizations, both liberal and conservative, The Sentencing Project submitted testimony to the Wisconsin Legislature in support of the bill. The bill passed out of the Executive Committee on Corrections and Courts and awaits a vote from State Senate and Assembly.

Washington State eliminated a disenfranchising policy which banned individuals with felony convictions who had not paid all financial obligations associated with their sentence from voting. Following the change, the ACLU of Washington launched "Promote the Vote" to educate newly enfranchised Washingtonians about their rights.

MEDIA

A New York Times editorial in support of reform called felon disenfranchisement  "bad prison policy," calling out states that upheld voting rights bans in California, New York and Massachusetts.

Editorial support was also garnered in support of the Democracy Restoration Act from The New York Times, the Patriot News in Pennsylvania, and the Detroit Free Press.

With President Obama's U.S. Supreme Court nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor, news outlets recalled her dissent in the case of Hayden v Pataki, in which she argued that the federal Voting Rights Act protected ethnic minorities in the area of felon disenfranchisement, Ballot Access reported. A New York Times op-ed column responded to controversial quips stating that her decisions were "color blind."

INTERNATIONAL

The Sentencing Project and the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law submitted a petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on the discriminatory effects of felony disenfranchisement. The report examines the practice of felony disenfranchisement in the United States and the nations of the Americas, and analyzes the impact of these polices on racial and ethnic minorities. It also describes the international momentum in support of reform, both among treaty-monitoring bodies at the United Nations and in jurisprudence in a number of countries, and calls upon the Commission to examine this practice among its member states.

LITIGATION

A federal judge ruled in favor of the ACLU of Pennsylvania in a lawsuit that claimed the removal of voting rights ads created from public buses was discriminatory, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported. According to the suit, the Port Authority unlawfully refused to accept the ACLU advertisements designed to inform the public that residents with felony convictions have the right to vote.

Advocates were not so victorious when the California Supreme Court let stand a ruling upholding California's "absolute" ban on voting by incarcerated persons and parolees, the Metropolitan News-Enterprise reported. The justices unanimously declined to review a lower court ruling where plaintiffs, representing people in prison and parolees, stated that the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution only permits disenfranchisement of persons convicted of common law felonies. California currently disenfranchises incarcerated individuals and parolees, but allows those on probation and formerly incarcerated to vote.

Several states, including Tennessee, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, brought cases against individuals with felony records who voted in the November 2008 election. Charged with voter fraud, most claimed they did not know they were, in fact, banned from voting, nor had received information from registration or polling sites telling them otherwise.

RESEARCH

Challenging theories and political fears that re-enfranchising individuals with felony offenses would dramatically impact the outcome of political elections, a study was released out of the University of Louisville Department of Justice Administration. Having polled disenfranchised voters who were on probation and parole in the state on their voting preferences, the report found that full participation by disenfranchised individuals would not have altered the outcome of the November 2008 senatorial and presidential election in Kentucky. The report, which was featured in the Federal Probation journal, contends that individuals who have completed their sentence "remain disadvantaged and carry less than complete rights of citizenship."

ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORT & ADVOCACY

The Family Life Center of Rhode Island released a new analysis that demonstrated a high level of interest in the electoral process by individuals on probation or parole. Following a 2006 ballot change to state law, 6,330 probationers and parolees - representing more than a third of the 17,600 state total - registered to vote during the 2008 election cycle. Of these, 3,001 voted during that time.

"My First Vote," a compilation of stories from individuals with felony records around the country who voted for the first time during the November 2008 election, was published by the Brennan Center for Justice. In an effort to put a face on the issue of disenfranchisement, new voters tell inspiring stories about voting for the first time after being denied that right for so long.

As we all continue to advance reform, The Sentencing Project wishes you a Happy New Year.

Help The Sentencing Project continue to bring you Disenfranchisement News and work to restore voting rights to more people with felony convictions in 2010.
Make your year-end contribution to The Sentencing Project today by clicking here!

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The Sentencing Project is a national organization working for a fair and effective criminal justice system by promoting reforms in sentencing law and practice, and alternatives to incarceration.

Remember: Your holiday wish

Dear friends:

A few weeks ago, I asked you to imagine a day when people can use marijuana without fear of arrest and prison.

A day when cancer and AIDS patients using marijuana to ease their pain aren't terrified of losing their homes if caught.

A day when marijuana is treated like alcohol and is taxed, regulated, and legal.

If you were waiting for the best possible moment to make your gift count, now is that moment. There's no doubt that 2009 has been the best year so far in the history of marijuana policy reform. But with the recent changes in marijuana laws in Washington, D.C., we can see that 2010 is going to be even bigger.

Here's how you can help make your holiday wish come true. Please select your wish from the list below, and your gift will help us to end marijuana prohibition for good. And if you give during the next nine days, a generous philanthropist will double it.

David, this is our moment. We have to be ready. Now is the time to send your most generous gift.

Sincerely,

Rob's signature

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

Come Help End the War on Drugs!

View this message on our website: www.drugsense.org/fundraisers/2009/DS21Dec09.htm


21 December 2009

Come Help End the War on Drugs!


Donate Now!

AT some point, zillions of cyber-moments ago, I stumbled upon a goldmine of information called the Media Awareness Project. I was instantly 'hooked' and have enjoyed every moment I've spent learning my way through every volunteer position. I'd like to share with you some of my experiences in hopes that you'll find something that you might like to try. I have found there is just no better feeling than getting to the end of my day with the knowledge that I've contributed to ending the atrocity we call the War on Drugs. Of course, if you don't have time to donate, we're always in need of financial support, www.drugsense.org/donate.

MAP

The first time I landed at mapinc.org I instantly agreed that writing letters to the editors of newspapers would not only help balance WOD coverage but would also let people know that they were not alone with their doubts about our failed drug policies. I followed some of the writing guidelines ( www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides ) and received ink fairly quickly. I was thrilled to see my name in print but realizing how this small effort would affect those who read it was even more rewarding.

Newshawk Now!

I hungrily started ripping through the burgeoning newspaper websites following our Newshawk guidelines, www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm. I must admit it was quite addictive as each appropriate article became my "fix" and seeing my name on the Newshawk line was the "high". These articles are posted to our fully searchable archives which supplies targets for our writers, is a fantastic research tool and ensures no one will ever be able to deny the inhumane treatment of so many people which occurs on a daily basis all across the world.

Our senior editor, Richard Lake, noticed my activity and enthusiasm and invited me to join the MAP Editor family. He patiently walked me through the article processing tasks and we have been best "buds" ever since. One of our first projects was the development of an online, self-paced tutorial to allow new MAP Editors to learn how to get an article from our Newshawks to our archives.

Not long after that I accepted the staff position of Membership Coordinator from which I am writing this message to you today. If you would like to help us contribute to changing our failed drug policies we would love to find a volunteer position to fit your schedule and talents. It doesn't matter where you are in location or skill level. Please take a moment to join our family by filling out our online volunteer form, www.mapinc.org/volunteers .


Jo-D Harrison
Membership Coordinator

P.S. If you are considering a year end donation, don't forget that reforming drug policy through DrugSense as a 501(c)(3) non-profit is tax deductible to the extent provided by law. Donating is quick and easy. Just visit www.drugsense.org/donate.

Checks can also be made payable to DrugSense and mailed to:

DrugSense
14252 Culver Dr #328
Irvine, CA 92604-0326

Or you can donate toll free by calling 1-800-266-5759.

Donations can automatically repeating it every month, quarter, or half year as noted here www.drugsense.org/donate.

Happy Holidays and Peace on Earth!


DrugSense/MAP
14252 Culver Drive #328 Irvine, CA, 92604-0326   (800) 266-5759
DrugSense is a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit. Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.


For more information please visit:

Drug Policy Alliance: Your Donation Will Be Matched

 

You Can Make a Difference

Dear friends,

Give today to have your tax-deductible gift doubled by an anonymous donor. 

Donate
Donate Now

I've never had a year like this in all my years fighting to end the drug war. 

With your help, we’ve scored some major victories, but drug war proponents have been battling, too, and I can't say we're winning  - at least not yet.

Can you help us continue the fight? If you make a tax-deductible donation today your gift will be doubled by an anonymous donor who will match your gift dollar-for-dollar through the end of the year until we reach $100,000.

We've got momentum, but we're up against a prison-industrial complex of immense power.  Never before have I needed your help as much as I do now.

The drug war zealots won't give up power or money easily. To continue our successes on the local, state and federal level, we need your support.

We have the ideas.  We have the troops.  We need you to provide the fuel.  Please give today, and your tax-deductible gift will be doubled.

Sincerely,

Ethan Signature (text free)

Ethan Nadelmann
Executive Director
Drug Policy Alliance

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