Portland NORML News - Friday, August 14, 1998
-------------------------------------------------------------------

DEA Attacks Peron Lake County Cannabis Farm (A Press Release
From Californians For Compassionate Use Notes Heavily Armed DEA Agents
Targeting Dennis Peron Uprooted 130 Plants Germinated By Proposition 215,
For The Second Time Harming Medical Patients, Acting On Both Occasions
As Judge, Jury And Executioner)

Date: Sun, 16 Aug 1998 13:37:55 -0800
To: friends@freecannabis.org, dpfca@drugsense.org, natlnorml@aol.com
From: canorml@igc.apc.org (Dale Gieringer)
Subject: DPFCA: Re: Peron's Lako Bust
Sender: owner-dpfca@drugsense.org
Reply-To: dpfca@drugsense.org
Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/dpfca/

DEA Attacks Peron Lake Co. Cannabis Farm

(Press release from Californians for Compassionate Use) Aug 14, 1998
"Heavily armed agents of the DEA invaded the Lake Co. Cannabis Farm this
Fri. morn at 8 am destroying 130 mj plants. A collective of seriouly ill
people was cultivating the herb for personal medial use as allowed under
California State Law. This is the second time the DEA has 'investigated'
these same patients acting on both occasions as judge, jury & executioner.
By not issuing tickets or charges the feds are skipping due process,
seizing vaqluable hard to replace plants and forcing patients to buy their
medicine on the black market.

"Patients are replanting immediately and are planning a counter-attack in
federal court...."

>Confirmed Rumor
>
>Unknown law enforcement agency raided Peron's Lake County pot farm
>this friday morning.
>
>Anyone got info.?
>
>Scott Imler

***

Dale Gieringer (415) 563-5858 // canorml@igc.apc.org
2215-R Market St. #278, San Francisco CA 94114
-------------------------------------------------------------------

City Takes Charge Of Medicinal Pot ('The Bulletin' In Bend, Oregon,
Notes The Oakland City Council Has Deputized Staff At The Oakland
Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative In Accordance With The Federal
Controlled Substance Act In Order To Prevent The Government
From Shutting It Down)

From: cwagoner@bendnet.com
Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 21:57:07 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: DPFOR: Bend Bulletin/ OCBC
To: dpfor@drugsense.org
Sender: owner-dpfor@drugsense.org
Reply-To: dpfor@drugsense.org
Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/
Newshawk: Curt Wagoner (cwagoner@bendnet.com)
Source: Bend Bulletin (bulletin@bendbulletin.com)
Website: http://www.bendbulletin.com
Pubdate: 8-14-98
Page: A-3

CITY TAKES CHARGE OF MEDICINAL POT

Oakland hopes ploy shields club from federal prosecution

OAKLAND, Calif. - The city of Oakland on Thursday became the first
city in the United States to begin distributing marijuana to ease the
symptoms of the chronically ill.

In an action that City Councilman Nate Miley portrayed as an act of
moral courage, the city named operators of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers
Cooperative as officers of the city and said they will distribute marijuana
at their cooperative on the city's behalf.

Miley said the city hopes the action will shield the club from the federal
Justice Department's efforts to shut it down.

The city is counting on the Federal Controlled Substance Act - the
same act the federal government is using in its attempt to close the club -
to keep it open. A provision of the act says that officers enforcing local
drug ordinances are immune from prosecution for possessing, buying and
selling illegal drugs in the course of their police work.

Now that the cannabis club's members are "officers" of the city of
Oakland, the city hopes, they too will be considered immune from
prosecution. Miley acknowledged, however, that the city is taking a risk.

"The city could be subject to civil and criminal prosecution" for the
program, Miley said, "but it's a risk we take. . . . There are just moments
that demand that people come forward and do the right thing." He said the
city also will consider ways to directly distribute marijuana.

"We're aware of the Oakland decision, and we're carefully reviewing
it," said Gregory King, a spokesman for the Justice Department in
Washington.

Calling the club "a very important element in our community," Miley
said the city "will do everything we can do legally . . . to ensure that
the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Club continues to operate."

Medical-marijuana advocates say the drug eases the symptoms of a wide
range of illnesses and can control nausea and pain suffered by some
chronically ill patients.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Defiant Oakland Adopts Pot Club ('The Sacramento Bee' Version -
Plus Commentary From An Informed List Subscriber)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 16:20:11 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Organization: BlueDot
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US CA: Defiant Oakland Adopts Pot Club
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Dave Fratello (amr@lainet.com)
Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/about_us/sacbeemail.html
Website: http://www.sacbee.com/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998
Author: Laura Mecoy and Lesli Maxwell Bee Los Angeles Bureau and Bee
Correspondent

DEFIANT OAKLAND ADOPTS POT CLUB

OAKLAND -- Oakland became the first city in the United States to begin
distributing marijuana for medicinal purposes when it issued a
declaration naming the operators of its local cannabis club "officers of
the city."

"We're out on the frontier," City Councilman Nate Miley said at a news
conference at City Hall, where the club's staff was authorized to act as
representatives of the city. Oakland officials are trying to take
advantage of a section of the Federal Controlled Substance Act that was
originally intended to protect undercover police officers who use or
transport illegal drugs to maintain their cover.

The provision says that any officer of a city who is enforcing drug laws
has immunity from prosecution under those laws.

"Today, Oakland has shown the way," said Gerald Uelmen,Santa Clara
University law professor and a lawyer for the buyers' cooperative. "It's
an example that will be widely emulated in California."

But the attorney general's office said the operators of Oakland Cannabis
Buyers' Cooperative will still be violating state law.

"Our reading of the law and the appellate court's decision found
cannabis clubs cannot operate," said Matt Ross, Attorney General Dan
Lungren's spokesman.

Ross said Proposition 215, the medical marijuana initiative adopted by
56 percent of voters in 1996, allows just three things: Doctors can
recommend marijuana for ill patients; those patients can grow and use
marijuana; and a primary caregiver can provide marijuana if the patient
is unable to grow it.

"Unfortunately for Oakland, a city is not a primary caregiver," Ross
said.

Cannabis clubs have argued that they should be considered caregivers and
allowed to provide the marijuana to seriously ill patients suffering
from ailments such as AIDS, cancer or glaucoma.

But Lungren, federal prosecutors and the courts have refused to consider
the clubs as caregivers. In recent months they have forced cooperatives
in San Francisco, San Jose and elsewhere to shut down.

Oakland's club and two others -- in Ukiah and Fairfax, Marin County --
continue to operate openly in defiance of the courts, and Proposition
215 advocates said even more operate clandestinely. "The whole issue of
how patients can get marijuana is complicated, but it is heartening to
see people step up to the plate," Dave Fratello, spokesman for Americans
for Medical Rights, the group that got Proposition 215 on the ballot,
said. "Oakland is obviously charging ahead."

The Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative had kept its doors open despite
a federal court order in May requiring it to shut down.

Last month, the Oakland City Council adopted an ordinance to make
designated marijuana retailers "officers of the city."

The official designation came on Thursday, and the club's attorneys said
they'll file a motion today seeking to dismiss the federal case against
the cooperative.

"On the basis of this ordinance, the case should be moot and end
entirely," said Robert Raich, an attorney for the buyers' club. "Those
lawyers (federal prosecutors) should go back to Washington, D.C."

Gregory King, U.S. Justice Department spokesman, declined to comment on
the motion, except to say that federal prosecutors are reviewing
Oakland's ordinance.

Bob Weiner, spokesman for federal drug czar Barry McCaffrey, said his
office will also have to study the city's action.

But he said current policy is that "science, not politics" should
determine what's legal -- and thus far, science hasn't determined that
marijuana is medicine.

Michael Vitiello, McGeorge School of Law professor, said Oakland's
ordinance may satisfy the language in the federal Controlled Substances
Act, but may not uphold the intent of the law.

Still, he said the Oakland ordinance has the "potential to be a real
model to solve a difficult problem."

Councilman Miley said the city won't back down, even if it means local
officials have to face prosecution for violating drug laws.

"It's a risk we're willing to take," he said. "If the federal government
wants to prosecute me and my fellow council members, then . . . bring it
on."

Rand Martin, chief of staff for Sen. John Vasconcellos, D-Santa Clara,
predicted Oakland's action would lead to a confrontation between Lungren
and Oakland's elected officials.

"Somewhere, there has to be a showdown like this because this is not a
real policy question because the voters already stated the policy," he
said. "This is a real political issue."

***

To: "DRCTalk Reformers' Forum" (drctalk@drcnet.org)
From: Robert Goodman (robgood@bestweb.net)
Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 00:06:34 +500
Subject: Re: Sacto Bee on Oakland / club
Reply-To: drctalk@drcnet.org
Sender: owner-drctalk@drcnet.org

>The Sacramento Bee, Friday, August 14, 1998
>Defiant Oakland adopts pot club
>By Laura Mecoy and Lesli Maxwell
>Bee Los Angeles Bureau and Bee Correspondent
>OAKLAND -- Oakland became the first city in the United States to
>begin distributing marijuana for medicinal purposes when it issued
>a declaration naming the operators of its local cannabis club
>"officers of the city." ...Oakland officials are trying
>to take advantage of a section of the Federal Controlled Substance
>Act that was originally intended to protect undercover police
>officers who use or transport illegal drugs to maintain their cover.

Not only undercover police, but above-cover police, as for instance any who
take possession of drugs as evidence. But it's likely the provision
contemplated situations like the one described as well, wherein officers
would be in custody of controlled substances to prevent their diversion.

>The provision says that any officer of a city who is enforcing drug
>laws has immunity from prosecution under those laws.
>
>Cannabis clubs have argued that they should be considered
>caregivers and allowed to provide the marijuana to seriously ill
>patients suffering from ailments such as AIDS, cancer or glaucoma.
>But Lungren, federal prosecutors and the courts have refused to
>consider the clubs as caregivers....
>
>Ross said Proposition 215, the medical marijuana initiative adopted
>by 56 percent of voters in 1996, allows just three things: Doctors
>can recommend marijuana for ill patients; those patients can grow
>and use marijuana; and a primary caregiver can provide marijuana if
>the patient is unable to grow it.
>"Unfortunately for Oakland, a city is not a primary caregiver,"
>Ross said.

Probably true. But:

(1) If the city has health clinics giving primary care, and if the med mj
patients make those clinics their primary source of health care, then the
city would be primary care givers for them.

And (2) it is quite likely that California's controlled substances statutes,
like those of the feds, exempt enforcement officers from registration
provisions. Either that or all police and others likely to handle
controlled substances in the course of enforcement of such statutes would
have to register with the state, just like pharmacies. One way or another,
it's likely that municipal officers enforcing any controlled substance law
(e.g. prop 215) are exempt from ALL registration provisions (state as well
as federal) regarding possession and distribution as related to the
substance in question. If the purpose of the laws, as amended by prop 215,
is to keep cannabis out of the hands of unauthorized possessors, then
regardless of who is considered a primary caregiver, how could those
deputized by the municipality to enforce the law not be said to be enforcing
the law, as long as they keep the cannabis in question out of SOME people's
hands? In fact, even in the absence of prop 215, a city could have its
enforcement officers distribute controlled substances to designated
recipients, and it'd still be legal under federal & state law.

Robert
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Deputizes Medical Pot Club ('The San Francisco Examiner' Version)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 16:16:41 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Organization: BlueDot
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US CA: Oakland Deputizes Medical Pot Club
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: compassion23@geocities.com (Frank S. World)
Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA)
Contact: letters@examiner.com
Website: http://www.examiner.com/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998
Author: Robert Selna Special To The Examiner 1998 San Francisco Examiner

OAKLAND DEPUTIZES MEDICAL POT CLUB

Oakland has become the first city in the nation to name a pot
distributor an official arm of the city, opening a new front in the
legal battle over medicinal marijuana.

"We felt like we needed to be out on the frontier to make sure that
Proposition 215 can be implemented," City Council member Nate Miley said
Thursday at a brief City Hall ceremony.

Prop. 215 is the controversial 1996 state initiative that under certain
conditions legalized distribution of medical marijuana in California,
but has run into roadblocks from state and federal prosecutors.

Thursday, city officials and a team of attorneys announced that a new
city ordinance will permit volunteers and employees at the Oakland
Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative to distribute marijuana for medicinal
purposes without threat of arrest.

City officials are trying to take advantage of a section of the Federal
Controlled Substance Act that was originally intended to protect
undercover police officers who use or transport illegal drugs to
maintain their cover.

The provision says that any officer of a city who is enforcing drug laws
has immunity from prosecution under those laws.

"Designating these officers will blow a hole through the controlled
substances act," said Robert Raich, the attorney who led the effort to
create the ordinance. "An agent of the city has the duty to enforce the
ordinance and is immune under the federal law."

But in the U.S. attorney's office, news of the ordinance drew a cautious
response Thursday.

"All I'm going to say is that we are aware of Oakland's decision and
looking at it very carefully," said spokesman Gregory King.

But the state attorney general's office said the operators of the
Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative will still be violating state law.

"Our reading of the law and the appellate court's decision found
cannabis clubs cannot operate," said Matt Ross, spokesman for Attorney
General Dan Lungren.

Despite the passage of Prop. 215 by 56 percent of California voters,
Lungren, federal prosecutors and the courts have refused to consider the
clubs as caregivers.

The law allows a patient or "primary care-giver" to possess and use
marijuana if recommended by a physician for the treatment of an illness.

But in recent months, cooperatives in San Francisco, San Jose and
elsewhere have been forced to shut down on the basis that the clubs
violated federal law prohibiting the distribution of controlled
substances.

In May, the federal government won a preliminary injunction against the
Oakland cooperative, which the cooperative chose to ignore.

On July 9, Oakland passed the most permissive medical marijuana
guidelines in the state, permitting medical marijuana users to maintain
a cache of 1=93 pounds -- or 10 cigarettes per day -- without fear of
arrest.

The city broke new ground again July 28 when the council unanimously
passed an ordinance designating marijuana retailers "officers of the
city."

Thursday was the official launching of the ordinance.

"It is important for humanitarian reasons to shield the club which
provides this substance to people who are less fortunate, suffering and
needy," Miley said. "We see this as a public health issue."

Friday, Raich was to file a motion with U.S. District Judge Charles
Breyer seeking immunity from the May preliminary injunction that
directed the cooperative to close its operations.

In the motion, Raich will employ the new ordinance as the cooperative's
defense against closure.

While medical cannabis advocates seemed confident in their case, some
experts doubted the strength of their legal argument.

"They have to overcome a 500-pound gorilla called the supremacy clause,"
said law professor Franklin Zimring of UC-Berkeley's Boalt Hall School
of Law. "Any conflict between local and federal law and federal law
wins."

Zimring, a criminal justice expert, said the controlled substance act
was originally set up to stop the sale of drugs by using undercover
officers, and the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative is attempting to
use the act to sell drugs.

"The judge will have to be a pretty big fan of that approach to buy it
because it seems to be a bit of a stretch," Zimring said.

Backers of the ordinance said Thursday they chose the cooperative as the
city's official medical pot seller because the organization has had a
good track record.

"So far, there have been no complaints. It has been run in a very
businesslike and professional manner," Miley said.

The Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative operates out of a nondescript
office building in downtown Oakland. The club dispenses marijuana plants
and processed marijuana to its 1,800 members from the same type of glass
case found in a jewelry shop. It also offers courses on growing the
drug, massage therapy and a buffet.

Cooperative Executive Director Jeff Jones said his operation is a
tightly run ship.

"We have a small number of members, everyone must have a verifiable
letter of recommendation from a doctor, and we have video surveillance
and a private security firm to check members' identification," said
Jones, who started the cooperative in 1996 after his father died of
cancer.

While Miley admitted there was no specific plan in place to monitor the
cooperative, he said the city manager's office has done a thorough
safety and financial review and that the ordinance excluded the city
from any liability claims arising from the pot distribution operation.
Examiner news services contributed to this report.

1998 San Francisco Examiner
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Club To Distribute Pot On City's Behalf ('The Los Angeles Times'
Version)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 16:00:56 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Organization: BlueDot
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US CA: Oakland Club To Distribute Pot On City'S Behalf
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Jim Rosenfield
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Contact: letters@latimes.com
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Pudate: 14 Aug 1998
Fax: 213-237-4712
Author: Mary Curtius, Times Staff Writer

OAKLAND CLUB TO DISTRIBUTE POT ON CITY'S BEHALF

OAKLAND--The city of Oakland on Thursday became the first city in the
United States to begin distributing marijuana to ease the symptoms of
the chronically ill.

In an action that City Councilman Nate Miley portrayed as an act of
moral courage, the city named operators of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers
Cooperative as officers of the city and said they will distribute
marijuana at their cooperative on the city's behalf.

Miley said the city hopes the action will shield the club from the U.S.
Justice Department's efforts to shut it down.

The city is counting on the Federal Controlled Substance Act--the same
act the federal government is using in its attempt to close the club--to
keep it open. A provision of the act says that officers enforcing local
drug ordinances are immune from prosecution for possessing, buying and
selling illegal drugs in the course of their police work.

Now that the cannabis club's members are "officers" of the city of
Oakland, the city hopes, they too will be considered immune from
prosecution.

However, the state attorney general's office said the action is probably
illegal, and even Miley acknowledged that the city is taking a risk.

"The city could be subject to civil and criminal prosecution" for the
program, Miley said, "but it's a risk we take...There are just moments
that demand that people come forward and do the right thing." He said
the city also will consider ways to directly distribute marijuana.

"We're aware of the Oakland decision and we're carefully reviewing it,"
said Gregory King, a spokesman for the Justice Department in Washington.

Oakland, a liberal city where former Gov. Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown Jr. is
scheduled to take office as mayor in January, has gone out on a limb
before. The city found itself in the midst of a national debate about
race, education and language in 1996 after the school board voted to
officially recognize black dialect, or "Ebonics," as a separate
language.

At the time, board members said their action was meant to save black
children by encouraging them to stay in school. On Thursday, Miley said
the city was interested in saving lives.

"We needed to be out on the frontier, to ensure that Proposition 215 can
be implemented," Miley said. "There are people in a lot of pain, who are
suffering and dying." Calling the club "a very important element in our
community," Miley said that the city "will do everything we can do legally
. . . to ensure that the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Club continues to operate."
Medical marijuana advocates say the drug eases the symptoms of a wide
range of illnesses and can control nausea and pain suffered by some
chronically ill patients.

Voters passed Proposition 215, the medical marijuana initiative, in
November 1996. Since then, state Atty. Gen. Dan Lungren and the Justice
Department have sought, in separate court actions, to close California's
marijuana clubs. More than two dozen clubs, some of which had operated
underground, emerged across the state soon after the law passed.

All but a handful have since closed--some as a result of state and
federal actions, others because their officials were arrested by local
police departments for allegedly selling marijuana to people without a
doctor's recommendation.

Three Clubs Defied Order to Close In May

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ordered six Northern California clubs to
close. Ruling in a civil suit brought by the U.S. attorney for the Northern
District, Breyer said that federal law, which prohibits any sale of marijuana
because it is a controlled substance, supersedes Proposition 215.

Three clubs--the Oakland club, one in Marin and one in Ukiah--chose to
defy Breyer's ruling and continue operating. Of those three, Oakland is
by far the largest, with about 1,800 members.

The Justice Department has asked Breyer to find the three clubs in
contempt of court and asked that federal marshals be allowed to shut
them down. A hearing on those motions is scheduled for Aug.
31 in San Francisco.

Seeking to head off a contempt ruling, the Oakland City Council took two
actions last month. It instructed its Police Department not to arrest
residents who possessed 1 1/2 pounds of marijuana or less for medical
purposes, several times the amount Lungren has said is allowable. The
council also passed an ordinance establishing the medical marijuana
distribution system, designating the Oakland cannabis club as the city's
distributor.

At an Oakland city hall news conference Thursday, Oakland Cannabis Club
director Jeff Jones--a clean-cut 24-year-old who says he became
committed to the cause of providing medical marijuana to patients after
watching his father die a painful death from cancer--and his staff were
publicly designated as officers of the city of Oakland.

Deputy City Manager Mike Nisperos said that the club's members all are
designated as officers. He said the designation does not put them on the
city's payroll or provide them with city benefits. It merely says that
they are acting on behalf of the city to enforce a city ordinance.

Attorneys for the cannabis club said that they will file a motion today
seeking to dismiss the federal case on the basis of the city's action.

"This designation will permit the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative
staff to distribute medical cannabis within federal law," said Gerald
Uelmen, a University of Santa Clara law professor who helped represent
O.J. Simpson in his criminal case.

Uelmen was joined by prominent criminal defense lawyer James Brosnahan.

Uelmen said that the 1970 Federal Controlled Substances Act contains a
provision saying any officer of a city who is enforcing an ordinance on
controlled substances is immune from liability for civil or criminal
prosecution under the act.

The provision normally applies to drug agents, protecting them from
prosecution when they are buying or selling drugs in order to make
arrests. But Uelmen insisted that its wording is broad, and said he is
confident that the courts will rule in Oakland's favor.

"We are blowing a hole in the act," said Robert Raich, another attorney
representing the club. Raich said that any city in the nation could
similarly pass an ordinance allowing for the distribution of medical
marijuana and designate officers to do that.

"I think that we have moved the availability of medical cannabis to a
much more sure-footed stance all over this state, all over this
country," Raich told The Times in an interview before Thursday's news
conference.

Lungren Spokesman Calls Actions Illegal

But a spokesman for Lungren expressed skepticism at the attorneys' legal
reasoning, saying he thought Oakland's actions are illegal under state and
federal law.

"Proposition 215 allows for three things," said spokesman Matt Ross.
"For a doctor to recommend the use of medical marijuana to a patient,
for a patient to use or grow marijuana for medical use, and for a
primary caregiver to provide it." A primary caregiver, Ross said, is
"someone who takes care of all of your needs, not just the need for
marijuana." "Today's actions by the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Club and the
city of Oakland," he said, "don't seem to meet any of those three
options." But Ross said Lungren's office has no plan to move against
Oakland or the cannabis club. It is up to the Alameda County district
attorney's office to do that, he said.

Alameda County Deputy Dist. Atty. Jeff Rubin said Wednesday that the
office would not get involved with the Oakland club unless law
enforcement officials found evidence of crimes being committed.

Lungren has maintained that the law never intended to legalize clubs
that sell marijuana to hundreds, even thousands of patients.

The state Supreme Court upheld that view, letting stand a lower court
ruling in a suit Lungren brought against the San Francisco Cannabis
Buyers Club, that the club could not be considered a caregiver under
Proposition 215.

In addition, Lungren has said that his office would consider patients
who grow marijuana themselves to be violating Proposition 215 if they
possess more than an ounce a month of processed marijuana, or the number
of plants needed to produce that amount.

Club operators and many patients argue that it is unrealistic to expect
every patient to be able to cultivate marijuana plants at home. They say
the clubs can ensure a safe supply and a safe delivery system at a
reasonable cost.

In May, Lungren won his battle to shut down the San Francisco Cannabis
Buyers Club, when Superior Court Judge William Cahill ruled it a public
nuisance and state drug enforcement agents padlocked it. The club
claimed to be serving about 9,000 patients, many of them suffering from
AIDS.

Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Begins Providing Marijuana To Ease Pain ('The Seattle Times' Version)

From: "W.H.E.N. - Bob Owen - Olympia" (when@olywa.net)
To: "-News" (when@hemp.net)
Subject: 3- Articles - Oakland, CA to provide pot
Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 12:21:12 -0700
Sender: owner-when@hemp.net

Copyright (c) 1998 The Seattle Times Company

Posted at 06:58 a.m. PDT; Friday, August 14, 1998

Oakland begins providing marijuana to ease pain

by Mary Curtius

Los Angeles Times

OAKLAND, Calif. - The city of Oakland yesterday became the first city in the
United States to begin distributing marijuana to ease the symptoms of the
chronically ill.

In an action that City Councilman Nate Miley portrayed as an act of moral
courage, the city named operators of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative
as officers of the city and said they will distribute marijuana at their
cooperative on the city's behalf.

Miley said the city hopes the action will shield the club from the federal
Justice Department's efforts to shut it down.

The city is counting on the Federal Controlled Substance Act - the same act
the federal government is using in its attempt to close the club - to keep
it open.

A provision of the act says that officers enforcing local drug ordinances
are immune from prosecution for possessing, buying and selling illegal drugs
in the course of their police work.

The provision normally applies to drug agents, protecting them from
prosecution when they are buying or selling drugs in order to make arrests.

Now that the cannabis club's members are "officers" of the city of Oakland,
the city hopes, they too will be considered immune from prosecution. Miley
acknowledged, however, that the city is taking a risk.

"The city could be subject to civil and criminal prosecution" for the
program, Miley said, "but it's a risk we take. . . . There are just moments
that demand that people come forward and do the right thing."

He said the city also will consider ways to distribute marijuana directly to
patients.

"We're aware of the Oakland decision, and we're carefully reviewing it,"
said Gregory King, a spokesman for the Justice Department in Washington.

Oakland, a liberal city where California's former governor, Jerry Brown, is
scheduled to take office as mayor in January, has gone out on a limb before.
The city found itself in the midst of a national debate about race,
education and language in 1996 after the school board voted to officially
recognize black dialect, or "Ebonics," as a separate language.

`A very important element'

Calling the club "a very important element in our community," Miley said the
city "will do everything we can do legally . . . to ensure that the Oakland
Cannabis Buyers Club continues to operate."

Medical-marijuana advocates say the drug eases the symptoms of a wide range
of illnesses and can control nausea and pain suffered by some chronically
ill patients.

California voters passed Proposition 215, the medical-marijuana initiative,
in November 1996. Since then, state Attorney General Dan Lungren and the
Justice Department have sought, in separate court actions, to close
California's marijuana clubs.

More than two dozen clubs, some of which had operated underground, emerged
across the state soon after the law passed.

All but a handful have since closed - some as a result of state and federal
actions, others because their officials were arrested by local police
departments for allegedly selling marijuana to people without a doctor's
recommendation.

In May, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ordered six Northern California
clubs to close, saying that federal law, which prohibits any sale of
marijuana because it is a controlled substance, supersedes Proposition 215.

Three clubs - the Oakland club, one in Marin County and one in Ukiah - chose
to defy Breyer's ruling and continue operating.

Of those three, Oakland is by far the largest, with about 1,800 members.

Heading off a contempt ruling

Seeking to head off a contempt ruling, the Oakland City Council took two
actions last month. It instructed its police department not to arrest city
residents who possessed 1 1/2 pounds of marijuana or less for medical
purposes, several times the amount Lungren has said is allowable.

The council also passed an ordinance establishing the medical-marijuana
distribution system, designating the Oakland cannabis club as the city's
distributor.

At an Oakland city hall news conference yesterday, Oakland Cannabis Club
director Jeff Jones - a 24-year-old who says he became committed to the
cause of providing medical marijuana to patients after watching his father
die a painful death from cancer - and his staff were publicly designated as
officers of the city of Oakland.

Deputy City Manager Mike Nisperos said the club's members all are designated
as officers. He said the designation does not put them on the city's payroll
or provide them with city benefits.

It merely says they are acting on behalf of the city to enforce a city
ordinance.

Attorneys for the cannabis club said they would file a motion today seeking
to dismiss the federal case on the basis of the city's action.

But Matt Ross, a spokesman for Lungren, said Lungren's office has no plan to
move against Oakland or the cannabis club. It is up to the Alameda district
attorney's office to do that, he said.

Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Jeff Rubin said Wednesday the office
would not get involved with the Oakland club unless law-enforcement
officials found evidence of crimes being committed there.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Designates Cannabis Co-Op Staff As City Agents
('The Associated Press' Updates Its Version From Yesterday)

From: "W.H.E.N. - Bob Owen - Olympia" (when@olywa.net)
To: "-News" (when@hemp.net)
Subject: 3- Articles - Oakland, CA to provide pot
Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 12:21:12 -0700
Sender: owner-when@hemp.net

By MICHELLE LOCKE

The Associated Press

08/14/98 5:23 AM Eastern

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- Staff members of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers'
Cooperative have a new title: officer of the city.

The designation, which became official Thursday, is part of an attempt to
shield the workers from federal prosecution as they distribute medical
marijuana.

"This is a historic day for medical patients' rights across California,"
says Jeff Jones, executive director of the co-op. "Just kind of turn the
clock back five years and think about this. It wouldn't have even been on
the landscape. Nobody even knew what medical cannabis was."

Oakland is believed to be the first city to have an official medical
marijuana distribution program.

"We're out on the frontier," City Councilman Nate Miley said at a City Hall
news conference Thursday.

"Today, Oakland has shown the way. I think this is an example that will be
widely emulated in California," said Gerald Uelman, an attorney working with
the club who also served as a member of the O.J. Simpson defense "dream
team."

Thursday's ceremony stemmed from an ordinance passed earlier this summer by
the city council. The council has also approved a policy allowing medical
marijuana users to have 1{ pounds of cannabis, which they view as a
three-month supply of about 10 cigarettes a day. State guidelines figure 1
ounce equals a 30-day supply.

Robert Raich, an attorney for the club, said designating staff as city
agents will protect them under the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which
gives immunity from federal and criminal liability to agents enforcing an
ordinance relating to controlled substances.

A call to the U.S. Attorney's office in San Francisco was referred to a
spokesman in Washington, D.C., who did not return a telephone call to The
Associated Press.

Federal prosecutors are moving to shut down the Oakland club, along with
several others which sprang up after voters approved Proposition 215 in
1996.

The initiative allowed patients with cancer, AIDS and other conditions that
might be helped by marijuana to obtain the drug under California law with a
doctor's recommendation. But a federal judge later ruled it did not and
could not override the federal law against distributing marijuana.

Raich said he will file a motion Friday seeking to have federal charges
against the club dismissed. A hearing is scheduled for Aug. 31.

Oakland has espoused a tough anti-drug program that includes seizing
vehicles allegedly used in the buying or selling of drugs.

Miley said there's no contradiction, because the medical marijuana program
is being administered strictly for legitimate health reasons.

"We will be very vigorous when it comes to law enforcement, but we will be
very strong when it comes to compassion," he said.

The Oakland ordinance exempts the city from liability arising as a result of
activities conducted by the club, which is required to carry its own
insurance and obey all city laws.

Like every workplace in Oakland, the cannabis club is a smoke-free
environment.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Deputizes Pot Club ('The San Francisco Chronicle' Version
Incorrectly Says 'State Law Allows' Medical Marijuana Patients To Possess
Only One Ounce Of Medicine, The Interpretation Of California Attorney General
Dan Lungren, Nemesis Of Proposition 215)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 13:24:14 -0400
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US CA: Oakland Deputizes Pot Club
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: compassion23@geocities.com (Frank S. World)
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Contact: chronletters@sfgate.com
Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998
Author: Thaai Walker, Chronicle Staff Writer
Section: Page A1

Oakland Deputizes Pot Club
Move uses federal law exempting city agents

Thaai Walker
Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, August 14, 1998

Oakland declared a medical marijuana club a city agency yesterday, becoming
the first city in the country to officially distribute pot for medicinal
use.

The novel tactic steps up the counterattack against the federal government's
continuing efforts to shut down Northern California pot clubs. It uses the
government's own law in an attempt to give club members immunity from civil
or criminal liability.

In a ceremony at City Hall, city officials designated the staff, volunteers
and board of directors of the Oakland Cannabis Buyer's Cooperative as
officers of the city.

The Oakland club, which serves almost 1,800 chronically ill people from its
downtown office, has been operating since the passage of Proposition 215 in
1996. That initiative legalized marijuana for medical uses. The Oakland club
is one of three Northern California pot clubs that federal authorities are
trying to shut down by the end of this month.

A Justice Department spokesman warned that the battle is not over. ``I would
discourage them from jumping to any premature conclusions,'' said spokesman
Gregory King. He added only that his department is reviewing Oakland's
action.

Nonetheless, directors of the other two Northern California marijuana clubs,
in Fairfax and Ukiah, were encouraged by the news and said they plan to try
to gain the same status in their cities.

``This is wonderful news,'' said Marvin Lehrman, director of the Ukiah
Cannabis Buyer's Club, which serves 200 patients. ``Oakland has made a
pioneering step here.''

Making marijuana club workers deputies of the city is Oakland's latest move
since a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction in May ordering the
Oakland club and five others to close. Three have since shut down, but the
other three have defied the order, saying they have not violated federal
law.

City leaders and medical marijuana advocates have expressed hope that their
new strategy, made possible by the passage of an Oakland ordinance approved
last month, will help them outmaneuver the federal government.

``This designation will permit the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative to
distribute medical cannabis within federal law,'' said Gerald Uelmen, a
prominent Santa Clara attorney representing the club. Uelmen is best-known
as a member of the O.J. Simpson ``dream team.''

``That means the federal government has no case,'' he said.

Federal law, which supersedes state law, says marijuana used for any
purposes is illegal.

Using the federal law to make their case, attorneys for the club said that
by a section of the Federal Controlled Substances Act, the club is now
immune from federal criminal and civil liability. The section states that
any officer of a city who is enforcing an ordinance relating to controlled
substances cannot be prosecuted under the act.

The federal government's legal actions have been aimed at the Oakland, Marin
and Ukiah clubs and three others that have since closed -- two in San
Francisco, including Dennis Peron's Cannabis Healing Center on Market
Street, and one in Santa Cruz.

On August 31, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer will decide whether to
strengthen his previous order by allowing federal agents to shut down the
clubs. Attorneys for the Oakland club plan to file a motion today asking the
judge to dismiss the federal petition in light of the city's new ordinance.

Inside the cooperative's simple, well-lighted offices yesterday, defiant
club members and staff breathed a sigh of relief. To them, the city's
sanction of their program is a sign that they will survive.

``We're not going to go away,'' said Jim McClelland, the club's business
manager.

Scott Imler, director of the Los Angeles Cannabis Resource Center in West
Hollywood, called Oakland's actions an ``innovative idea'' and said he
thought it ``ironic'' that a loophole in the Controlled Substances Act that
was established to allow ``narcs to set people up in drug stings could be
turned around like that on the federal government.''

But he said he is not sure the tactic will prevent the club from being shut
down.

Imler said the federal government took actions to close down the Northern
California clubs because undercover agents were able to gain access to them
with phony documentation.

``I don't know if after-the-fact designation will be enough to stave off the
injunction already issued,'' Imler said. ``The cow may be out of the barn
before the door got closed.''

Robert Raich, an attorney representing the Oakland club, said the undercover
agents used ``lies and deceit.'' That they gained access does not indicate
the club is careless, he said.

``They had a sophisticated operation,'' he said. ``(The club's) procedures
were not lax.''

City officials also said yesterday that they are confident that the club is
run in a professional manner. The city reviewed the club's licensing and tax
status, security measures and insurance coverage before going forward with
the designation.

Medical marijuana advocates were upbeat.

``This gives me hope,'' said Lynnette Shaw, who runs Marin Alliance for
Medical Marijuana in Fairfax. ``We've been waiting to see what happened in
Oakland before moving forward.''

Fairfax Town Council member Frank Egger said town officials are supportive
of the Fairfax pot club, but he said he will contact Oakland's city attorney
to find out more about liability issues associated with the city's action.

Oakland Councilman Nate Miley, an ardent advocate of the use of medicinal
marijuana, acknowledged yesterday that the city could be subject to state
and federal criminal and civil prosecution, but he said the city is willing
to take that risk.

``If the federal government wants to prosecute me or my colleagues, then
prosecute. Bring it on,'' he said.

The battle over medicinal marijuana has intensified since California voters
overwhelmingly passed Proposition 215.

Oakland has pushed to the forefront of the issue. In addition to its latest
maneuver, it has approved a policy allowing medical marijuana users to store
up to 1 1/2 pounds of the drug -- 24 times more than state law allows.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Seeks To Shield Sellers Of Medicinal Pot
('The Orange County Register' Version)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 15:18:22 -0400
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US CA: Oakland Seeks To Sheild Sellers Of Medicinal Pot
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: John W. Black
Source: Orange County Register (CA)
Contact: letters@link.freedom.com
Website: http://www.ocregister.com/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

OAKLAND SEEKS TO SHEILD SELLERS OF MEDICINAL POT

Oakland officials leaped to the forefront of the medical marijuana movement
Thursday, designating the staff of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative
as city agents.

The move is designed to shield them from criminal prosecution. Robert
Raich, an attorney for the club, said designating staff as city agents will
protect them under the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which gives
immunity from federal and criminal liability to agents enforcing an
ordinance relating to controlled substances.

Federal prosecutors are moving to shut down the Oakland club, along with
several others which sprang up after voters approved Proposition 215, the
medical marijuana initiative, in 1996. A federal judge later ruled the
initiative did not override federal law against distributing marijuana.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Marijuana Club Given Official Role In Oakland ('The Chicago Tribune' Version)

Date: Sun, 16 Aug 1998 10:20:27 -0700
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US CA: Marijuana Club Given Official Role in Oakland
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Steve Young (theyoungfamily@worldnet.att.net)
Source: Chicago Tribune (IL)
Contact: tribletter@aol.com
Website: http://www.chicago.tribune.com/
Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998
Author: V. Dion Haynes
Section: Sec. 1, p. 1

MARIJUANA CLUB GIVEN OFFICIAL ROLE IN OAKLAND

LOS ANGELES -- Opening a new front in the legal battle over medicinal
marijuana, Oakland leaders Thursday designated the outlawed Oakland
Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative an official arm of the city, thereby becoming
the first municipal government to dispense the drug to seriously ill
patients.

In its new partnership, Oakland is attempting to find its own solution to
the unresolved issue of medicinal marijuana use in California. Though
voters in November 1996 approved a statewide ballot measure allowing
patients to grow and smoke marijuana under certain conditions, the law has
faced repeated challenges from the California attorney general and the U.S.
Justice Department.

Last spring, a federal judge, responding to a Justice Department lawsuit,
issued an injunction ordering the Oakland cannabis cooperative and five
other clubs in northern California to stop distributing marijuana. Three
clubs, including the Oakland cooperative, have defied the order.

By making the Oakland cannabis club an "agent of the city," Oakland leaders
are seeking the shield of a provision of the Federal Controlled Substances
Act that protects undercover drug agents from federal prosecution. Section
885 (d) of the act provides that an "officer of a city" in enforcing
controlled-substances ordinances "has civil and criminal immunity" under
federal law.

"All the documentation I've seen shows that medical marijuana helps reduce
pain and suffering for certain patients-- those with glaucoma and cancer,"
said Nate Miley, an Oakland city councilman who helped launch the effort.

"What we're doing is historic," he said, adding that he expects federal and
state officials to challenge the partnership.

"We're putting ourselves out on a limb because we feel it's a moral issue
and we have to demonstrate support" for a patient's right to the drug.

Gerald Uelmen, a law professor at Santa Clara University who advises the
Oakland cannabis club, said the arrangement makes sense for law-enforcement
officials too.

"If you recognize the right of people to have (medicinal marijuana) but
don't supply a clear, secure environment to get it, patients will acquire
it from illicit dealers," Uelmen said. "Patients would prefer to have one
central location--a clean, well-lighted place. This simplifies the
(police's) responsibility to make sure the law is obeyed."

Justice Department officials are reviewing the Oakland action.

Besides California, Arizona also had a ballot-initiated medicinal marijuana
law. The state's legislature struck it down shortly after it was passed in
1996. The proposition will be back on the ballot in November, along with
another measure that would prohibit state lawmakers from invalidating
ballot measures.

In November, several other states, including Alaska, Oregon and Nevada,
will have ballot measures asking voters if they want to legalize medicinal
marijuana.

Proposition 215, or the Compassionate Use Act, was approved by 56 percent
of California's voters. The law allows a patient or "primary caregiver" to
possess and use marijuana if recommended by a physician for the treatment
of an illness.

For the last few years, Oakland officials have been aggressive in
attempting to counter state and federal opposition to medicinal marijuana.
The council in 1996 issued two resolutions endorsing Proposition 215 and
agreed not to stop the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, which had been
operating about a year before the law went into effect.

Last month, the council voted to allow residents to possess 1 1/2 pounds of
medicinal marijuana. The amount is based on medical estimates of what a
patient would use in three months.

The council's action last month was aimed at Atty. Gen. Dan Lungren's
declaration shortly after the law went into effect that the state would
attempt to prosecute anyone possessing more than an ounce of medicinal
marijuana.

From the beginning, Lungren and the cannabis clubs have been at odds over
how Proposition 215 should be carried out.

Under Lungren's interpretation, patients with a doctor's recommendation can
grow and smoke the medicinal marijuana. The patient also can obtain the
drug from a "primary caregiver."

The point of contention is over who is a primary caregiver. The clubs
consider themselves primary caregivers, but Lungren defines them as
doctors, nurses, friends and relatives.

"A primary caregiver is someone who looks after all your needs on a
consistent basis," said Matt Ross, Lungren's spokesman, adding that the
interpretation was supported by an appeals court ruling in December 1997.
"All a cannabis club does is provide marijuana."

The Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative operates out of a nondescript
office building in downtown Oakland. The club dispenses marijuana plants
and processed marijuana to its 1,800 members from the same type of glass
case found in a jewelry shop.

Club officials say they check the veracity of all doctors' notes from
patients. They attempt to keep track of the amounts given to patients and
investigate when the requests exceed the recommended dosage.

"We are diligent to make sure no abuses occur," said Jeff Jones, executive
director of the cannabis club.

Thursday's action essentially makes the club a consultant for the city,
although it receives no money. In fact, the club had to pay more under the
deal to purchase additional liability insurance indemnifying the City
Council, city attorney and city manager.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland To Supply Marijuana Officially ('The Boston Gobe' Version)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 08:58:49 -0700
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US: Oakland To Supply Marijuana Officially
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: emr@javanet.com (Dick Evans)
Source: Boston Globe (MA)
Contact: letters@globe.com
Website: http://www.boston.com/globe
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

OAKLAND TO SUPPLY MARIJUANA OFFICIALLY

AIM IS A DEFENSE FROM PROSECUTION

OAKLAND, Calif. - The City of Oakland named the first ``official''
marijuana supply agency in the country yesterday, breaking new ground in
the legal battle over California's 1996 medical marijuana law. At a
ceremony at Oakland City Hall, officials proclaimed staff of the Oakland
Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative to be ``officers of the city.'' This move is
intended to shield them from federal prosecution, although its legal
foundations were not clear.

Oakland officials said the new designation should thwart federal efforts to
close the club. California voters passed a state law in 1996 legalizing
medical marijuana use, but federal prosecutors have sued to close the
clubs, saying their operations violate federal narcotics laws. While a
number of northern California medical marijuana clubs have folded under the
legal pressure, Oakland's cannabis cooperative has continued to operate,
distributing the drug to 1,800 people to treat symptoms of AIDS, cancer and
other serious illnesses.

``The Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative runs a clean, legitimate
business, contributes to Oakland's downtown revitalization, and prevents
seriously ill people from turning to the streets to buy their medicine,''
said Vice Mayor Nate Miley, who chairs the city council's Public Safety
Committee. ``We're delighted to offer the cooperative all the support we
can, and hope that other cities will follow suit.'' While the new ``city
officer'' designation does not mean the club members are now city
employees, it does extend potentially powerful legal protection to them.
Under the Federal Controlled Substances Act, ``city officers,'' a term
usually taken to mean undercover law enforcement agents, cannot be
prosecuted for selling controlled drugs within the scope of their official
duties. Now, city officials hope, that designation will allow the cannabis
club to distribute marijuana to critically ill patients from its tidy,
pharmacy-like downtown offices.

``This designation will permit the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative to
distribute medical cannabis within federal law,'' said Professor Gerald
Uelmen of the University of Santa Clara School of Law, who has served as a
legal adviser to the club.

``That means the federal government has no case. The lawsuit against the
cooperative should be dropped today.'' Federal officials had no immediate
comment on Oakland's move, the first by any city in the country to name
what amounts to an official marijuana supply agency. ``We're aware of the
decision, and we are in the process of reviewing it. Any comment that we
might have would be made in court,'' said Gregory King, a spokesman for the
Justice Department.

Oakland officials, said, however, that they were aware that the city's
effort to protect the cannabis club might not stop the federal suit. City
lawyers will ask that it be dismissed on Friday.

``What we are trying to do is basically, as a city, set up a system to
distribute medical marijuana to those in need,'' said Joe de Vries, an aide
to Miley. ``If that's not good enough, we'll go the next step. And maybe
then everybody at the club will receive a City of Oakland paycheck.''
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Oakland Tries To Protect Medical Sales Of Marijuana ('The New York Times'
Version)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 08:58:42 -0700
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US: Oakland Tries To Protect Medical Sales Of Marijuana
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: emr@javanet.com (Dick Evans)
Source: New York Times (NY)
Contact: letters@nytimes.com
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

OAKLAND TRIES TO PROTECT MEDICAL SALES OF MARIJUANA

OAKLAND, Calif. -- The City Council on Thursday designated the Oakland
Marijuana Buyers' Cooperative as officers of the city, an effort to shield
the group from federal civil and criminal prosecution. The U.S. Justice
Department had won a temporary restraining order in May against the Oakland
cooperative and five other medical marijuana providers in Northern
California, claiming that they were in violation of federal narcotics laws.
Three of cooperatives shut down voluntarily, while the others, including
the one in Oakland, have defied the U.S. District Court ruling. Oakland
officials and the cooperative had worked together since the passage of a
1996 state initiative that allowed medically prescribed marijuana to be
distributed to any "seriously ill" Californian.

In July, the council voted to allow each medical marijuana user up to a
pound and a half of prescribed cannabis, which the council views as a
three-month supply.

"We decided we needed to be out on the frontier, to ease the suffering of
those in need," said Councilman Nate Miley at a brief ceremony in Oakland's
city hall. "We're delighted to offer the cooperative all the support we
can, and hope that other cities will follow suit."

Jeff Jones, the executive director of the cooperative, accepted the
designation on behalf of his group, which distributes the drug to more than
1,500 people to treat the effects of illnesses like cancer and AIDS. "This
is a great day for our patients and a great day for Oakland," Jones said.
Justice Department spokesman Gregory King said the decision by Oakland
officials was under review.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

A Clockwork Orange - Judge Dredd Goes on Vacation ('OC Weekly'
Notes Marvin Chavez, The Medical Marijuana Patient And Co-Founder
Of The Orange County Patient, Doctor, Nurse Support Group, Has A New Judge
In His Trial - Superior Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald, Whose Chambers
Boast A Poster Of The Sly Stallone Sci-Fi Flick, 'Judge Dredd,' Was Replaced
By Judge Franklin Fasel, Who May Reverse Fitzgerald's Decision
Not To Allow Chavez A Proposition 215 Defense)

Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 08:41:21 -0400
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US CA: A Clockwork Orange: Judge Dredd Goes on Vacation
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: FilmMakerZ@aol.com
Source: OC Weekly
Contact: speakout@ptconnect.infi.net
Website: http://www.ocweekly.com/
Pubdate: Friday, 14 August 1998
Author: Nick Schou

A CLOCKWORK ORANGE: JUDGE DREDD GOES ON VACATION

The timing couldn't have been better for Marvin Chavez, the
medical-cannabis advocate who faces several years in state prison if
convicted on 10 counts of felony pot distribution.

On Aug. 4, Chavez rejected an offer by Deputy District Attorney Carl
Armbrust that would have given him five years of probation-and no jail
time-in return for a promise not to distribute pot to members of his
organization (read: sick people). It seemed like a good deal, but just 24
hours later, Superior Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald, who the previous week
had ruled that Chavez could not use Proposition 215-the state's
medicinal-marijuana initiative-as a legal defense in his upcoming trial,
removed himself from the case so he could go on vacation.

A similar anti- Prop. 215 ruling helped convict Chavez's cohort, David Lee
Herrick. That ruling sent the former San Bernardino County sheriff's
deputy to the Wasco state prison for four years.

Fitzgerald, whose chambers boast a poster of the Sly Stallone sci-fi flick
Judge Dredd, was replaced by Judge Franklin Fasel, who told a seemingly
disappointed Armbrust that he plans to hold a special pretrial hearing on
whether to reverse Fitzgerald's decision. Trial for Chavez starts on Aug. 14.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Dave Herrick Moved To Wasco Prison (A List Subscriber Forwards A Letter
From The Medical Marijuana Patient And Former San Bernardino County,
California Sheriff's Deputy Just Sentenced To Four Years In Prison
By An Orange County Judge After Not Being Able To Invoke Proposition 215
In His Defense)
Link to earlier story
From: WBritt420@aol.com Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 00:50:00 EDT Subject: Dave Herrick Moved to Wasco Prison Dave sent me a letter, (he's not allowed to make phone calls). He's been moved to Wasco State Prison for 2-4 months until a cell covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act can be found for him.( He's hoping for C.M.C. San Louis Obispo) He gets a "special" program because of his "Permanent and Stationary" rating. His current address is: David Herrick P-06857 B-1-B-125L Wasco State Prison Reception Center P.O. Box 5500 Wasco, Ca 93280-5500 As if his humiliation wasn't enough, they shaved his hair off. He is only allowed to receive 5 stamped envlopes a letter and make 1 trip to the canteen once a month (Candybars are about the only pleasure he has left). He has very little money for tolitries, stationary etc. and says that any help would be greatly appreciated. If you wish to donate please send a postal money order made payable to: California Dept. of Corrections, with Dave Herrick P-06857 (printed) in the margins. In my letter back to him I asked what the conditions are like, if he is being allowed any pain medications and if he is any danger of bodily harm. I'll keep you posted. William Britt Patient Advocate
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Gherkin Behind A Mask (A Letter To The Editor
Of 'The San Francisco Chronicle' Reminds Voters That Dan Lungren
Shouldn't Be Elected Governor Of California Because He Defied The Will
Of Voters In Thwarting Proposition 215)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 16:13:39 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Organization: BlueDot
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US CA: PUB LTE: Gherkin Behind A Mask
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: compassion23@geocities.com (Frank S. World)
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Contact: chronletters@sfgate.com
Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

GHERKIN BEHIND A MASK

Editor -- Dan Lungren is a sugar-coated pickle, sweet on the outside,
but sourer than any dill on the inside. The people of California had a
good look at Lungren's true nature with his behavior toward medical
marijuana users.

For the past two years Lungren has defied the will of the people with
an all-out assault on Proposition 215. Instead of supporting the
democratic will of the majority, this sour gherkin has not hesitated
to attack the sick and dying.

Whatever Lungren's glib vision for California may be, we already know
that this man has no compassion and no respect for the majority will.
Lungren violated his oath of office by attempting to veto Proposition
215 with the attorney general's office and he will betray the trust of
the people again if elected governor.

California cannot afford a mean-spirited sour pickle like Dan Lungren
who hides behind a cotton-candy mask.

ROBIN GIVENS
San Francisco
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Davis And Lungren Pandering On Crime (Another Letter To The Editor
Of 'The San Francisco Chronicle' Rejects The Traditional Bidding War
To See Who Is 'Tougher On Crime' Waged By The Two Leading
California Gubernatorial Candidates)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 16:13:54 -0700
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Organization: BlueDot
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
Subject: MN: US CA: PUB LTE: Davis And Lungren Pandering On Crime
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: compassion23@geocities.com (Frank S. World)
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Contact: chronletters@sfgate.com
Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

DAVIS AND LUNGREN PANDERING ON CRIME

Editor -- After watching the Lungren-Davis debate, I am now more worried
than ever about the state of California's politics. To watch two
intelligent, articulate men try to gain favor by promising to kill more
of our population than the other was downright silly.

Even more disgusting was the suggestion of Mr. Davis that ``Singapore is
a good place to start'' from a law enforcement perspective. I, for one,
do not want to live in a place where one is arrested for having chewing
gum or spitting in the street. Where people are publicly beaten for
things such as petty vandalism. No, thank you.

Mr. Lungren promises to step up the war on drugs, but after his Omnibus
Crime Prevention Act of 1984 (which introduced the country to no-knock
searches, anonymous informants, pretrial asset seizure and greatly
increased wiretaps and other practices) I'm afraid to ask what he means.
So please, gentleman. Why don't you worry about helping the people, not
jailing them?

JASON RUBADEAU
Calistoga
-------------------------------------------------------------------

White House War On Drugs Vs. Watanabe (A Letter To The Editor
Of 'The Orange County Register' From James R. McDonough,
Director Of Strategy For The White House Office Of National Drug Control
Policy, Cites Selective But Unbelievable Statistics Trying To Refute
A Previous Letter To The Editor)
Link to earlier story
Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 13:41:16 -0400 To: mapnews@mapinc.org From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) Subject: MN: US: LTE: White House War On Drugs Vs. Watanabe Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: John W. Black Source: Orange County Register (CA) Contact: letters@link.freedom.com Website: http://www.ocregister.com/ Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998 Author: James R. McDonough, Director of strategy, ONDCP WHITE HOUSE WAR ON DRUGS VS. WATANABE Steve Watanabe's article "Time to wave a white flag in the drug war" [Orange Grove, Aug. 11] was wrong on facts and in logic. Watanabe sets up a false dilemma between full legalization of all drugs and a Draconian regime where anyone caught with drugs is executed or imprisoned for life. He closes his tirade with the plea, "What have the last 25 years of money and effort accomplished?" Quite a bit, as it turns out. Casual drug use has halved among Americans, from the 1979 peak of 14 percent of the population to 6.1 percent of the population in 1996. Over 61 million Americans who once used drugs have now rejected them. These statistics and others are published in the "National Drug Control Strategy," available on-line at: http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/policy/ndcs.html. Had Watanabe bothered to check this site, he would have discovered that the federal drug-control policy actually places emphasis on demand reduction. The prime national priority is preventing youth drug abuse, followed by expanding treatment for those trying to escape addiction. James R. McDonough - Washington, D.C.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Bail Denied For Man Accused Of Smuggling ('The Orange County Register'
Says A Man Suspected Of Smuggling 550 Pounds Of Cocaine
Across The Mexican Border In A Twin-Engine Cessna 320 Was Denied Bail
Thursday When He Appeared In Federal Court In Los Angeles)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 15:20:09 -0400
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US CA: Bail Denied For Man Accused Of Smuggling
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: John W. Black
Source: Orange County Register (CA)
Contact: letters@link.freedom.com
Website: http://www.ocregister.com/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

BAIL DENIED FOR MAN ACCUSED OF SMUGGLING

A man suspected of smuggling 550 pounds of cocaine across the Mexican
border in a twin-engine Cessna 320 was denied bail Thursday when he
appeared in federal court in Los Angeles.

"The government requested that Daniel Wesley Allen be detained and that was
granted," said Jeff Alabaso, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office. A
preliminary hearing for Allen was set for Aug. 27 with an arraignment Aug.
31, Alabaso said.

Allen was arrested Wednesday morning after authorities tracked his plane as
it approached the California-Mexico border with its transponder off, said
Customs spokesman Mike Fleming. The plane eventually landed at the Santa
Paula airport, Fleming said. Authorities met Allen there and found 14
duffel bags loaded with 550 pounds of cocaine and three loaded handguns on
the plane.

Customs officials said Allen is a U.S. citizen, but his age and hometown
were not immediately available.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Alaska Will Vote In '98 (Dave Fratello Of Americans For Medical Rights
Confirms AMR Collected Enough Signatures For Its Alaskan
Medical Marijuana Initiative)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 01:26:05 GMT
To: "DRCTalk Reformers' Forum" (drctalk@drcnet.org)
From: Dave Fratello (amr@lainet.com)
Subject: Alaska will vote in '98
Reply-To: drctalk@drcnet.org
Sender: owner-drctalk@drcnet.org

On Sat, 08 Aug 1998 08:30:05 -0400, Paul Wolf (paulwolf@icdc.com) wrote:

>In Alaska, Charles Rollins blocked the AMR bill in court and I don't think
>that one will be on the ballot either.

On August 10, Superior Court Judge Niesje J. Steinkruger (Fourth District
of Alaska) issued an order denying Charles Rollins' motion for a
preliminary injunction to block the Alaskans for Medical Rights initiative
from the November 1998 ballot.

Because the measure has already been certified for the ballot, and this
legal maneuver was unsuccessful, the initiative will come before voters as
expected November 3 this year.

- Dave Fratello
Americans for Medical Rights
-------------------------------------------------------------------

The DARE Debate - Austin Police Kick Drug Prevention Program
('The Austin Chronicle' Notes The City Of Austin, Texas, Has Become
The Latest In A Series Of Large Cities - Including Seattle, Washington,
And Oakland, California - To Ditch The Government's Favorite Drug
Education Program, Administered Across The United States At A Cost
Of About $750 Million Annually, Despite Its Proven Ineffectiveness)

From: BulldogUSA@aol.com
Date: Sun, 16 Aug 1998 16:16:24 EDT
To: dpfca@drugsense.org
Subject: DPFCA: Fwd: Austin Chron: The DARE Debate -
Austin Police Kick Drug
Sender: owner-dpfca@drugsense.org
Reply-To: dpfca@drugsense.org
Organization: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/dpfca/
Newshawk: Art Smart (ArtSmart@neosoft.com)
Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998
Source: Austin Chronicle, pages 28-29
Contact: mail@auschron.com
http://www.auschron.com/current/pols.dare.html

Austin Police Kick Drug Prevention Program

The DARE Debate

by Erica C. Barnett

DARE, the world's most popular drug prevention program, just
lost another customer. The city of Austin is the latest in a
series of large cities -- including Seattle, Washington, and
Oakland, California -- to ditch the high-dollar program,
which costs about $750 million annually to administer across
the United States. Although DARE's bumper stickers, t-
shirts, and gimme caps (dubbed "DARE-aphernalia" by
detractors) will long remain ubiquitous in Austin, the
police department will eliminate its program starting this
school year -- a victim, depending on who you talk to, of
resource problems, or its own ineffectiveness.

From a manpower perspective, growing numbers of vacancies in
the Austin Police Department ranks led to a reassessment of
the program, to which the city allocated $500,000 in 1997.
Austin has not received federal funding for the program in
the last two years.

"Obviously, [DARE] takes officers off the streets," says
Assistant Police Chief Bruce Mills. "We don't mind [putting
officers in schools] when we can afford to ... but given the
number of vacancies, we can't find the officers." In
addition, Mills says, the nationally standardized curriculum
is too rigid, requiring officers to stick to a single,
invariant script. "DARE has very limited curriculum
requirements," he says. "We are looking for something you
can specialize for a certain district or a certain class."
At the same time, Mills says, his department is aware of
nagging concerns about DARE's effectiveness. "If you ask,
`Is there a better way to impart knowledge about drugs?' the
answer is, `We don't know.' ... The feeling is that [DARE]
is not the panacea for drug education."

DARE's defenders say that critics are too quick to point
fingers at the program for failing to prevent teen drug use.
Instead, they say, detractors should look to the world
outside the classroom, where popular culture, advertising,
and increasing drug availability make a utopian world
without gangs or drugs impossible. "DARE is just a piece of
the puzzle," says six-year DARE veteran Mike Alexander, an
A.P.D. sergeant. "It works only for a moment. If the kids go
out and there is nothing to combat everything they hear,
they lose it."

Daryl Gates' Brainchild

Started in 1983 by the Los Angeles Police Department as a
pet project of former police chief Daryl Gates, DARE has
since spread like kudzu across the United States. The
program's 17-week core curriculum, whose lessons have titles
such as "Building Self-Esteem" and "Learning Assertiveness,"
is firmly entrenched in some 75% of school districts
nationwide, and 44 foreign countries have versions of DARE
in place. Although several cities have dropped the program,
others have rushed in as if to fill a vacuum, with New York
City the most widely publicized new addition. The program,
in which trained officers take over the classroom once a
week to teach fifth and sixth graders how to resist drugs
and violence, has proved virtually resistant to criticism,
at least on a national scale. Since 1988, one day per year
has been set aside by presidential decree as "National DARE
Day," an event at which public servants typically herald
DARE's overwhelming success in hurtling itself into school
districts and public consciousness.

But the obvious question -- does DARE work? -- is seldom if
ever whispered in the halls of power where budgets are made
and presidential orders decreed. Several studies --
including one commissioned by the U.S. Department of Justice
and later discarded as "methodologically unsound" -- have
indicated that it does not. The most often-cited study, a
statistical analysis of all known DARE research conducted by
North Carolina's Research Triangle Institute in 1994,
concluded that "DARE's limited influence on adolescent drug
use behavior contrasts with the program's popularity and
prevalence."

Closer to home, an Austin municipal audit the same year
concluded that DARE had no effect in preventing drug-related
crimes by juvenile offenders. Meanwhile, juvenile drug use
has continued to rise, with 25% of high school students
reporting monthly use of illegal drugs in 1996-1997 -- up 2%
from the previous year. With 75% of all American children
receiving some form of DARE in their education diet, it
appears that school districts and police departments are
spending more and getting less than ever.

Although DARE literature asserts that the program "supplies
the young students with the skills necessary to resist" such
cultural pressures, its defenders says that no 17-week
program will prevent drug use three or five years down the
line.

But if that's the case, why not start DARE, say, in junior
high, when kids are at their most impressionable? Charlie
Parsons, director of DARE America, which distributes DARE
curriculum, workbooks, and those omnipresent bumper
stickers, says that the program "was designed to try to get
to children before they had experimented. The easiest way to
quit is never to start."

David Williams, state coordinator with the Texas DARE
Institute in San Marcos, which administers the DARE program
statewide, adds that school districts themselves may be to
blame. DARE's full 13-year program, which focuses on fifth
or sixth grade but puts cops in classrooms from kindergarten
on, must be implemented in its entirety to be effective, he
says. "Reinforcement is what makes all programs effective,"
he says. "When DARE is put in place properly and implemented
and reinforced properly, it is effective."

Few studies exist to back up Williams' claim, in large part
because few school districts have adopted DARE's longer,
more costly, program. But short-term studies, which
typically examine behavior patterns of DARE "graduates"
three to seven years after they complete the program,
indicate that the number of these students who go on to
experiment with drugs is comparable to the number of non-
DARE students who do so.

Poor Success Rate

David Springer, a researcher with the University of Texas'
School of Social Work who has published several papers on
drug treatment strategies, says that DARE's phenomenal
popularity belies its less-than-inspiring success rate. If
the goal of school districts is keeping kids off drugs, he
says, "Why would you spend that much money on a program
that's about as effective as the flip of a coin? The only
reason it hasn't been cut despite the research is because,
politically, it's very popular."

Indeed, DARE's greatest success appears to be as a public
relations campaign. On a national level, DARE gives
politicians an easy way to demonstrate that they are serious
about getting tough on drugs; locally, police departments
see DARE as visible community outreach, a tangible sign that
they are not just policing the community, but helping to
improve it. Additionally, DARE makes officers more
accessible and less intimidating to children who may be at
risk for drug use or gang influence, says Assistant A.P.D.
Chief Mills. "There's great interaction between the officers
and students," he says. "It's an excellent example of
officers forming relationships with kids."

As trusted confidantes, however, DARE officers must operate
in two conflicting worlds. As teachers, they must serve as
approachable role models to whom students can confide about
drug- and gang-related problems; but as police officers,
they can never forget that their foremost duty is to enforce
the law. The result of these conflicting aims, critics say,
is a confusing and unrealistic "no-use" policy which, a
Department of Justice study has found, students
overwhelmingly reject.

"Zero tolerance is one of the worst campaigns we've tried to
pull off in the war on drugs," says UT's Springer. "As a
nation, maybe we need to move toward a harm-reduction
approach ... because kids are going to continue to
experiment." But DARE, whose curriculum has been widely
criticized for blurring distinctions between "hard" and
"soft" drugs and exaggerating the effects of marijuana and
alcohol, recognizes no such possibility. Its curriculum
equates drug use with drug abuse in the second lesson,
telling students flatly that "no use of any substance is
acceptable."

Although the jury is out on whether such tactics make
students less likely to confide in police, many teachers
feel that the job of educating kids ought to fall to parents
and educators, not armed law enforcement officials. Lance
Miles, a former fifth-grade teacher whose students took DARE
classes weekly, says that although the DARE officers he
dealt with genuinely tried to relate to the kids in his
classes, they varied widely in their teaching ability. While
the officers did bring up issues -- such as alcoholism and
family drug abuse -- which are not addressed by the
district's health book, Miles wonders if any program can
substitute for positive parental influence. "A lot of
parents aren't doing their jobs, and we're left to do that
job [at school], telling them things they ought to be taught
about at home. ... There's only so much" that teachers and
police officers can do before parents must take over, Miles
says.

But don't expect AISD [Austin Independent School District]
to hand drug education over to parents any time soon.
Currently, according to district spokeswoman Nicole Wright,
the district is considering a number of alternative
programs, including a five-week pilot called "Project Yes,"
targeted at fourth- and sixth-grade classes. In the
meantime, school counselors and health classes are filling
in the gaps in AISD's drug education program.

With Austin kicking the DARE habit, will other area school
districts follow suit? Unlikely, say both DARE
representatives and officials with the Travis County
Sheriff's Department, which administers DARE to districts
outside Austin's city limits. Sgt. Wayne Singleton, of the
department's Community Services division, says he sees no
reason to abandon the program, which has received a "pretty
positive" response from the community. DARE leader Parsons
characterizes the situation in Austin as "man bites dog," an
aberration in a nation moving closer, if anything, toward
universal adoption of DARE. But with drug use on the rise
across America, and DARE under increasing scrutiny by school
districts looking for more than an expensive PR campaign,
it's almost certain that more districts will take a long
look at DARE and choose to "just say no."
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Death Payoff Won't Fix Border Control Policy ('Dallas Morning News' Columnist
Richard Estrada Says The United States' Agreement To Pay $1.9 Million
To The Survivors Of Esequiel Hernández Jr., The 18-Year-Old Shot To Death
On His Family's Ranch By US Marines Patrolling The Texas-Mexico Border,
Won't Camouflage A Border Control Policy That Continues To Drift)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 13:22:17 -0400
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US TX: OPED: Death Payoff Won't Fix Border Control Policy
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: adbryan@onramp.net
Source: Dallas Morning News
Contact: letterstoeditor@dallasnews.com
Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/
Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998
Author: Richard Estrada (restrada@dallasnews.com) The Dallas Morning News

DEATH PAYOFF WON'T FIX BORDER CONTROL POLICY

Nearly $2 million is a lot of money, but it won't bring back Esequiel
Hernandez Jr. And neither will it camouflage a border control policy that
continues to drift, as the federal government implements one stopgap
measure after another in the fight against drug smuggling and illegal
immigration.

According to attorneys for the family of the deceased, the United States
has agreed to pay the hefty sum of $1.9 million to the survivors of young
Mr. Hernández. He was the 18-year-old American of Mexican descent who was
shot to death by U.S. Marines patrolling the Texas-Mexico border nearly two
years ago.

No evidence has been uncovered that Mr. Hernández, who was armed with a
small-caliber rifle at the time of his death, knew he had fired on the
Marines. Many people believe he was hunting or target practicing -
"plinking" being the term of art.

In the aftermath of the young man's death, Rep. Lamar Smith, R-San Antonio,
one of Congress' most ardent advocates for greater border control, has been
in the vanguard of those calling for more answers in the tragedy. His
spokesman, Alan Kay, says the congressman is committed to providing the
American people with a full public accounting of the incident.

Under the Military Claims Act, the military components of the federal
government are authorized to settle claims related to U.S. military
activities without a showing of fault by military personnel. Such claims
can be settled only if the injured parties weren't themselves to blame.

But just try to uncover the fine points of the deal. The Immigration and
Naturalization Service, which oversees the Border Patrol, says it isn't
handling media inquiries into the case. A spokesman at the Justice
Department proceeded to inform me that the department is indeed handling
media questions but that it is barred by law from discussing the specifics
of the settlement.

Fine. While the settlement itself is an interesting issue, a lack of
discussion surrounding the greater issue of cross-border illegality hardly
serves to prevent the instability that can lead to similar tragedies.

To think that a teenage goatherd, working on his parents' property, could
be shot to death by Marines on an official mission is incomprehensible to
most people - even if the Marines involved in the death have been absolved
of wrongdoing. (Within the past week, a grand jury on the Texas-Mexico
border refused to indict one of the Marines for the murder - the second
refusal to indict in the case.)

Yet, as a wave of drug-related violence continues to plague both sides of
the border, a failure to implement a more coherent, thoughtful and
consistent strategy may be contributing to the problem. Only belatedly, in
the aftermath of the Hernández shooting, did the government suspend
operations entailing military cooperation with the Border Patrol.

The decision was a de facto admission that the military has no business in
that line of work. Military personnel are trained to do a different job
than the Border Patrol. Troops engage the enemy in combat; the Border
Patrol enforces the law.

And yet the irony is that the government's inability to confront extensive
violations of our territorial sovereignty at the border has resulted in the
House passing a provision in June authored by Rep. James Traficant, D-Ohio,
that authorizes the deployment of up to 10,000 troops on the border. The
Senate has yet to take up the measure.

In truth, the Clinton administration has begun to beef up the border with
traditional guards. A recent proposal by drug czar Barry McCaffrey to
establish a border czar responsible for coordinating federal law
enforcement initiatives along the border also holds promise. But will there
be follow-through in terms of the sufficient and efficient deployment of
resources? Not if a record of showing indifference or going for quick fixes
is any guide.

As justifiable as the Hernández settlement was, what kind of compensation
does the government have in mind for a nation that is placed at risk by a
border control policy that flies this way and that?

Whatever young Mr. Hernandez may have been shooting at on the day of his
tragic death, it is worth identifying the major shortcoming of those in
charge of America's border control policies: They continue to take shots in
the dark.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Hemp Controversy Growing On Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
('The Associated Press' Notes Members Of The Oglala Sioux Tribe
Are Moving Forward With Plans To Cultivate Hemp, Even If They Have To
Take The Drug Enforcement Administration To Court - Hemp Has Grown Wild
For Decades On The Reservation In South Dakota Despite The DEA's
Repeated Attempts To Eradicate It)
Link to earlier story
Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 16:49:23 -0400 To: DrugSense News Service (mapnews@mapinc.org) From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) Subject: MN: US ND: Wire: Hemp Controversy Growing On Pine Ridge Indian Reservation Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: compassion23@geocities.com (Frank S. World) Source: Associated Press Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 Author: Angela K. Brown, Associated Press Writer HEMP CONTROVERSY GROWING ON PINE RIDGE INDIAN RESERVATION SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) - Some members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe are moving forward with plans to cultivate hemp, even if they have to take the Drug Enforcement Administration to federal court. Hemp has grown wild for decades on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, despite the DEA's repeated attempts - spraying and dousing with chemicals, setting fields on fire - to wipe it out. Growing hemp, a cousin to marijuana, is illegal. The Land-Use Association, a group of tribal members in the small reservation town of Slim Buttes, wants to turn the tall hemp stalks into paper, mats, construction blocks for housing and other products. The group says the moneymaking venture would create jobs and homes in the impoverished area. Milo Yellow Hair, the tribe's vice president, said the reservation has struggled with the issue for at least two years and finally decided to proceed with the hemp project after other economic-development initiatives failed. "Now we are left to tackle the so-called gray area initiatives," he said. "When they hear the word hemp, they think marijuana. Then they think drug use, and then it becomes a police state. But that's not what we want to do." Hemp and marijuana are both varieties of the cannabis sativa plant, but hemp typically contains less than 1 percent of the narcotic chemical THC. Marijuana plants contain 10 percent to 20 percent THC, which makes pot smokers high. Two weeks ago, the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council changed a tribal law to allow for making products out of hemp. The revised code says a plant with less than 1 percent of THC is considered industrial hemp and is legal. But according to federal law, growing hemp - no matter how low its THC content - is the same as growing marijuana. And the same criminal penalties apply to people growing either plant. Anyone who wants to grow hemp plants legally for industrial use must get permission from the DEA, said Karen Schreier, U.S. attorney for South Dakota. "The same rules apply on and off the reservation," she said. Yellow Hair said the tribe will apply for a DEA certificate of registration to grow the hemp, but the process is not easy. Schreier said she does not think the DEA has ever approved an application to grow hemp plants. Larry Johnson, resident agent-in-charge of the DEA office in Sioux Falls, said the tribe's chances are not good. "I seriously doubt that they will be able to meet the requirements," he said. Tom Cook, who is in charge of the Land-Use Association's hemp project, said asking the DEA for permission would be a "useless endeavor." For now, the tribal group plans to proceed without breaking the law. He said members can do that by touching only the hemp stalks, which do not contain THC, and by avoiding the leaves and seeds, which do contain the chemical. The stalks are the parts needed to make paper and other products. Although federal law considers that action illegal, the land-use group is following the recently revised tribal law, Cook said. The only way to resolve the dispute between the federal and tribal laws is going to court, he said. "At some point the tribe will be before a federal judge filing an injunction against the DEA," he said. "The question is whether the tribe has sovereignty over its own land." Copyright 1998 Associated Press
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Pine Ridge Eyeing Hemp As Cash Crop (A Lengthier 'Associated Press' Version
In South Dakota's 'Rapid City Journal')

Date: Mon, 17 Aug 1998 10:57:43 -0400
To: MAP News (mapnews@mapinc.org)
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US SD: Pine Ridge Eyeing Hemp As Cash Crop
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Joe Hickey (agfuture@kih.net)
Pubdate: August 14, 1998
Source: The Rapid City Journal (SD)
Mail: 507 Main Street, Rapid City, SD 57701
Fax: (605) 394-8462
Author: Associated Press Writer Angela K. Brown

PINE RIDGE EYEING HEMP AS CASH CROP

Some Reservation Officials Are Eager To Produce Commercial Products From
Plant Related To Marijuana.

PINE RIDGE - Some members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe are moving forward with
plans to cultivate hemp, even if they have to take the Drug Enforcement
Administration to federal court.

Hemp has grown in the wild for decades on the Pine Ridge Indian
Reservation, despite the DEA's repeated attempts - spraying and dousing
with chemicals, setting fields on fire - to wipe it out. Growing hemp,
which is a cousin to marijuana, is illegal.

The Land-Use Association, a group of tribal members in the small
reservation town of Slim Bittes, wants to turn the tall hemp stalks into
paper, mats, construction blocks for housing and other products. The group
says the money-making venture would create jobs and homes in the
impoverished area.

Milo Yellow Hair, the tribe's vice president, said the reservation has
struggled with the issue for at least two years and finally decided to
proceed with the hemp project after other economic development initiatives
failed.

"Now we are left to tackle the so-called gray area initiatives," he said.
"When they hear the word hemp, they think marijuana. Then they think drug
use, and then they think police state. But that's not what we want to do."

Hemp and marijuana are both varieties of the cannabis sativa plant, but
hemp typically contains less than 1 percent of the narcotic chemical THC.
Marijuana plants contain 10 percent to 20 percent THC, which makes pot
smokers high.

Two weeks ago, the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council changed a tribal law to
allow for making products out of hemp. The revised code says a plant with
less than 1 percent of THC is considered industrial hemp and is legal.

But according to federal law, growing hemp - no matter how low its THC
content - is the same as growing marijuana. And the same criminal penalties
apply to people growing either plant.

Anyone who wants to grow hemp plants legally for industrial use must get
permission from the DEA, said Karen Schreier, U.S. attorney for South
Dakota. "The same rules apply on and off the reservation," she said.

Yellow Hair said the tribe will apply for a DEA certificate of registration
to grow the hemp, but the process is not that easy.

Schreier said she does not think the DEA has ever approved an application
to grow hemp plants. Larry Johnson, resident agent-in-charge of the DEA
office in Sioux Falls, said the tribe's chances are not good.

"I seriously doubt that they will be able to meet the requirements," he said.

Tom Cook, who is in charge of the Land-Use Association's hemp project, said
asking the DEA for permission would be a "useless endeavor." For now, the
tribal group plans to proceed without breaking the law.

He said members can do that by touching only the hemp stalks, which do not
contain THC, and by avoiding the leaves and seeds, which do contain the
chemical. The stalks are the parts needed to make paper and other products.

Although federal law considers that action illegal, the land-use group is
following the recently revised tribal law, Cook said. The only way to
resolve the dispute between the federal and tribal laws is going to court,
he said.

"At some point the tribe will be before a federal judge filing and
injunction against the DEA," he said. The question is whether the tribe has
sovereignty over its own land."

Cook said the 1868 treaty between the tribe and federal government allows
the reservation to grow food and clothing for its members. Growing hemp is
"an expressed intention" of that agreement, he said.

Yellow Hair said most reservation residents oppose illegal drugs and were
hesitant when they first heard about the issue. But they now understand the
differences between marijuana and hemp and have an open mind about the
project, he said.

"It's a tough cookie to crack, no matter how you look at it," he said.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Hemp - Hope For The Future (Another Version In The Rapid City,
South Dakota 'Indian Country Today')

Date: Mon, 17 Aug 1998 11:01:53 -0400
To: MAP News (mapnews@mapinc.org)
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US SD: Hemp - Hope For The Future
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Joe Hickey (agfuture@kih.net)
Pubdate: August 14, 1998
Source: Indian Country Today
Mail: 1920 Lombardy Drive, Rapid City, SD 57701
Fax: (605) 341-6940
Author: Karen L. Testerman, Today staff writer

HEMP - HOPE FOR THE FUTURE

Sign Of Sovereignty
OST Council Adopts Hemp Ordinance

PINE RIDGE INDIAN RESERVATION, S. D. - The Oglala Sioux Tribe enacted
historic legislation on industrial non-narcotic hemp despite the Drug
Enforcement Administration's warning that cultivating it would violate
federal law.

In a move toward self-determination and economic development, the Oglala
Sioux Tribal Council passed an ordinance amending the tribe's penal code
relating to industrial hemp and marijuana on July 28, redefining the legal
distinction between the plants. This move may provide the tribe and its
members the opportunity to use industrial hemp as a viable and profitable
crop. The Drug Enforcement Administration said it will prosecute anyone
cultivating hemp in South Dakota without a valid DEA Certificate of
Registration.

Industrial hemp and marijuana are amongst a large variety of the Cannabis
sativa plant, which have varying amounts of the narcotic chemical
tetrahydrocannabinol or THC.

The DEA contends that any cultivation of hemp falls into the category of
marijuana cultivation, a schedule 1 controlled substance considered illegal.

The tribal council's amendment classifies the difference between illegal
"marijuana" as having one percent or more concentration of THC by weight.
The DEA' definition of marijuana doesn't provide exemptions for low or no
THC plants.

At the request of Oglala Sioux Tribal President John Yellowbird Steele,
U.S. Attorney Karen E. Schreier inquired about the official legal position
of the DEA whether the cultivation of hemp on American Indian tribal lands
is a violation of federal law.

DEA Acting Associate Chief Counsel Mary Kate Whaelen wrote that the
Controlled Substances Act is applicable to activities conducted on American
Indian land. "The manufacture of hemp constitutes the manufacture of
marijuana, which can only be done legally if the idividuals who wish to
cultivate marijuana for industrial use obtain a DEA Certificate of
Registration."

OST Vice President Milo Yellow Hair said the vote reflects the interest the
council has in supporting self-determination and the quest for jobs and
industry on the reservation.

In response to the DEA's letter, Mr. Yellow Hair said, "The U.S. government
confiscated the Black Hills because 'they needed it' for their economic
expansion. It is really no different in this case. The language is the
same. The reasoning is the same."

Spokesman for the Ordinance, Joe American Horse, told the council
"Sovereignty over our own land and scientific language regarding the hemp
plant are the issues involved."

Land-Use Association Attorney Thomas J. Ballanco, a West Point graduate
said,"Asking the DEA for advice about industrial hemp is like asking Donald
Trump for advice about Indian gaming issues."

For the last two years, the Land-Use Association, based in Slim Buttes,
S.D., have spearheaded the hemp project by sponsoring and promoting the
recognition of industrial hemp as an economical advancement for the tribe
and its members.

Mr. American Horse, Oglala Lakota, said the vote to adopt the amendment
sets the stage for land-based economic development on the reservation, but
may also involve a legal challenge by the tribe in federal court.

The tribal council reinforced its position that treaties signed between the
Oglala Sioux Tribe and the United States government acknowledge that
the tribe retains the right to grow food and fiber crops.

In addition, the tribal council cited a paragraph of the Ordinance that
international treaties and trade agreements including the 1961 Single
Convention on Narcotic Drugs, the North American Free Trade Agreement, and
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade specifically classify industrial
hemp as a commodity that is separate and distinct from any narcotic.

Ironically, industrial hemp is already growing wild on the Pine Ridge
Reservation.

"The mere fact that hemp is growing wild is an inescapable reminder that
industrial hemp was once a cornerstone of agriculture in America," Mr.
Ballanco said.

Supporters of industrial hemp cited a study by the Vermont state
legislature that revealed in 1997 more than 99 percent of the "marijuana"
located and destroyed by the DEA, at the cost of approximately $500
million, is actually industrial hemp that has extremely low levels of THC
(the active ingredient in marijuana) and no psychoactive potential.

LUA Project Director Tom Cook, Mohawk, said now the Ordinance is in place,
the association and the tribe will move foward within the legal realms of
the law.

"We're concerned to proceed in a civil matter rather than a criminal
matter." Mr. Cook said. "Our interests are to preserve the natural resource
that is growing right now on the reservation," Mr. Cook said.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Three Cops Indicted In $8,000 Extortion ('The Chicago Tribune'
Says Chicago Police Officers John Labiak, Rodney Carriger
And Ernest Hutchinson, Who Allegedly Broke Into An Apartment
Without A Warrant And Demanded $8,000 From A Couple In Exchange
For Not Arresting Them For A Small Amount Of Marijuana And Two Guns,
Have Been Indicted On Charges Of Home Invasion, Armed Robbery
And Official Misconduct)
Link to earlier story
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) To: "MN" (mapnews@mapinc.org) Subject: MN: US: IL: 3 Cops Indicted In $8,000 Extortion Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 14:53:12 -0500 Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: Steve Young Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Contact: tribletter@aol.com Website: http://www.chicago.tribune.com/ 3 COPS INDICTED IN $8,000 EXTORTION Three Chicago police officers who allegedly demanded $8,000 from a couple in exchange for not arresting them on drug and weapons charges have been indicted on charges of home invasion, armed robbery and official misconduct, prosecutors said Thursday. The indictment was announced when John Labiak, with 9 years on the Chicago force, Rodney Carriger, an 8-year veteran, and Ernest Hutchinson, with 12 years on the force, appeared before Cook County Circuit Judge William Lacy. An attorney for one of the officers said all three were suspended without pay by police officials about a week ago. The three had been assigned to the Harrison District. After the indictment was announced, Lacy approved a request by prosecutors Tom Bilyk and Anita Alvarez for an order requiring the defendants to turn over any guns they own to the Chicago Police Department, which will hold them while the case is pending. They are accused of following a woman into her home in the 1200 block of West Huron Street on June 23 and then ransacking the residence. Prosecutors alleged that one of the officers also spat on another woman resident of the house when she asked whether he had a search warrant. According to prosecutors, the officers' search turned up a small amount of marijuana and two guns. The officers then allegedly told a male resident of the house that he and the others could face criminal charges unless they came up with $8,000. While the man was out trying to raise the money, prosecutors said, an off-duty police officer who is acquainted with the family coincidentally stopped by the house and was told by the defendants to leave because they were conducting an investigation. A short time later, when the male resident returned with the money, two other officers who were acquainted with him also entered the home and witnessed the defendants accept the payoff, prosecutors said. They said that after the defendants left the residence, the other two officers contacted superiors and reported what they had seen. The three were arrested on July 16. The three suspended officers' next scheduled court appearance is Sept. 2.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Urine Test Traps 'Pregnant' Male Thief ('The Toronto Star'
Notes An Ohio Man Whose Second Urine Test Came Up Positive
For Cocaine, After His First Test Was Disallowed, Was Sentenced
To One Year In Prison, Even Though He Was Eligible To Receive
Only Probation For His Original Charge Of Theft)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 11:03:01 -0400
To: mattalk@islandnet.com
From: Dave Haans (haans@chass.utoronto.ca)
Subject: TorStar: Urine test traps 'pregnant' male thief
Newshawk: Dave Haans
Source: The Toronto Star (Canada)
Pubdate: Friday, August 14, 1998
Page: A2
Website: http://www.thestar.com
Contact: lettertoed@thestar.com

Urine test traps 'pregnant' male thief

PAINSVILLE, Ohio (AP) -- John Issa's court-ordered urine test came back
positive. For pregnancy.

About the only thing he's expecting now is a year in prison.

"It was obviously not his urine," prosecutor Werner Barthol said.

Issa, 20, had to submit a urine sample before being sentenced for stealing
Christmas gifts off doorsteps. But, the urine seemed cold. Then the test
showed the donor was pregnant.

Issa was ordered to produce a second sample, which was positive for cocaine.

Investigators aren't certain whose urine Issa first gave them, but his
wife, who accompanied him to the testing, is pregnant.

Although Issa was eligible to receive only probation for the thefts, he got
a year behind bars Wednesday.

"I'm sure the judge took the tests into consideration," Barthol said.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Court Helps Pot Protest Get Permit ('The Associated Press'
Says Suffolk Superior Court Judge Carol Ball On Friday Persuaded Officials
From The City Of Boston Not To Block MassCan's Ninth Annual Freedom Rally
October 3 At Boston Common - The Judge Also Scheduled A Hearing
Later This Month On Restrictions Sought By The City, Including A Requirement
That All Speakers And Performers Discourage Marijuana Smoking)
Link to follow up
Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 19:38:14 -0400 To: DrugSense News Service (mapnews@mapinc.org) From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews) Subject: MN: US MA: Wire: Court Helps Pot Protest Get Permit Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/ Newshawk: compassion23@geocities.com (Frank S. World) Source: Associated Press Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 Author: Alexis Chiu, Associated Press Writer Note: The MassCann website is at: http://www.masscann.org/ COURT HELPS POT PROTEST GET PERMIT BOSTON (AP) -- After years of public marijuana smoking at a pro-marijuana rally on Boston Common, the city felt it was time to deny organizers a permit for this year's event. But the pot enthusiasts claimed their constitutional rights were violated, and they sought an injunction Friday to block the city from interfering with the 9th Annual Freedom Rally set for Oct. 3. "Mayor Menino doesn't like people smoking dope, and he doesn't want the city to be seen as condoning it," said John Swomley, attorney for the Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition. MassCann came away with a partial victory when Suffolk Superior Court Judge Carol Ball persuaded the city to agree to issue a permit, but she also scheduled a hearing later this month on restrictions sought by the city. When Boston initially denied the 1998 permit request, it listed 20 conditions MassCann would have to satisfy in order to meet city standards. Those stipulations -- including a requirement that all speakers and performers discourage marijuana smoking and announcements that police would enforce drug laws -- are likely to be addressed at the upcoming hearing. "The Boston Common is the oldest forum for freedom of expression," said Bill Downing, president of Reading-based MassCann. "I think it's incredible that they think they can coerce speech from people there." But city spokesman John Dorsey said the city was on solid constitutional ground. "If anything, it's a disclaimer," he said. "We're just asking to let people know that police will be enforcing the laws." Last year's rally attracted an estimated 60,000 people from around the country, more than 150 of whom were arrested on drug charges. Copyright 1998 Associated Press.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Sheriffs May Sue Over Jail Crowding
(According To 'The The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,' Georgia Sheriffs
Say They Will Sue The State If The Next Legislature And Governor
Do Not Take Action To Ease The Pressure On Crowded Prisons)

From: "Bob Owen @ WHEN, Olympia" (when@olywa.net)
To: "-News" (when@hemp.net)
Subject: GA Sheriffs may sue over jail crowding
Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 19:47:49 -0700
Sender: owner-when@hemp.net

August 14, 1998
By Rhonda Cook, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sheriffs may sue over jail crowding

Concerned that they are not being taken seriously, Georgia sheriffs say they
will sue the state if the next Legislature and governor do not take action
to ease the pressure of a crowded prison system.

Early County Sheriff Jimmie Murkerson, past president of the Georgia
Sheriffs' Association, said county government officials had written about
their fears to gubernatorial candidates.

"We're going to have to give our new governor a chance and see what he's
going to do about this problem," Murkerson said. "But if the new leadership
fails to act on this problem, we will have to (bring) . . . a class-action
lawsuit. It's a state problem, not just a local problem."

It was such a threat from the sheriffs 10 years ago that forced the 1989
Legislature to raise the sales tax to fund construction of 9,400 beds. The
last of those new prisons opened four years ago. The state has since made
only incremental increases at various prisons to provide room for 38,000
convicts. With three medium-security private prisons opening in southern
Georgia, the state will be able to incarcerate 42,100 inmates by spring.

Still, the prisons are at capacity now, and candidates for statewide races
have called for longer prison sentences and the abolition of parole. The
state Board of Pardons and Paroles has warned that the prison and jail
crowding will get worse even if parole is not abolished. The board said last
month Georgia must build 14,000 prison beds within five years or the county
and state systems will be crushed.

Space in county jails has tripled to more than 27,000 beds and there are 35
ongoing jail construction projects, but state prisoners continue to take up
more and more space as they await space in the state system.

"Somebody's got to manage the bed space," said Jerry Griffin, executive
director of the Association of County Commissioners of Georgia.

Department of Corrections Commissioner Wayne Garner dismisses dire
predictions as politically motivated by board members trying to protect
their jobs. Garner says state prisons are not crowded, but his own agency's
records contradict him.

An analysis presented to sheriffs meeting on Wednesday showed most county
jails would need to double in size to accommodate the additional state
inmates for whom there would have been no room in a state prison if the
parole had been abolished in 1994. Instead of 28,000 inmates in county jails
today, there would be more than 46,000.

Rural jails such as the Baker County Jail in southwest Georgia would have a
hard time. The jail designed for four prisoners would have 30 inmates. The
Telfair County jail in southeast Georgia is designed to hold 28 inmates but
would be faced with housing 111--99 sentenced to prison--if parole had been
abolished in 1994.

Clayton County now has 1,175 prisoners crammed into space designed to hold
760, so it already is planning to build a new jail. But if parole had been
abolished, that jail would have 2,171 prisoners--1131 bound for a state
prison.

The hypothetical, said consultanting firm attorney Randall Duncan, "goes to
show the impact at the local level. Parole abolition becomes like an
iceberg. . . . The tip of the iceberg is not considered that threatening,
but there's more to this. If I were a county commission, I'd want somebody
up in that crow's nest, looking for those icebergs."
-------------------------------------------------------------------

CDC - One In Five Teen-Agers Carries A Weapon Or Drives After Drinking
('The Associated Press' Says A New Survey Of 16,262 High School Students
Nationwide, Released Thursday By The Centers For Disease Control
And Prevention, Suggests One In Three Teen-Agers Gets Into Fights,
Almost One In Every Five Carries A Weapon Or Drives After Drinking,
And Almost One In 10 Attempts Suicide - Black And Hispanic
High School Students Are More Likely Than Their White Counterparts
To Be A Threat To Others By Carrying Weapons Or Fighting, But Whites
Are More Likely To Hurt Themselves By Driving After Drinking Alcohol
And White Teen-Agers Were Nearly Twice As Likely As Hispanics To Smoke
Frequently Or Chew Tobacco)

From: "W.H.E.N. - Bob Owen - Olympia" (when@olywa.net)
To: "-News" (when@hemp.net)
Subject: 20% of teens carries weapon or drinks & drives
Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 12:20:46 -0700
Sender: owner-when@hemp.net

CDC: One in five teen-agers carries a weapon or drives after drinking

By Karen Hill, Associated Press, 08/14/98 03:34

ATLANTA (AP) - Black and Hispanic high school students are more likely than
their white counterparts to be a threat to others by carrying weapons or
fighting, while whites are more likely to hurt themselves by driving after
drinking alcohol, a government study found.

The similarities among teen-agers were equally stark: About one in three are
involved in fights. Almost one of every five carries a weapon or drives
after drinking. Almost one in 10 attempts suicide.

The findings, based on a survey of 16,262 high school students nationwide,
were released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

``The lesson here is that too many youth continue to practice behaviors that
put them at risk - for injury or death now and chronic disease later,'' said
Laura Kann, a chief researcher for the CDC's National Center for Chronic
Disease Prevention and Health Promotion.

The 1997 survey looked at behavior leading to injury, and surveyed
teen-agers' use of alcohol, tobacco and drugs, and their sexual and physical
activity.

Hispanic high school students were most likely to arm themselves, with 23
percent carrying a gun, knife or club, compared with 22 percent of blacks
and 17 percent of whites.

Blacks were most likely to have fought in the previous year, at 43 percent
vs. 41 percent for Hispanics and 34 percent for whites.

Whites were most likely to have drunk five or more glasses of alcohol on at
least one of the 30 days before the survey: 38 percent of whites said they
had, compared with 35 percent of Hispanics and 16 percent of blacks.

Blacks were least likely to mix alcohol and driving. Nine percent drove
after drinking, compared with 19 percent of whites and 18 percent of
Hispanics.

The differences could be ``a marker for socioeconomic status'' and urban
living, Ms. Kann said.

White teen-agers were nearly twice as likely as Hispanics to smoke
frequently or chew tobacco, with 20 percent of whites saying they smoked
frequently, compared with 11 percent of Hispanics. Among blacks, 7 percent
smoked frequently and 2 percent chewed tobacco.

Six percent of Hispanics had used cocaine in the 30 days before the survey,
double the number of whites and nine times the number of blacks. Hispanics
also were more likely to have used steroids or injected drugs.

Nineteen percent of whites and 18 percent of Hispanics had tried other
illegal drugs such as LSD, PCP, Ecstasy, mushrooms, speed, methamphetamines
or heroin. Only 3 percent of blacks had.

Asked whether they ate the minimum five daily servings of fruits and
vegetables recommended for good health, only 29 percent of whites and 28
percent of Hispanics and blacks said they did.

Teen-agers at 151 schools filled out confidential questionnaires for the
survey. The margin of error, which differed for each question, was as high
as 4 percentage points.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Many Teens Live On The Edge, Study Finds ('The Chicago Tribune' Version)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 13:33:00 -0400
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US: Many Teens Live On The Edge, Study Finds
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: Steve Young 
Source: Chicago Tribune (IL)
Contact: tribletter@aol.com
Website: http://www.chicago.tribune.com/
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998
Author: From Tribune Wire Services
Section: Sec. 1, p. 8

MANY TEENS LIVE ON THE EDGE, STUDY FINDS

ATLANTA, GEORGIA -- White high school students are more likely than blacks
and Hispanics to hurt themselves with tobacco or drugs, while blacks and
Hispanics are more likely to be a threat to others by carrying weapons or
fighting, a government study has found.

The 1997 study, results of which were released Thursday by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, also found that roughly one in five
teenagers carries a weapon or drives after drinking and one in 10 has
attempted suicide.

"The lesson here is that too many youth continue to practice behaviors that
put them at risk--for injury or death now and chronic disease later," said
Laura Kann, a chief researcher for the National Center for Chronic Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion.

The survey of 16,262 teenagers looked at behavior leading to injury and
surveyed their use of alcohol, tobacco and drugs; their sexual activity;
and their physical activity.

Teens at 151 schools nationwide filled out confidential questionnaires.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Double Standard On Drug Testing In Congress (A Letter To The Editor
Of 'The Daily Gazette' In Schenectady, New York, By Walter Wouk
Of NORML, Says The Reason Young People Are Apathetic About Politics
Is The Hypocrisy Evidenced Recently When The House Of Representatives
Rejected Mandatory Urine Testing For Themselves After Overwhelmingly
Passing The 'Drug Free Workplace Act Of 1998' For Everyone Else)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 08:58:33 -0700
To: mapnews@mapinc.org
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US: PUB LTE: Double Standard On Drug Testing In Congress
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Source: Daily Gazette (Schenectady, NY)
Contact: gazette@dailygazette.com
Website: http://www.dailygazette.com
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

DOUBLE STANDARD ON DRUG TESTING IN CONGRESS

Young people worry John Glenn. The 77-year-old senator and astronaut isn't
troubled by their clothes or music. It's the apathy

young Americans feel toward politics, Glenn tells Time magazine in its Aug.
17 issue. "They don't want to touch it," Glenn laments.

If Sen. Glenn can't figure out why the young have soured on the political
process, he should consider this:

Republican leaders have quashed a plan by two Republican lawmakers to
require drug testing of House members and their staffs. Rep. Joe Barton of
Texas, a co-sponsor of the proposal with Rep. Gerald Solomon of New York,
said the chairman of the House Republican Conference, Rep. John Boehner of
Ohio, is refusing to allow the drug plan to be brought up for discussion
because many lawmakers have complained that the measure is unnecessary and
insulting.

Recently the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the "Drug Free
Workplace Act of 1998" - a piece of legislation that will expand mandatory
workplace drug testing in the United States.

Our elected representatives have no qualms about forcing the American
public to urinate into a bottle to prove their innocence, but consider it
insulting to be required to do likewise.

The hypocrisy that fills the political process needs to be flushed out.
Then the young might be inclined to use the system.

WALTER F. WOUK

Howes Cave

The writer is president of the Schoharie chapter of NORML, the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Congress, Your Hypocrisy Is Showing - Plan To Drug-Test Politicians Is Killed
(A News Release On The Same Issue From The Libertarian Party Headquarters
In Washington, DC)

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 98 07:30:33 PDT
From: announce@lp.org
Subject: Release: drug testing
Sender: announce-request@lp.org
Reply-To: announce@lp.org
To: announce@lp.org (Libertarian Party announcements)


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

NEWS FROM THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY
2600 Virginia Avenue, NW, Suite 100
Washington DC 20037

For release: August 14, 1998

For additional information:
George Getz, Press Secretary
Phone: (202) 333-0008 Ext. 222
E-Mail: 76214.3676@Compuserve.com

***

Congress, your hypocrisy is showing:
Plan to drug-test politicians is killed

WASHINGTON, DC -- If federally mandated drug testing is such a
good idea for high school students, public-housing residents, and bus
drivers, why isn't it good enough for Congressmen?

That's what Libertarians are asking after the Republican House
leadership quietly torpedoed an effort to mandate drug testing for
every member of Congress.

"These Congressmen must be getting high on hypocrisy," said
Libertarian Party National Director Ron Crickenberger. "Why else would
they wage a War on Drugs on the rest of us, but declare a drug-testing
truce in the halls of Congress?"

Last week, Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX) said the House was
too "busy, busy, busy" to consider a proposal that would have required
all 435 House members and their staffs to take random tests for illegal
drug use.

Armey and other Republican leaders discreetly declined to set a
date for a vote on the motion, effectively killing it for the year.

The decision to quash the drug-testing plan has Libertarians
unsure whether to applaud Congressmen for their wisdom or jeer them for
their hypocrisy, admitted Crickenberger. For example...

* One of the reasons Congress was too "busy, busy, busy" to
debate the drug-testing proposal was because it was "busy, busy, busy"
passing new legislation to ratchet up the Drug War.

"So far this term, Congress passed a $17 billion drug war
budget; approved stationing U.S. troops on our borders to fight drug
smuggling; killed a bill that would have curbed asset forfeiture
abuses; and voted to spend $2 billion for a five-year anti-drug
advertising campaign," said Crickenberger. "In addition, Republican
leaders vowed to launch a World War II-style blitzkrieg to wipe out
drug abuse. Does this seem just a little hypocritical?"

* Even more ironic: News reports indicated that many lawmakers
had quietly opposed the measure because drug testing was "unnecessary
and insulting" and "undignified."

"To those Congressmen, we say: Welcome to the Drug War," said
Crickenberger. "Too bad 270 million other Americans will continue to
endure those same unnecessary, insulting, and undignified violations of
their Constitutional rights. Why is there one set of standards for
politicians who make the laws, and another for ordinary Americans who
suffer under them?"

* Despite the draconian punishments that Congress has mandated
for drug offenses, the proposed drug-testing measure would have merely
required that any House member who tested positive be reported to the
Ethics Committee.

"If Congressmen want to play Drug Warriors, shouldn't all the
rules of the game apply to them?" asked Crickenberger. "If they tested
positive for illegal drugs, shouldn't they be immediately arrested? Be
subjected to mandatory-minimum jail terms? Face a death sentence if
they are declared Drug Kingpins? Have their assets seized? If these
harsh punishments are really needed to fight drugs, isn't it only fair
that they apply to Congressmen, too?"

* Finally, proponents of the drug-testing plan had argued that
the House needs to "set a good example" for the nation, since so many
Americans -- including air-traffic controllers, high school athletes,
public-housing residents, and bus drivers -- are subject to
government-required drug testing.

"Actually, the House set a good example by rejecting this
plan," countered Crickenberger. "Now maybe it will set an even better
example by protecting every other American from the horrors of the War
on Drugs. After all, Congressmen finally summoned the courage to stand
up for their own Constitutional rights. When will they start standing
up for ours?"

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The Libertarian Party
2600 Virginia Ave. NW, Suite 100
Washington DC 20037
http://www.lp.org/
voice: 202-333-0008
fax: 202-333-0072

For subscription changes, please mail to  with the
word "subscribe" or "unsubscribe" in the subject line -- or use the WWW form.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Court Reverses Landmark Tobacco Ruling ('Reuters' Says A Three-Judge Panel
Of The US Fourth Circuit Court Of Appeals, With One Judge Dissenting,
Ruled In Richmond, Virginia, Friday That Congress Did Not Give
The US Food And Drug Administration Regulatory Jurisdiction
Over Tobacco Products)

Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1998 19:28:12 -0400
To: DrugSense News Service (mapnews@mapinc.org)
From: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org (MAPNews)
Subject: MN: US: Wire: Court Reverses Landmark Tobacco Ruling
Sender: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Reply-To: owner-mapnews@mapinc.org
Organization: Media Awareness Project http://www.mapinc.org/lists/
Newshawk: David.Hadorn@vuw.ac.nz (David Hadorn)
Source: Reuters
Pubdate: 14 Aug 1998

COURT REVERSES LANDMARK TOBACCO RULING

RICHMOND, V