When good things make you sad

Make no mistake about it. Senator Richard Durbin is one of the good guys, and I’m proud to have him as my Senator. He was the only one to stand up to DEA head Karen Tandy in her confirmation hearing (proving she was unfit to serve). He also introduced the Truth in Trials Act to assist medical marijuana patients facing federal charges.
So I was pleased to finally hear back from him regarding H.R.1528: Defending America’s Most Vulnerable: Safe Access to Drug Treatment and Child Protection Act of 2005, sponsored by James F. Sensenbrenner (WI-5), an odious bill that would, among other things, make me a felon for not snitching on college students who have pot. As part of an action alert, I had written him asking him to oppose the bill if it made it to the Senate.
I finally received a reply. And sure enough, Durbin opposes Sensenbrenner’s bill. But am I satisfied? Not by a long shot. Here’s the letter.

Dear Mr. Guither:

  Thank you for your message regarding Defending America’s Most Vulnerable:
Safe Access to Drug Treatment and Child Protection Act, HR 1528. I
appreciate knowing your thoughts.

  I understand your concerns about this measure. On April 6, 2005,
Representative James Sensenbrenner introduced HR 1528, which primarily
addresses drug distribution involving minors by expanding mandatory
minimum sentences.

  Opponents of the legislation argue that it virtually eliminates the
ability of federal judges to give sentences below the minimum sentence
recommended by the federal sentencing guidelines. They also argue that
the measure is punitive because it requires a 10-year minimum sentence for
anyone 21 or older who gives marijuana or other drugs to someone under 18
and that the legislation further widens the disparity in sentencing for
crack and powder cocaine offenses. These provisions could cause severe
hardships and injustice and contribute to the growing population within
our nation’s prisons.

  I am concerned that this bill prohibits consideration at sentencing of a
defendant’s need for education, vocational training, or medical care. To
achieve the long-term goals we seek, tough punishment must work in tandem
with smart prevention and early intervention.

  This measure is pending before the House Judiciary Committee and the
House Energy and Commerce Committee. Similar legislation has not been
introduced in the Senate. However, I will keep your thoughts in mind in
case the Senate considers legislation involving mandatory minimum
sentences. Thank you again for contacting me.

     Sincerely,

     Richard J. Durbin
     United States Senator

RJD/el

P.S. If you are ever visiting Washington, please feel free to join Senator
Obama and me at our weekly constituent coffee. When the Senate is in
session, we provide coffee and donuts every Thursday at 8:30 a.m. as we
hear what is on the minds of Illinoisans and respond to your questions.
We would welcome your participation. Please call my D.C. office for more
details.

So why am I disappointed?
Because he refers to Sensenbrenner’s bill as if it is something to be taken seriously, although he is “concerned” about some of the provisions and notes that “opponents of the bill” make certain points.
I wanted him to say:

Dear Mr. Guither:

  Thank you for your message regarding Defending America’s Most Vulnerable:
Safe Access to Drug Treatment and Child Protection Act, HR 1528. I
appreciate knowing your thoughts.

You should know mine. My esteemed colleague, Representative James Sensenbrenner, is an ass. The fact that he is in Congress is a travesty. The fact that he is chair of a committee should be a point of extreme embarrassment to the Republican leadership. It seems that every time he proposes a bill, he violates his own oath to support the Constitution of the United States while traitorously destroying the freedom of his own constituents.

There’s no way in Hell that I’d let a bill even similar to his make it through the Senate. It’s time to reform the laws that don’t work, not make them worse. Thank you again for contacting me.

     Sincerely,

     Richard J. Durbin
     United States Senator

Now I understand why Senator Durbin couldn’t write a letter like that. There are ways you do things so you don’t piss people off, and public officials just can’t be that blunt.
But why did he feel the need to say: “tough punishment must work in tandem
with smart prevention and early intervention”? Why is it that one of the better people in Congress is unable to tell the truth about drug policy? Is our society so afraid to face reform? So paralyzed by the years of propaganda?
How long will it take before politicians can actually say that they favor reform, without including the obligatory tough talk?
Note that Senator Durbin invited me to join him and Senator Obama for coffee and donuts if I’m ever in Washington, DC. I don’t get there often, but I’d love to take advantage of it. I’d like to ask him a question:

Senator Durbin, why do you feel there is this need for “tough punishment”? Do you have any evidence that tough punishment works? Do you really think the country would have been better off if Senator Obama had been caught indulging in his youthful indiscretions (cocaine and marijuana) and spent time in prison?

Yes, I’m proud of Senator Durbin. He’s one of the best we’ve got. Unfortunately.
When I deal with a sado-moralist like Souder, I get feisty. When I get a letter from Durbin, it just makes me sad.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on When good things make you sad

Go check out Last One Speaks

Libby has been blogging up a storm recently, with some great stuff on the Senlis Council, the Salon article on the Utah attack, the effectiveness of meth reaction laws, and DEA delays.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Go check out Last One Speaks

I’m not sure quite what to make of this…

… or how much to believe, but in a special to the World Tribune.com: Cannabis new drug of choice to finance Al Qaida

ABU DHABI — Saudi security sources said Sunni insurgents have been smuggling illegal drugs from Iraq to Saudi Arabia to finance insurgency attacks against coalition forces.

The sources said the drugs being smuggling now tend to be cannabis.

“In the space of one year, border police intercepted 10 tons of cannabis coming from Iraq,” a Saudi source said. “In the past, the [smuggled] merchandise used to consist of alcoholic beverages and prohibited drugs.”

So let’s see, we go to Afghanistan and it becomes the largest source of opium in that part of the world. We go to Iraq, and it becomes the supplier of marijuana to Saudi Arabia.
The notion that we have the power or capability of stopping the production, distribution, or consumption of illicit drugs anywhere is laughable.
And, of course, regarding the claim that Al Qaida is being financed by the marijuana, remember that marijuana has nothing to do with it. The black market has everything to do with it.

[Thanks to John]
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on I’m not sure quite what to make of this…

Action Alert: Allow Research

Regular readers of this site have heard me complain ad nauseum about the delaying tactics of the federal government to prevent even the proper investigation of medical marijuana.
Here’s a chance for you to get your Representatives into the act — an action alert from NORML.

Members of Congress are now rallying support to send a letter to DEA head Karen Tandy, asking the DEA to end the monopoly and approve an application to grow research marijuana submitted by the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. This is where you come in: contact your Representative and urge him or her to support that letter!

Let your Congressperson know that it is not acceptable to let politics stand in the way of legitimate scientific research. Marijuana should get the same consideration by the Food and Drug Administration as any other medicine seeking approval!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Action Alert: Allow Research

Jury says NO

I mentioned this case briefly back in July. As part of a drug sting, police in Great Barrington, MA lured and arrested 19 young people for selling drugs (most were first time offenders and many were for small amounts of marijuana — one was just for connecting the officer with someone who could sell). The state has onerous 1,000 feet school zone laws (very difficult to know when you’re in a school zone) and the DA chose to apply the school zone mandatory minimums.
The first trial, for Kyle Sawin, ended up in a mistrial in July. They went back to trial and on Friday the jury found him Not Guilty.
Apparently both juries were concerned about the severity of the 2 year mandatory minimum, and felt that the sting looked more like entrapment:

Juror Jonathan Nix said that the panel was split when deliberations began, but that as it grappled with the issues surrounding the case, its members concluded that not enough evidence existed to convince them with certainty that the earliest transaction occurred.

“On the other two (sales), we felt that there was enough coercion to warrant an entrapment finding,” Nix, of Becket, said.

From the Berkshire Eagle’s editorial:

The Draconian nature of the school-zone law simply cannot be ignored. It makes no distinction between first and habitual offenders or the amount of drugs sold. It ties the hands of judges, who should be allowed to consider the differences in drug cases brought before them. It is clearly designed to protect school children, and while the Taconic lot is within 1,000-feet of two schools, the undercover operation took place in summer. It’s obvious unfairness will loom over any of the trials brought because of the Great Barrington sting.

First-time drug dealers should be penalized through some combination of probation, counseling and community service that will set them straight without ruining the lives of the young people charged. However, the district attorney’s all-or-nothing strategy, built as it is upon a bad law, means they will escape punishment and the counseling they clearly need.

Juries can send important messages — to District Attorneys and to lawmakers. This was a community that believed the law was improperly inflexible (a community petition to drop the school zone charges had gotten a lot of signatures), and that believed the DA and police had overstepped. The jury agreed and refused to convict — twice — despite having sufficient evidence that the drug sales had taken place.
Remember the power of the jury.
[A roundup of articles on the case from the Berkshire Eagle is here. Thanks, Adam]

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Jury says NO

Reader’s Digest takes on mandatory minimums

The historically conservative Reader’s Digest comes through with Petty Crime, Outrageous Punishment by Carl M. Cannon.
The article goes after the three-strikes law, but includes a lot more mandatory minimum madness, including this amazing story:

A Florida welfare mom, Clyburn accompanied her boyfriend to a pawnshop to sell his .22-caliber pistol. She provided her ID because her boyfriend didn’t bring his own, and the couple got $30 for the gun. But Clyburn had a previous criminal record for minor drug charges, and when federal authorities ran a routine check of the pawnshop’s records, they produced a “hit” — a felon in possession of a firearm. That’s automatically 15 years in federal prison, which is exactly what Clyburn got. “I never even held the gun,” she noted in an interview from prison.

No one is more appalled than H. Jay Stevens, the former federal public defender from the middle district of Florida. “Everybody I’ve described this case to says, “This can’t have happened.” [But] it’s happening five days a week all over this country.”

This one made me smile a little:

Several years ago, a prominent Congressman, Rep. Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois, was sent to prison on mail-fraud charges. It was only then that he learned what he’d been voting for all those years when anticrime legislation came up and he cast the safe “aye” vote. Rostenkowski told of being stunned at how many young, low-level drug offenders were doing 15- and 20- year stretches in federal prison.

“The waste of these lives is a loss to the entire community,” Rostenkowski said. “I was swept along by the rhetoric about getting tough on crime. Frankly, I lacked both expertise and perspective on these issues.”

So true. All our elected leaders lack the expertise and perspective… Perhaps we could help them out by giving them all some jail time.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Reader’s Digest takes on mandatory minimums

Seize This!

You may recall that Boulder City Attorney Dave Olsen wants to seize the home of 56-year-old Cynthia Warren for her misdemeanor charge of growing 6 marijuana plants (see here and here). The editorials in the papers have been slamming Olsen.
At the time, several commenters here noted that Dave Olsen pled no contest to a misdemeanor drunk driving charge in 2004. Well that also didn’t escape the notice of Steve Sebelius in this scathing article in the Las Vegas City Life.

[…]And you know what? I agree with [Olsen], wholeheartedly. We must seize the property of those who put children in danger, and we must do it now.

So that’s why we’ve got to immediately seize Dave Olsen’s motorcycle.

You see, in 2004, Olsen pled no contest to drunken driving, a crime that surely has taken more lives than marijuana ever will. Anti-DUI advocates are fond of saying that, with a drunken driver at the controls, a vehicle is a weapon, surely one more dangerous than Cynthia Warren’s house.

Call the Boulder City police, and get the Henderson SWAT team for backup. There could be a standoff.

The problem with Olsen is not just that he’s a hypocrite — although he surely is — it’s that he’s also not telling the truth. […]

It’s great to see this strong a response in the media.

Outrage barely covers it: Regardless of what the law says, Olsen is engaging in an act of theft. Warren committed a crime, and was punished for committing a crime. Olsen’s exacting a punishment for something Warren never did in the eyes of the law, making wild and untrue claims in the process. He should drop this case immediately, and if he doesn’t, Boulder City fathers should find the courage to order him to stop.

In the meantime, will somebody look at seizing that motorcycle? I think we’d all feel safer if they did.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Seize This!

We spent HOW much?

After five years of unprecedented runaway spending (that has almost made LBJ look fiscally conservative), a group of Republican House members apparently finally looked at our credit card statements.
It all came to a boil when they were trying to decide which card still had enough credit limit left to buy the brand new Sim City: New Orleans.
“Hey, who charged this $223 million bridge to nowhere?” asked one of them. “Kiss my ear,” replied Don Young (disappointed that nobody actually nibbled his lobes, which are incredibly sensitive).
So they decided to look at how they could cut back on the family expenses (You’ve all been there before — no movie rentals this month, eliminate Sally’s lunch money and let her trade sexual favors for food, etc.)
So the Republican Study Committee has released a list of cuts (pdf) to help cover the cost. (Of course, these cuts wouldn’t actually touch the current credit card balances or anything — that would require some really tough choices.)
I’m not going to comment on all the cuts they suggested — most will not survive their own colleagues’ self-interest.
But let’s check out the drug war entries:

  • Level funding for Andean Counter-Drug Initiative
    […] Savings: $125 million over 10 years
  • Eliminate State Grants for Safe and Drug-Free Schools
    […] States receive SDFSCA funding on the basis of their school-age population and
    number of poor children but statistics suggest programs are ineffective. In addition, studies show that schools are among the safest places in the country and relatively drug free. Savings: $4.8 billion over ten years
  • Eliminate the Federal Anti-Drug Advertising
    […] There is no solid evidence that media campaigns are effective in either preventing or reducing the use of illegal drugs. Savings: $1.3 billion over ten years
  • Eliminate High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Program
    […]Because many of its functions are duplicative, the Administration requested
    that its functions be transferred to the Department of Justice, and the program terminated. Savings: $3.2 billion over ten years

OK, there are a couple of good cuts there, but that’s just scratching the surface. Only level the funding for Andean Counter-Drug Initiative? Scrap it. And where’s the cuts to the DEA’s budget? Come on, guys — you can’t tell me that you’re going to eliminate the Moon/Mars mission and Sesame Street, but keep arresting grandma for using marijuana to help deal with her chemo treatments in California? Does that make any sense at all?
On the plus side, it’s nice to see members of Congress in print point out that some of these programs that they suggested for the chopping block are “ineffective.”
We may want to remind them of that fact on occassion.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on We spent HOW much?

Fact-checking the media

Via News of the Weed:
The Times Online (UK) published a reefer-madness article by Will Iredale and Holly Watt on Sunday: Mental problems soar among children using cannabis.

The number of children treated for mental disorders caused by smoking cannabis has quadrupled since the government downgraded the legal status of the drug, according to a leading drug charity.

Startling. But clearly nonsense to anyone who follows the facts. Yet at a time when there are prohibitionists in England trying hard to reverse the liberalization trend, such an article will fan flames in a major way.
So what’s this leading drug charity where the Times got their info? Addaction.
The very next day, Addaction released this statement

The Sunday Times published a story on September 18th under the heading “Mental Health Problems Soar Among Children Using Cannabis” by Will Iredale and Holly Watt that bore little relation to any information supplied by Addaction, and was, in our view, entirely misleading.

The story has been so structured as to make a case about cannabis-related psychosis based on information the paper claims came from Addaction, but which did not come from the charity.

In 2004-5 Addaction which collects data on numbers of young people seen in its youngaddaction services, saw 1,575 young people who came to Addaction for treatment for drug misuse. Addaction collected data on cannabis use. But Addaction is not a mental health charity and is not qualified to treat psychosis.

Rosie Brocklehurst, Director of Communications at Addaction said: “The subject of cannabis-related psychosis is a very serious subject and the report in the Sunday Times made serious claims, based on no evidence supplied by us. We suspect the story was influenced by the Sunday Times wish to write a piece before the imminent deliberations by the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs. The ACMD will be reviewing the scientific evidence on cannabis use and misuse and will be making recommendations to the Government in the light of those deliberations.”

I haven’t seen a correction yet at the Times.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Around the world

I’ve just started rehearsals as musical director for Marat/Sade – quite a fascinating challenge, so my posting may occassionally be erratic.
For today, let’s take an interesting trip around the world…
“bullet” Controversy in Mexico over the decision by the Catholic Church to accept donations from drug traffickers. The Bishop says such money can be “purified” by giving it to the church. Government spokesmen call it money laundering.
“bullet” Russia is considering mass mandatory drug testing for college students and prospective college students. Students testing positive would be thrown out in 24 hours, and refusal to take a test would be the same as a positive test. [Thanks, Herb]
“bullet” China is expanding its drug enforcement bureaucracy.
“bullet” Nigeria has apparently been bamboozled into believing that using the United States Drug Enforcement Agency as a role model is a good thing.
“bullet” In Great Britain, David Cameron, a Tory and possible future leader of the conservative party calls for the United Nations to legalize drugs and let individual countries try their own approaches.
“bullet” Iran is concerned about opium and feels that “at least a 10-year period is needed to smash the facilities of drug production in Afghanistan.” Dream on.
“bullet” The Philipines always manages to find bizarre and provocative stories to promote their drug war. This is a prime example: Druggie Rapes Deranged Sister
“bullet” Australians are slow to learn the lesson: Do not go to Indonesia.
“bullet” The Colombian army discovered a huge cocaine lab. Yawn. Likely effect on cocaine prices: 0.
“bullet” In Amsterdam, “a television presenter on a new Dutch talk show plans to take heroin and other illegal drugs on air in a program intended to reach young audiences on topics that touch their lives.” It’s called the “Shoot Up and Swallow Show.” [Thanks, Tim]
“bullet” “Japan’s flea markets have become ‘lawless zones,’ according to Weekly Playboy (10/4), with perverts, purveyors of putrid porno and pimps of drugs like magic mushrooms running amok.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Around the world