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  • Posts Tagged ‘Obama Administration’

    Page 1 of 512345»


    Northern California federal prosecutor says they will continue to raid dispensaries, despite DOJ memo

    Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009 at 10:50 am | By: Radical Russ

    (Mission Local) The federal government will continue raids on medical marijuana operations in California despite guidelines issued by the Justice Department two weeks ago indicating the contrary.

    “I think it’s unfortunate that people have for some reason picked up on this as a change in policy, because it’s really not a change at all,” said Joseph Russoniello, federal prosecutor for the northern district of California, who was appointed in 2007 by then-President George W. Bush.

    Asked if federal officials will halt investigation and prosecution of medical marijuana operations in the state, Russoniello said simply, “The short answer is no.”

    Russoniello said many dispensaries in San Francisco and around California aren’t really not-for-profit, and he will prosecute any distributor fraudulently operating as a commercial enterprise in violation of state laws.

    “By that I mean people who are in it as if they were running a neighborhood candy store instead of running a commune, a collective or a group club that caters only to specific identified persons,” he said.

    Asked if federal agents are currently preparing to raid dispensaries suspected of illegal activities, Russoniello declined to comment.

    “I cannot affirm or deny the existence of ongoing criminal investigations,” he said.

    You know, I was just thinking that President Obama’s approval ratings are still way too high.  What he needs to do is have his administration issue a memo that seems to remove the threat of federal raids from lawful dispensaries, and then when people are comfortable about visiting those dispensaries, send in a few DEA agents in body armor to point assault weapons at people in wheelchairs.  Think of it as Obama’s “Read my lips; no new taxes” moment a la George Bush Sr. in 1988.  A few stunning visuals of jack-booted thugs taking down the neighborhood dispensary in a state where 56% of the voters want not just medical marijuana but outright legalization ought to drop that approval rating a few points, huh?


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    Behind the DOJ Medical Marijuana Memo

    Tuesday, October 27th, 2009 at 6:11 pm | By: Chris Goldstein

    John Ray Wilson and Jim Miller in New Jersey

    John Ray Wilson and Jim Miller in New Jersey

    10/25/09 by Chris Goldstein

    Scoop:  Staffers at Americans for Safe Access met with Department of Justice officials before the memo on medical marijuana was released last week.

    My role with several marijuana reform non-profits in New Jersey and Pennsylvania requires interaction with the national reform groups. One that has represented patients with great passion and success is Americans for Safe Access.

    They have aggressively pursued issues related to medical marijuana laws and then the rights of patients under those laws.  ASA has chapters in several states with main offices in California and Washington DC.

    On Wednesday I called ASA’s DC office to check in about some literature for events. Their Director of Government Affairs is Caren Woodson. She’s an experienced beltway player who has led protests on the street and meetings on The Hill. We’ve interviewed many times for podcasts and radio and have been working together as advocates this year.

    After talking business I asked her what she thought of the Department of Justice memo. Caren’s usual, very professional tone changed and there was excitement in her voice: She and Steph Sherer, ASA’s Director, had been invited for a meeting with DOJ officials the week before.  This was the only known meeting of advocates with the DOJ on this issue.

    That morning I had just happened to have wrapped up a telephone radio interview with an author of a book on public education. I asked Caren for an interview right away. The recording took 12 minutes and it aired that night on KSFR 101.1FM with my show Active Voice Radio.

    LISTEN- MP3 of Caren Woodson’s 10/21/09 interview

    Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

    In the past, ASA was protesting in front of the Department of Justice:  Loudly and very visibly protesting at that. Now they are invited in for meetings. There was no stronger indicator this week of this tangible shift in federal policy on medical cannabis.

    The impact of the DOJ memo is already being felt locally in NJ/PA. Two major editorials were published in the immediate wake of the news. The NJ General Assembly is expected to see The New Jersey Compassionate Use Medical Marijuana Act in a floor vote this fall.PA should have the first public legislative hearings on the issue soon.

    Philadelphia Inquirer: Easing Their Pain

    The Obama administration’s new policy on medical marijuana should make it easier for New Jersey and Pennsylvania to legalize its use for seriously ill patients. The Justice Department has removed a major legal hurdle by issuing a memo directing federal prosecutors in states that allow medical marijuana not to target patients or their sanctioned suppliers when the drug is purchased for legitimate purposes. Read Full Editorial

    Times of Trenton: It’s About Time

    New Jersey legislators, poised to vote on the issue, may be encouraged by the federal change of heart. It reflects the opinion of a majority of Americans — and 82 percent of N.J. residents — who favor dispensing marijuana to patients. With the new federal policy in place, there is no reason for New Jersey to any longer delay legalizing medical marijuana. Read Full Editorial

    NJ residents who support medical marijuana can CLICK HERE TO CONTACT ELECTED OFFICIALS IN NJ

    More information about medical cannabis in NJ can be found at  the Coalition for Medical Marijuana New Jersey.

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    Everybody is talking about marijuana after Obama DOJ memo

    Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 at 8:27 am | By: Radical Russ

    Does it seem like everybody is talking about marijuana these days?  Following yesterday’s announcement of the new Obama Administration DOJ memo outlining a “hands off” approach to states with medical marijuana laws, every local news reporter in a medical marijuana state scrambled to get interviews with local NORML activists for reaction.  Even I was contacted by local radio station KPAM when it couldn’t get through to Oregon NORML’s Madeline Martinez, because she was already on the phone with another local radio station!

    Mel from Southern Oregon NORML send me this video where their local TV station visited their headquarters for reaction:

    Madeline from Oregon NORML was also featured in this Bloomberg coverage:

    Madeline Martinez is in constant pain from a disease that is destroying her joints and the discs in her back. Marijuana relieves her discomfort, she said, and the Obama administration has ended her worries that she may someday be jailed for using the drug.

    Martinez, 58, of Portland, Oregon, had previously been given Abbott Laboratories’ Vicodin and codeine for her pain. Use of those drugs led to stomach problems, and now she takes marijuana prescribed for her by a doctor. Medicinal marijuana is legal in Oregon, one of 14 states to allow so-called compassionate-care use.

    The U.S. Department of Justice yesterday advised federal prosecutors not to seek criminal charges against those who use medical marijuana in accordance with state laws, reversing a Bush administration approach. Along with chronic pain, the American College of Physicians, the second-largest U.S. doctors group, has said marijuana can be used to treat glaucoma, multiple sclerosis and nausea.

    “Having disabled people jailed for no reason, that’s terrifying,” said Martinez, who mostly uses a tincture of the drug rather than smoking it. “As a medical marijuana patient, it’s always good to have some stress and anxiety alleviated.”

    Martinez, who struggles with chronic pain from degenerative disc and joint disease, grows her own marijuana because Oregon doesn’t have official dispensaries, she said. She also participates in a collective to give away cuttings and medicine.

    “We struggle with access,” Martinez said. “The black market mostly controls the marijuana in the country, and we need to grab it away from him and use it for our own economy, and to make it a priority for patients.”

    If you’ve gotten local newspaper, radio, or television coverage of yesterday’s news where a local NORML chapter is prominently featured, please send it my way at stash@norml.org.

    By the way, NORML’s Allen St. Pierre will be on MSNBC around 12:10PM today debating former GOP congressman Ernest Istook, and NORML’s Keith Stroup will be on CNN around the same time. According to St. Pierre, “I think NORML’s staff did 25-35 interviews yesterday with national and large regional media outlets yesterday, from 5AM to 1AM….and starting again today at 6AM with, so far, 5 more live radio shows…”

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    It’s Official: Obama Admin will not raid state-compliant medical marijuana facilities

    Monday, October 19th, 2009 at 6:54 am | By: Radical Russ

    WASHINGTON (Huffington Post) — The Obama administration will not seek to arrest medical marijuana users and suppliers as long as they conform to state laws, under new policy guidelines to be sent to federal prosecutors Monday.

    Two Justice Department officials described the new policy to The Associated Press, saying prosecutors will be told it is not a good use of their time to arrest people who use or provide medical marijuana in strict compliance with state laws.

    The new policy is a significant departure from the Bush administration, which insisted it would continue to enforce federal anti-pot laws regardless of state codes.

    A three-page memo spelling out the policy is expected to be sent Monday to federal prosecutors in the 14 states, and also to top officials at the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

    The memo, the officials said, emphasizes that prosecutors have wide discretion in choosing which cases to pursue, and says it is not a good use of federal manpower to prosecute those who are without a doubt in compliance with state law.

    At the same time, the officials said, the government will still prosecute those who use medical marijuana as a cover for other illegal activity. The memo particularly warns that some suspects may hide old-fashioned drug dealing or other crimes behind a medical marijuana business.

    In particular, the memo urges prosecutors to pursue marijuana cases which involve violence, the illegal use of firearms, selling pot to minors, money laundering or other crimes.

    This is a fantastic development that puts onto paper what Obama and Attorney General Holder have already said previously.  However, remember that according to San Diego DA Dumanis, dispensaries are “nothing more than for-profit storefront drug dealing operations run by drug dealers hiding behind the state’s medical marijuana law.” According to Los Angeles DA Cooley, “about 100%” of dispensaries are not “in strict compliance with state laws.”  In other words, does Obama’s memo rely on the feds to decide whether someone is following state law, or will the DEA come a-runnin’ every time some anti-pot district attorney has a hare-brained theory that all dispensaries are illegal?  Time will tell.

    What we really need is to have this policy enshrined into law.  Please call your federal representatives today and urge them to co-sponsor HR 2835, The Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act.


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    2002 NORML CON Speech by Van Jones, Obama’s former green energy advisor, targeted by Glenn Beck

    Thursday, September 10th, 2009 at 1:02 pm | By: Radical Russ

    Big thanks to Steve Bloom at CelebStoner for unearthing this YouTube video.

    YouTube Preview Image

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    Drug Czar Kerlikowski addresses UN report on success of decriminalization, without mentioning decriminalization

    Wednesday, June 24th, 2009 at 3:20 pm | By: Radical Russ

    The remarks from our Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy on the release of the UN 2009 World Drug Report, which endorsed drug decriminalization in a reversal of previous policy. Guess which 17-letter D-word never gets mentioned once in our “drug czar’s” 781-word statement?

    Statement of R. Gil Kerlikowske
    Director, National Drug Control Policy
    Remarks at Release of the 2009 World Drug Report
    June 24, 2009

    It is a great pleasure for me to be here with UNODC Executive Director Antonio Costa for the release of the 2009 World Drug Report. I am also pleased that we can be joined today by Michele Leonhart, Acting Administrator of DEA, and William McGlynn, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL). Congratulations to Antonio and his team in Vienna for putting together this very comprehensive document. As the report shows, every nation is affected by the drug problem.

    As we approach June 26th, International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Drug Trafficking, it is a good time to reflect on what we can do better. In the United States, we are moving away from divisive “drug war” rhetoric and focusing on employing all the tools at our disposal to get help to those who need it. We recognize that addiction is a disease and are seeking public health solutions. My top priority is to intensify efforts to reduce the demand for drugs which fuels crime and violence around the world.

    Read the rest of this entry by clicking here


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    Legalization of marijuana, a “fringe” issue like UFO and Kennedy Assassination conspiracy

    Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009 at 10:20 am | By: Radical Russ

    The New York Times has a piece up about the Obama Administration’s “Open for Questions” internet initiative where they accepted questions from the general public about federal policy and government.  As we know, legalization of marijuana was enormously popular and shot to the top of the list of questions every time the President asked us what federal policies we’d like to see.  The Times piece interviews the chief technology officer in charge of this effort, and the Times’ reporter does his best to paint us “legalizers” as some sort of tiny but loud fringe minority not worthy of serious consideration.

    The White House made its first major entree into government by the people last month when it set up an online forum to ask ordinary people for their ideas on how to carry out the president’s open-government pledge. It got an earful — on legalizing marijuana, revealing U.F.O. secrets and verifying Mr. Obama’s birth certificate to prove he was really born in the United States and thus eligible to be president.

    “Please, as fellow human beings of this great planet Earth, disclose all known information on space/UFO’s because the world needs to know,” wrote sprinter5160 on the site, whitehouse.gov/open, which attracted thousands of similar comments on fringe topics.

    “Even for people who want to talk about U.F.O.’s or the Kennedy assassination, we have created a forum for people to have a conversation with each other, and potentially to go off and organize and develop this further,” said Beth Simone Noveck, a New York Law School professor who is Mr. Obama’s deputy chief technology officer for open government.

    The visitors advanced more than 3,900 ideas, which in turn spawned 11,000 comments that received 210,000 thumb votes.

    The result? Three of the top 10 most popular ideas called for legalizing marijuana, and two featured conspiracy theories about Mr. Obama’s true place of birth.

    Clay Shirky, a professor at New York University… said that government must also prevent small groups of loudmouths from hijacking the public debate.

    “The first thing that happens when my mom and dad log into the system and they find it’s populated by U.F.O. people and birth-certificate people, they simply are not going to participate,” he said.

    Sorry, Clay, but if you consider 22,000,000 adult pot smokers as a “small group”, then you consider Texas a “small group”, because there are more of us than Texans.

    (Besides, everybody knows that aliens in UFOs landed in Dallas in 1963 to shoot Kennedy from behind the grassy knoll to create the distraction for them to hop over to Hawaii to fake Obama’s birth certificate so he could become president and legalize marijuana.  Aliens can’t get enough kind earth bud; all they usually get is that brown Rigellian schwag.)


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    90% of guns in Mexican drug war come from US… or not

    Tuesday, June 16th, 2009 at 9:20 am | By: Radical Russ


    Yesterday I had written this in a post about Mexican officials seeking Asylum in the US:

    How tragic – we fund the Mexican cartels because we prohibit a plant that Americans demand, then we supply 90% of the firearms and ammunition the cartels use to terrorize police, but when the police run to us in fear for their lives, we won’t grant them asylum.

    Which got me a prompt email from Stasher Tom:

    You stated that the US supplies 90% of the firearms to the Mexican cartels, this is not true.  The US at the most supplies 33% and as little as 14% of the firearms used by the cartels. Russ please retract this misstatement, please do not muddy this movement for liberty with unevaluated quotes from anti-gun groups.

    And I thought, hold on, I’m usually really careful with the numbers.  Did I unknowingly slip up?  I don’t recall gathering quotes from the Brady Campaign to End Gun Violence or any other “anti-gun” group.  I’m actually quite a fan of guns and the 2nd Amendment (it’s that Idaho DNA – where I’m from, “gun control” means “use both hands”), even though I think we do a poor job keeping them out of the hands of the violent and mentally ill and our culture has a huge defect revealed in our love for shooting each other (according to the CDC, the ratio of US gun homicides to International gun homicides is 15.7:1)

    So what’s the truth and what led your intrepid reporter to the “90%” quote?  Read on…

    Read the rest of this entry by clicking here


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    Congressional Research Service’s “Medical Marijuana: Review and Analysis of Federal and State Policies”

    Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 at 2:20 pm | By: Radical Russ

    Medical Marijuana: Review and Analysis of Federal and State Policies (PDF; 920 KB)

    Source: Congressional Research Service (via FAS/Secrecy News)

    The issue before Congress is whether to continue the federal prosecution of medical marijuana patients and their providers, in accordance with the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA), or whether to relax federal marijuana prohibition enough to permit the medicinal use of botanical cannabis products when recommended by a physician, especially where permitted under state law.

    Bills that would make medical marijuana available under federal law for medical use in the states with medical marijuana programs and that would make it possible for defendants in federal court to reveal to juries that their marijuana activity was medically related and legal under state law have been introduced in recent Congresses and are likely to be reintroduced in the 111th Congress. Past proposals to move marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule II of the CSA might also resurface in the current Congress.

    The Obama Administration’s Attorney General has signaled an end to federal raids by the Drug Enforcement Administration of medical marijuana dispensaries that are operating in accordance with state laws, in fulfillment of a pledge to end such actions that was made by candidate Obama during the presidential campaign.

    Thirteen states, mostly in the West, have enacted laws allowing the use of marijuana for medical purposes, and many thousands of patients are seeking relief from a variety of serious illnesses by smoking marijuana or using other herbal cannabis preparations. Meanwhile, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration refuses to recognize these state laws and continues to investigate and arrest, under federal statute, medical marijuana providers and users in those states and elsewhere.

    Claims and counterclaims about medical marijuana—much debated by journalists and academics, policymakers at all levels of government, and interested citizens—include the following: Marijuana is harmful and has no medical value; marijuana effectively treats the symptoms of certain diseases; smoking is an improper route of drug administration; marijuana should be rescheduled to permit medical use; state medical marijuana laws send the wrong message and lead to increased illicit drug use; the medical marijuana movement undermines the war on drugs; patients should not be arrested for using medical marijuana; the federal government should allow the states to experiment and should not interfere with state medical marijuana programs; medical marijuana laws harm the federal drug approval process; the medical cannabis movement is a cynical ploy to legalize marijuana and other drugs. With strong opinions being expressed on all sides of this complex issue, the debate over medical marijuana does not appear to be approaching resolution.

    This report will be updated as legislative activity and other developments occur.

    via Docuticker » Blog Archive » High Interest CRS Report — Medical Marijuana: Review and Analysis of Federal and State Policies.

    This document is what your congresscritters requested in order to get the latest update on medical marijuana in America.

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    2009 NORML Foundation


    Feds may lift forfeiture threat from medical marijuana clinics

    Tuesday, June 9th, 2009 at 12:20 pm | By: Radical Russ

    All of this brings to question whether those DEA letters sent to landlords warning of potential forfeiture actions and other penalties are still valid. Asked about the issue several weeks ago, a spokesperson for Attorney General Eric H. Holder did not give a clear answer about the Justice Department’s intentions.

    When asked whether landlords who rent to medical marijuana cooperatives are still at risk of asset forfeiture, a U.S. Department of Justice official said it’s not a priority to target those who follow state laws. Department spokeswoman Laura Sweeney said in an email that “as part of the federal government’s efforts to best employ its resources, the Department focuses its investigative and enforcement activities involving marijuana on large-scale drug traffickers whose conduct is often inconsistent with both federal and state law.”

    All of this, of course, comes as welcome news to medical marijuana advocates, who say that more than 300 letters were sent by the DEA to landlords in 2007 and 2008. “Since Obama has taken office, we have not seen any letters disseminated,” Americans for Safe Access spokesperson Kris Hermes said.

    via Feds may lift forfeiture threat from medical marijuana clinics | Articles | Asset Forfeiture Watch – Asset Forfeiture, Civil Asset Forfeiture, Criminal Forfeiture, Asset Forfeiture Law, Asset Forfeiture Training, Government Seizure.

    In case you don’t know about Civil Asset Forfeiture, it is one of the most insidious legacies of the War on (Certain American Citizens Using Non-Pharmaceutical, Non-Alcoholic, Tobacco-Free) Drugs.  The basic idea was that if a drug kingpin bought boats, houses, and cars with his ill-gotten drug money, the government can seize those assets, sell them at auction, and use the proceeds to fight more bad guys.  In reality it has meant low-level marijuana users losing their property over a seed or a joint.

    In this instance, the feds have been trying to scare landlords in California by sending them letters threatening to seize any properties rented to medical marijuana providers, since in their view, those providers are just drug kingpins.  This also touches on what was Joe Biden’s RAVE Act, the law that allows feds to seize properties used for drug distribution, like “E” at a rave or joints at a concert, whether the owner allows it or even knows about it or not.  Worse, in a forfeiture action, you don’t even have to be charged with a crime – the property is charged with the crime, and it is guilty until proven innocent (e.g., you have to prove you didn’t buy that car with drug money).

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