Archive June, 2010

Calif. NAACP endorses legalizing marijuana

29 June, 23:24, by admin Tags: , ,

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES (KABC) — The California chapter of the NAACP is endorsing Proposition 19, the ballot initiative that seeks to make marijuana possession legal in the state.

The state’s chapter of the civil rights group said blacks are unfairly targeted for marijuana-related offenses.

“It is time for them to stop using my community to populate the prison system on such minor offenses as having a joint,” said Alice Huffman, president of the California chapter of the NAACP.

Huffman said because of that inequity, her organization is supporting Prop. 19.

That declaration is not sitting well with leaders of the African American community. Some say it unfairly portrays blacks as heavy marijuana users.

“Marijuana is the drug of choice for every stoner in the valley,” said Joe Hicks, vice president of Community Advocates, a civil rights think tank in Los Angeles.

He criticizes the California chapter of the NAACP for making poor decisions. This latest endorsement, Hicks said, sends the wrong message to the African American community.

“If you just did a random poll of black folks on the street and said, are these the things that you would like to see this organization address itself to, I don’t think you would see the decriminalization of marijuana anywhere in the list of 100 things,” Hicks said.

On the streets, there was little support for the NAACP’s decision.

“I think they should leave it alone,” said B.J. Hill. “It’s not their problem.”

Michael Murrel said that if the law passed, his children might be more influenced to use marijuana.

“I have two children. I wouldn’t want them to be exposed to the marijuana or being exposed that they can easily have access to it,” Murrell said.

The NAACP’s endorsement of Prop. 19 doesn’t necessarily guarantee it any votes.

While the NAACP stood against Prop. 8, the same sex marriage band, African Americans voted overwhelmingly in favor of it.

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES (KABC) — The California chapter of the NAACP is endorsing Proposition 19, the ballot initiative that seeks to make marijuana possession legal in the state.

The state’s chapter of the civil rights group said blacks are unfairly targeted for marijuana-related offenses.

“It is time for them to stop using my community to populate the prison system on such minor offenses as having a joint,” said Alice Huffman, president of the California chapter of the NAACP.

Huffman said because of that inequity, her organization is supporting Prop. 19.

That declaration is not sitting well with leaders of the African American community. Some say it unfairly portrays blacks as heavy marijuana users.

“Marijuana is the drug of choice for every stoner in the valley,” said Joe Hicks, vice president of Community Advocates, a civil rights think tank in Los Angeles.

He criticizes the California chapter of the NAACP for making poor decisions. This latest endorsement, Hicks said, sends the wrong message to the African American community.

“If you just did a random poll of black folks on the street and said, are these the things that you would like to see this organization address itself to, I don’t think you would see the decriminalization of marijuana anywhere in the list of 100 things,” Hicks said.

On the streets, there was little support for the NAACP’s decision.

“I think they should leave it alone,” said B.J. Hill. “It’s not their problem.”

Michael Murrel said that if the law passed, his children might be more influenced to use marijuana.

“I have two children. I wouldn’t want them to be exposed to the marijuana or being exposed that they can easily have access to it,” Murrell said.

The NAACP’s endorsement of Prop. 19 doesn’t necessarily guarantee it any votes.

While the NAACP stood against Prop. 8, the same sex marriage band, African Americans voted overwhelmingly in favor of it.

Montel Williams Lobbies Albany To Legalize Med Marijuana

29 June, 23:22, by admin Tags: ,

Montel Williams, the former talk show host who now suffers from multiple sclerosis, is making the rounds here at the State Capitol today in hopes of encouraging the legalization of medical marijuana in New York.

Williams, who uses marijuana to ease the effects of his condition, noted 14 states and the District of Columbia have passed MM laws, and many other state legislatures are now considering it.

It’s questionable whether the New York measure will make it through, and officials including Mayor Bloomberg have issued strenuous objections to its passage.

I had a chance to chat briefly with Williams, who says he’s not giving up hope.

Watch:

Weed Control Part 1: MS sufferer finds relief with medical marijuana

29 June, 23:20, by admin Tags: ,

Matt Young used to bust kids for smoking pot as a security officer in Calgary, but now it’s Young who’s trying to find a way to smoke marijuana in peace.

That search almost cost him his life.

Young, now living in Saskatchewan, is a former private security manager and amateur bodybuilder who wanted to be a police officer. He’s watched all that disappear as his multiple sclerosis advanced since his diagnosis at age 14.

The 28-year-old has tried every drug suggested to him by doctors in three provinces, but he said marijuana, which he only tried once or twice in high school, is the only drug that stops his spasms and lets him eat and sleep at night.

“Marijuana still doesn’t eliminate the problems, but it reduces them so I can get out of bed and play with my boy,” Young said, referring to his seven-year-old stepson.

At the end of May, Health Canada sent Young the card that allows him to legally smoke marijuana. He’s one of 100 Saskatchewan residents and 4,029 Canadians who can legally possess cannabis, according to Health Canada.

“I wish it could have been something else that helped me,” Young said, sitting beside his childhood friend and now partner, Tina Mauro, in their home north of Saskatoon. “But I’ve tried everything else.”

To legally smoke pot, one has to find a doctor willing to sign a prescription for the drug. Health Canada approves the possession licence and the prescription is filled by growing a small supply of marijuana, finding a designated holder (also licensed by the government) or buying from Health Canada.

Legal access to medical marijuana in Saskatchewan is not easily obtained, say several users and proponents of medicinal pot.

Earlier this year, the local chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws blasted the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan for deterring doctors from prescribing pot. Health Canada counts 59 Saskatchewan doctors who support medical marijuana.

Young had a difficult time finding a Saskatchewan doctor to prescribe marijuana before Health Canada sent him his licence.

“A lot of damage has been done to our lives,” Young said. “If somebody reads this, maybe it’ll provide them a glimmer of hope.”

- – -

Young grew up in Saskatchewan, but found himself in Calgary where he ran security for an office complex.

He applied to be an officer with the Calgary Police Service, but was told he was ineligible because of his multiple sclerosis, a disease that attacks nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.

Eventually, the MS symptoms escalated and Young sought treatment. He tried a barrage of drugs prescribed by doctors. The medication didn’t work and, in 2005, after getting approval from Health Canada, he tried marijuana as an alternative.

“I got better,” Young said, while sitting in his two-bedroom bungalow in a small town north of Saskatoon.

He smoked for a year. He felt so good that he stopped smoking. He had a severe relapse and he soon found himself moving back to Saskatchewan in 2008 to live with Mauro at her suggestion. They were engaged in September 2009.

But in Saskatchewan, Young couldn’t find a doctor to prescribe marijuana. They pushed more pharmaceuticals on him, he said, but nothing worked and the drugs often made Young more ill.

“He’s the one in 100 that the drugs didn’t work for,” said Mauro, a former pharmacy technician who now works at a bank.

Young pleaded with his doctors to write him a prescription for marijuana. He’s not a man to mingle with drug dealers and Health Canada sells pot at half the price of its street value.

In January, frustrated and depressed with refusals from doctors, Young set out to kill himself. He overdosed on prescription pills at his home while his family was away.

“When I walked in the door, he stopped breathing,” Mauro said. Their son was screaming for Young to wake up while Mauro called paramedics. Young was taken to Shellbrook Hospital before a transfer to Saskatoon where he spent several days in a coma.

“The doctors didn’t think he was going to make it,” Mauro said. “He was in a coma on a Monday and on Tuesday I walked into the hospital room and he turned over and looked at me and we both started crying.”

- – -

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan warns doctors about prescribing medical marijuana. The treatment has plenty of anecdotal evidence but little else to back up health claims, say medical experts.

“In time, I think we’ll have a greater level of consensus, but we need more evidence,” said Dr. Peter Butt, a Saskatoon family physician and addictions specialist. “We’re in the early of days of medical marijuana and the story has yet to unfold.

“There’s limited evidence about its efficacy. We have a product being smoked, so there’s a health problem with that. Just as tobacco companies are being sued, some physicians might be reluctant to prescribe something that will also cause harm.”

There are other problems: Criminal involvement in marijuana trade and the contamination of street drugs, addiction and the trouble of measuring dosage for different patients.

But there are cases in which marijuana has helped people, especially those who are HIV positive, receiving chemotherapy or diagnosed with MS, said Butt, also an assistant professor with the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine.

There is some evidence that marijuana can help patients regain their appetite and ease nausea and chronic pain, he said.

“It can help in select cases, but that doesn’t mean it’s a panacea for all chronic pain,” Butt said.

To make marijuana use safer for patients, researchers must develop a better delivery system to avoid the health problems associated with smoking, Butt said.

“How many medications are dispensed in leaf form?” Butt said.

Some medical marijuana proponents and users believe current alternatives — sprays and pills with concentrated THC — don’t work as well as smoking.

The MS Society doesn’t recommend MS patients use marijuana, but does say that there is anecdotal evidence to support its benefits, said Laurie Murphy, the charity’s client services co-ordinator in Saskatoon.

“It can help with spasticity and pain,” she said. “But we can’t advocate for any treatment that doesn’t have the research to back it up.”

The society directs curious patients to Health Canada if they feel like marijuana is the last resort, Murphy said.

“I don’t know of many doctors in Saskatchewan who support it and many won’t even talk about it,” she said. “It’s sad they can’t access (marijuana) if they benefit from it.”

- – -

A neurologist gave Young a prescription in February and Health Canada mailed Young his licence four months later.

Young can only pay for some of his prescription, which allows him 3.5 grams of marijuana per day. Health Canada charges Young about $600 per month to fill his prescription, half of the street value for the same amount, he said.

He’d like governments to subsidize marijuana, like provinces do for other prescriptions, for low-income people. He and Mauro are a single-income family and they run a cake decorating business on the side. The couple is trying to keep their home as they fight financial problems, Young said.

Despite the discount, Young only bought one ounce for his first purchase this year. He smoked it all by the middle of June and he can’t order more until the end of the month.

“He scrapes and conserves if there’s any residue left,” Mauro said.

Young said marijuana “is supposed to heal, but waiting for it feels like torture.”

In an email, a Health Canada spokesperson suggested licensed users grow their marijuana — it charges $20 for a packet of 30 seeds — to keep expenses low.

Young doesn’t want to grow his marijuana, although it’d be easy to do with Health Canada’s approval. He lives with a young family in a small town and fears how even a couple of marijuana plants could jeopardize his family’s security.

“I hope to fall asleep before the spasms start,” he said. Without the marijuana, Young said, his body is wracked by insomnia, spasms, nausea and eating troubles. “I feel like I’m literally losing my mind. I have a digital recorder I rely on because I’m constantly forgetting things.”

Once Young inhales the marijuana smoke, the changes are instant, Mauro said.

“The depression is gone. His thoughts are clear, concise,” she said. “He loves to write again and the appetite is there.”

“The only thing that makes it better is the marijuana,” Young said.

Weed Control Part 2: ‘Still treated as criminals’ Medical marijuana growers face obstacles, while police still see issues

29 June, 23:18, by admin Tags: ,

The walls are bright white and patched with red construction tape. Fluorescent lights — mimicking sunlight — shine down on 20 flowering plants of varying strains.

Two giant pails of water being aerated fill the room with a low hum, as Jason Hiltz stands above rows of flowering herbs in the converted garage greenhouse.

There, just off the main drag in a small town outside Saskatoon, sits one of 94 legal medical marijuana grow operations in the province and one of the many Hiltz helped get off the ground.

It’s unsophisticated, but it works, he said.

“This has a few glossy spots,” Hiltz tells James Francis, 52, who says he’s the longest licensed user of medical marijuana in Canada.

“When did you last water?”

Hiltz, a horticulturist and Saskatchewan’s best known pot advocate, is Francis’ cannabis consultant, helping him and 12 other local medical marijuana growers cultivate their crops.

Hiltz, who is also a licensed user after a car crash left him with chronic pain, helps everyone from family friends to elderly people on their death beds access medicinal marijuana and advises a number of growers on how to wind through Health Canada’s bureaucratic morass.

“It’s about compassion,” Hiltz says. “Honestly, it’s probably easier being an illegal grower than a legal grower.”

More research is supporting previous anecdotal evidence that cannabis may have a wide range of therapeutic uses, such as the treatment of Alzheimer’s, depression, glaucoma, epilepsy, cancer, HIV/AIDS and hepatitis.

However, the medical growers in the Saskatoon area say the government’s program has artificially depressed the medical market by making it difficult for patients to qualify, supplying what many consider poor-quality marijuana and restricting qualified licensed growers to supplying a maximum of two patients.

Growers say they live in fear of break-ins, some say they’re discriminated against by police who still view their grow-ops with an air of suspicion and struggle against the insurance industry, which wants absolutely nothing to do with the risks.

“We’re still treated as criminals,” says Jeff Lundstrom, the owner of Skunk Funk, a head shop that he says has become the local headquarters for the medical marijuana community.

Lundstrom, who is authorized to grow for two users under the federal program, had his garage-based grow room broken into over winter. Someone caught wind of the operation, drove a vehicle through his garage and made off with two plants he was pollenizing. The legal operation wasn’t covered by insurance and he was forced to pay for the repairs — the thieves were never caught.

“Now, you don’t worry about the police kicking in your door,” Lundstrom says, “you worry about some thug kicking in your door and stealing the medicine.”

Saskatoon Police Const. Dean Hoover, head of the integrated drug unit, says Saskatoon hasn’t yet seen the problem, cited by the RCMP in several jurisdictions, where medical growers traffic excess marijuana to make a profit.

The major issue for police is the lack of available information from the Health Canada program. The police aren’t given a list ahead of time on where medical grow-ops exist. They’re not informed until they want to do a search warrant, he said. If police agencies knew the addresses they may also be able to help with enforcement, he says. Grey is not a good colour for the law, he says.

“Until they get some type of system where they give us lists of who’s got them to ensure they’re not going above their quotas, what are we going to do?” Hoover says.

A Health Canada spokesperson, in an email interview, says the government will only disclose information to police if a person is suspected of illegal activity. Otherwise, it’s seen as a privacy breach.

The legalization of marijuana or even the over-the-counter sale in a compassion club in Saskatchewan, where weed is given out to those with a medical card, is a pipe dream because the acceptance of the drug, from a cultural perspective, doesn’t come close to matching that of British Columbia, where several dispensaries exist, Hoover says.

Marijuana is the most prolific drug in Saskatoon and its risks shouldn’t be downplayed due to the potency of modern pot, he says. With the advent of THC pills, there’s no need for smoking medical marijuana, he says.

“I’ve never talked to a cocaine user or morphine addict that didn’t start off by smoking marijuana,” Hoover says. “Anyone that says it’s not a gateway drug is full of shit.”

Lundstrom sits behind a desk at the back of his store, hemp posters adorning the walls and pot paraphernalia strewn around his desk.

He has tried to get a medical exemption himself because of chronic back problems suffered when he fell off scaffolding, but has been denied four times by wary doctors. He left the doctor’s office in tears recently after he was told cannabis stimulates appetite, a side-effect that would not help with his weight. Like the vast majority of patients who say they need marijuana as a medicine, Lundstrom continues to buy pot on the black market.

The market exists in Saskatchewan to start a compassion club or dispensary similar to those in B.C., but those looking to grow or use for medical reasons are stilted by doctors unwilling to prescribe, Lundstrom says.

Several advocates say their goal is to start a sustainable commercial agriculture operation in Saskatchewan to provide medicinal marijuana to those with exemption cards if the Health Canada restrictions are lifted.

“There’s 50 people I could be growing for right now and I’m only allowed to grow for two. It’s a headache, plain and simple,” Lundstrom says.

“It’s still illegal and to many people medical marijuana is just simply a loophole to an illegal system and that’s how it’s being treated.”

The limit of growing for two users, however, doesn’t appear set to change any time soon. It was established “in order to reduce the risk of diversion and to protect the health and safety of Canadians,” Health Canada’s spokesperson writes.

Francis, the long-time medical marijuana user whose name has been changed because of fear of break-ins and the stigma he faces in the small town, says he’s been working out daily, awaiting the day a burglar comes through the door.

He decided to build his own grow-up — at a substantial cost — because product from Health Canada wasn’t potent enough and the supply from growers in B.C. was inconsistent.

A collision in Saskatoon 12 years ago crushed half of Francis’ spinal chord, leaving him unable to feel his legs for three years. A long-time recreational user, he turned to cannabis, which he smokes or ingests up to 10 times a day, because heavier prescription pain killers zapped his energy, left him constipated and unable to sleep.

Slowly, Francis has been able to wean the amount of morphine he uses down to almost zero, which he credits to medicinal marijuana.

“It doesn’t kill the pain, but it deflects it,” he says. “It helps your mind carry on.”

- – -

MEDICAL MARIJUANA BY PROVINCE

Province People Supportive authorized physicians to possess

Alberta 282 140
B.C. 1,008 536
Manitoba 57 30
New Brunswick 88 44
Nfld and Lab. 39 24
Nova Scotia 491 159
Ontario 1,631 801
Québec 305 162
Saskatchewan 100 59
Rest of Canada 28 22

TOTAL 4029 1977

Source: Statistics Canada – 2009
- – -
FEDERAL REGULATIONS

Possession, sale and production of marijuana in Canada remains illegal. However, Health Canada provides an exemption for compassionate care and for treating symptoms associated with several conditions, including severe pain or persistent muscle spasms from multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury or spinal cord disease; severe pain, nausea or anorexia from cancer or HIV/AIDS infections; and severe pain from forms of arthritis or seizures from epilepsy.

Health Canada also exempts those who have debilitating symptoms of other medical conditions that do not respond to conventional treatments. Those who qualify require a doctor to verify the medical problem and prescribe the usage. The users are also required to obtain a licence from Health Canada.

The government suggests three sources for medicinal marijuana: Buy the weed grown for Health Canada from Prairie Plant Systems of Saskatoon, grow your own or designate someone else to grow it for you. Those who grow marijuana must be licensed by Health Canada and meet security requirements to prevent loss or theft. The government also regulates the amount of marijuana that can be grown and stored.

Saskatchewan Licensed pot grower sees opportunities beyond medical marijuana

29 June, 23:15, by admin Tags: , ,

SASKATOON – A reputation of any kind, even for a business, is hard to shake.

And when your company is the only federally licensed medical marijuana producer in Canada, that’s the first thing people think of when they hear the company’s name, says Brent Zettl, the company’s president and CEO.

But providing cannabis to patients authorized by Health Canada isn’t the Saskatoon-based company’s only focus, even if sales of the CanniMed herbal treatment account for between 60 and 65 per cent of its revenue, Zettl says.

“It’s kind of like our gateway drug, if I can use that term,” he says in an interview. “It’s our gateway drug to these other compounds that we’re planning to have produced in plants.”

For nearly 10 years, PPS has been producing medical marijuana on a contract basis for the federal government. Originally grown in the deep depths of a decommissioned mine in Flin Flon, Man. – known unofficially as the Ganja Mine – PPS moved its legal hydroponic pot operation out of the town on the Saskatchewan border when the contract with the mine’s owner ended last summer.

PPS is still growing the marijuana for the government, but the location of the operation must remain confidential under federal regulations, Zettl says.

Rumour has it the cannabis crop is being grown somewhere in Saskatchewan, a theory Zettl cannot comment on. He can say only that the operation is somewhere in Canada.

“North of the 49th and in between the Atlantic and the Pacific and Arctic oceans, that’s where it is,” he says with a smile.

Although the high-profile, legal and still-controversial practice of growing medical marijuana is what PPS is best known for, Zettl hopes the distinction will change over time.

“I think a lot of people forget this is a contract we bid on,” he says. “But we had a bigger purpose in mind. . . . Although it’s our reputation at this point, we’re trying to change that.”

The company, along with the Plant Biotechnology Institute, has designed a plant to produce a therapeutic enzyme known as adenosine deaminase, or ADA. The enzyme, Zettl explains, is part of the body’s immune system and is deficient in people with severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCIDS), a condition often referred to as bubble-boy syndrome.

People with the disease must undergo enzyme-replacement therapy, Zettl says, and at the moment, most of the ADA used in the treatment is purified from cow spleens.

PPS’s ADA takes the animal out of the equation.

“We’ve successfully designed a plant to make that very same enzyme – except a human form of it – in the plant,” he says. “Now we’re at a point where we’re just purifying it enough to see if we can get it to clinical trial.”

The hope is to one day turn the enzyme into medicine for SCIDS patients, Zettl says, adding PPS is working on isolating three other enzymes using the plant system.

“It’s still a form of agriculture, but it’s again where that convergence of pharmacy and agriculture are combining to produce more effective medicines,” he says

The cannabis side of the business, he adds, has helped PPS move forward with its therapeutic enzyme studies, with growing conditions, industry standards and pharmaceutical credibility supporting its scientific work.

Zettl can see the enzyme development becoming a much more significant part of the company’s business plan.

“I think the market potential for Prairie Plants extends far beyond medical marijuana into these other areas. We think there’s much larger potential than that,” he says.

Meanwhile, the company’s environmental division, which helps mining companies reclaim work sites, continues to operate. So too does PPS’s bio products division – the segment that started the business back in 1988 – which sells fruit plants and seed potatoes to farmers.

On the company’s mission to “improve” its reputation, Zettl concludes the enzyme work will help PPS both grow its revenues and create a new identity. At the same time, he says, the medical marijuana side of the company’s business isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

“We’re on a mission to produce these other higher-value enzymes in plants,” he says. “It doesn’t mean that we’re going to ignore the other side at all.”

California Grand Jury says government could benefit from legal pot: County could see $7.5 million gain from new taxes and decreased costs

29 June, 23:14, by admin Tags: , ,

SANTA CRUZ – Local governments could cash in on legal pot to the tune of $7.5 million, a new Santa Cruz County Grand Jury report concludes.

The analysis of the financial impact of Proposition 19, a measure on the Nov. 2 statewide ballot, which seeks to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana, is one of several reports released Tuesday by the Grand Jury – and no doubt the most unusual.

As is typical, the Grand Jury spent the past year studying various government agencies, and in its final report raises issues and makes recommendations for the studied programs and groups, including the County Jail, the public defender’s contract, a drug treatment website and the Watsonville Personnel Commission, as well as for public libraries and the Lompico Water District, sections that were previously released.

But the pot report aimed to scrutinize the finances without weighing in on the issue.

“At the end of the day it’s up to the voters,” said Patrick Henderson, who chaired the marijuana committee. “We didn’t look into the morality of it, just the dollars and cents impact on Santa Cruz.”

The report, which opens with a light-hearted preamble titled “Getting the Dope on Dope: The Grand Jury Attempts to Clear the Smoke in the Joint from the Numbers,” derives some of its data from statewide estimates of marijuana use and enforcement costs. It also looked at local crime statistics.

Santa Cruz Police spokesman Zach Friend questioned one piece of data.

He said department figures from 2008 show 315 adult arrests/citations, while the Grand Jury report says there were 724. Friend said adults are the “overwhelming” majority when it comes to arrests and citations for marijuana.

Henderson said all the numbers came from the agencies themselves.

“If the data’s wrong, it’s because they gave us the wrong data,” he said.

The report assumes pot would cost $100 an ounce, that 19 million ounces would be sold statewide, and that the county would impose a $50-per-ounce tax. Under that scenario the county would collect $129,200 in sales taxes and $6.46 million from its pot tax.

The county also would lose about $400,000 in fines, seized property and enforcement grants, but would save $1.36 million in arrest, prosecution and incarceration costs, the report says.

What’s unknown, Henderson said, are the potential costs of legalizing the drug, lost productivity and addiction treatment, for example.

Supervisor Tony Campos, who is serving as board chair, hasn’t taken a position on Proposition 19, but he said he’s seen a huge change in attitudes about marijuana, even among some in law enforcement, during his 12 years in office. His “gut feeling” is that the measure will pass. If it does, he’s willing to tax sales.

“We sure could use it … to help our county pay for law enforcement, mental health services, health care for our elderly, to make sure there’s child care, and probably No. 1, to make sure our schools have money,” he said.

Santa Cruz Mayor Mike Rotkin, who favors legalizing pot with “reasonable regulation,” said his city can’t go it alone, but if state voters approve the measure, “it would be a good thing.” Marijuana is not more dangerous than alcohol, he said, and much of the problem revolves around its status as an illegal substance, violent turf wars, for example.

“We certainly would tax the hell out of it,” Rotkin said. “Certainly, it’s not a necessity. It’s a luxury.”

2010 Grand JURY REPORT

Watsonville Personnel Commission

The fairness of an Aug. 20 hearing was questioned after the department head defending against an employee complaint attended a dinner with commissioners beforehand. The jury concluded that the hearing was fair, commended the commission for its process, but said the dinner, while legal, could have resulted in the appearance of bias, and recommended limiting future dinners to commissioners, their legal counsel and recording secretary.

RecoveryWave.com

The jury commended county health officials for a website that provides information about recovery and addiction treatment programs, but said accuracy of information should be verified and updated, and a disclaimer should be more prominent to avoid the appearance of official endorsement of private services.

Public Defender’s Contract

The jury recommended the county make its contract with a private law firm for public defenders services more transparent by adding an audit clause and consider opening the contract to a competitive bidding process. The same firm has provided legal representation for indigent defendants in the county for 35 years and the jury noted that services have been satisfactory. This year’s contract costs the county more than $5.2 million.

For details, visit www.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/grandjury/

Rahm Emanuel to Quit – Sarah Palin Marijuana Policy

21 June, 18:34, by admin

DC Buzz! goes literal with Sarah Palin chiming in on her marijuana policy and what the government should do regarding legalization of pot. On the left side, Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, is thinking about quitting his job as he is “frustrated with Barack Obama’s inner circle,” a UK Telegraph article claims.

Is he the fall guy? Follow both items below.

***

One – Sarah Palin says she believes law enforcement has better things to do than chase dope smokers, but stopped at calling for the legalization of pot.

She said in an interview that marijuana use “relatively speaking” is a “minimal problem” in the country. However, she also said: “I’m not for the legalization of pot…I think that would just encourage especially our young people to think that it was OK to just go ahead and use it.”

***

Two – “I would bet he will go after the midterms,” said a leading Democratic consultant in Washington. “Nobody thinks it’s working, but they can’t get rid of him – that would look awful. He needs the right sort of job to go to but the consensus is he’ll go.”

Is Rahm Emmanuel the fall guy if the Democrats lose big in the mid-term elections? The UK Telegraph explores the possibility of the exit.

The Battle Over Medical Marijuana In NJ

21 June, 18:33, by admin Tags: ,

Haddonfield, NJ – New Jersey’s medical marijuana activists are upset about a report that Gov. Chris Christie wants
to make the state’s law legalizing cannabis to treat some conditions more restrictive. Fox 29′s Julie Kim spoke with a woman who says she hopes the Governor makes up his mind, sooner, rather than later. Just before Christie took office, Gov. Jon Corzine signed the law to allow medical marijuana.

Christie has been asking lawmakers to delay the start of sales –now scheduled for Oct. 1 — to give his administration time to draft regulations. The Star-Ledger of Newark reported Friday that he’s floated other changes to the law, including having Rutgers University grow the pot and letting hospitals distribute it.

The current law calls for it to be grown and distributed by private groups. Changes would need legislative approval.

Marijuana Based Drug Approved For Use in Britain To Treat MS

21 June, 18:32, by admin

Yet another medical use has been found for marijuana. The British government has approved the use of Sativex, a drug made from some components of marijuana for treatment of the spasticity that accompanies multiple schlerosis. The drug is sprayed under the tongue of the patient. It is currently being used for MS sufferers who do not resond to existing treatments. GW Pharmaceuticals, the company which manufactures Sativex, has been working on developing the drug for 10 years. The drug had been in use in Canada as early as 2005 as a treatment for neuropathic pain, but its approval in Britain opens up the EU as a market for the drug. Sativex is the first marijuana derived drug to pass regulatory hurdles and to make its way into the pharmaceutical mainstream The London Telegraph reports as follows on additional uses being found for Sativex.

At the time, Dr Geoffrey Guy, chairman of GW, said: “The first six months of this year have proven the most important in GW’s history, in which we have made material progress towards Sativex’s launch in Europe and generated positive cancer pain data.”

Sativex is likely to soon make its way to continental Europe since Spain is expected to approve its use soon. Hopefully Americans suffering from MS will also enjoy the benefits of the new drug. There is no reason that drugs such as nicotine and marijuana should not be explored as sources of benefit to society. Hopefully, there will be more such discoveries as Sativex researched, tested and marketed in the future.

Bill 423 Aims to Legalize Medicinal Marijuana on Guam

21 June, 17:12, by admin

Medical marijuana club refers clients to street

15 June, 03:18, by admin Tags:

A medical marijuana dispensary shut down by Montreal authorities earlier this month is urging clients to buy their drugs on the street.

The Compassion Club on Papineau Street is telling clients who need to refill their prescriptions that they now only have two choices if they want to obtain marijuana.

“We have to send them to either Health Canada, which takes two to six months, or we send them to buy on the street, where you can actually buy some,” explained Geneviève Simon, a Compassion Club administrator arrested last month in police raids on cannabis centres.

“The only way to buy right now in Montreal is to go to Berri-UQÀM [Metro station] and buy from people there, because it’s the only place that is an open market, and you will find a dealer, said Simon. Getting a permit from Health Canada takes months, Simon said.

Advising people to buy marijuana from street dealers isn’t illegal, said Montreal police. Authorities raided five clubs across the province June 3, alleging that some club clients were buying marijuana without proper federal authorization.

Thirty-five people, including Simon, were arrested, and they all face drug trafficking charges.

Simon is still consulting with clients from a table she has set up outside the Papineau Street dispensary.

She said she hopes to be selling medicinal marijuana soon, but is anticipating long, drawn-out court proceedings.

Simon’s next appearance in court is June 23.

Pot wheels: Mobile marijuana dispensary rolls out in Southern California city

15 June, 03:18, by admin

RIVERSIDE — A rolling marijuana dispensary has found a new parking spot after officials in the Southern California community of Norco chased it out of town.

Stewart Hauptman had provided medical pot from his motor home for about seven months until he was cited by police for violating a city ban on marijuana dispensaries.

Hauptman’s Lakeview Collective-on-Wheels had been selling $10 pot cookies and other items outside a clinic.

But Hauptman says he couldn’t afford to fight the city zoning laws.

Hauptman says he hasn’t had any problems since he moved his dispensary out of Norco to an unincorporated area of Riverside County this month.

A 1996 voter initiative legalized marijuana for medical use in California, but court battles are being fought about whether cities can ban distribution.

Banks blasted for granting mortgages to grow-op

15 June, 03:17, by admin

VANCOUVER — The B.C. government agency in charge of hunting down the proceeds of crime is accusing two of Canada’s largest banks of being “wilfully blind” and reckless in granting massive mortgages to a Vancouver man on a property that allegedly was being used as a marijuana grow operation.

In a civil case that has the potential to set a legal precedent — and create a lot of embarrassment for the Bank of Montreal and the Royal Bank of Canada — the Victoria-based Civil Forfeiture Office is before the B.C. Supreme Court asking for full or partial forfeiture of the banks’ interest in the mortgages on the million-dollar Vancouver home.

The writ filed by the CFO suggests the banks were either aware of or “wilfully blind” to the fact that approving the mortgages would allow Hai Le to launder money through the property and their respective institutions.

“All or part of Mr. Le’s income is derived from unauthorized production of cannabis marijuana,” the writ claims. “BMO and RBC . . . had actual knowledge, were recklessly indifferent towards, or were wilfully blind to the fact that the approval of funding of the BMO Mortgage and RBC Mortgage permitted the . . . property to be used as an instrument to launder the proceeds of crime.”

In August 2009, according to the writ, Vancouver police raided Le’s home and uncovered a massive marijuana grow-op. Two days later, Le sought and received a $70,000 mortgage from the Royal Bank of Canada on the property.

Ten months before the raid, the Bank of Montreal agreed to refinance Le’s mortgage for $976,000, some 15 months after he’d bought the house from a Viet Van Truong for $980,000.

In both instances, the writ alleges, Le was allegedly unable to provide evidence he could make the mortgage payments through legitimate means. Further, the writ claims, the Royal Bank of Canada mortgage was given when the house had zero equity.

The case marks the first time, since B.C.’s civil forfeiture legislation came into effect in 2006, that the CFO has fingered a bank as an interested party in a court action.

This means the CFO is seeking full or partial forfeiture of the bank’s interest — the mortgages. In all past property cases, the banks have been repaid outstanding mortgages following the sale of the seized property.

The eventual ruling could present a public-relations nightmare for the banks — especially the Bank of Montreal, which is already dealing with an alleged mortgage-fraud scam in Calgary estimated to be worth tens of millions of dollars.

The case also provides a disturbing look at how crime groups successfully use large financial institutions to fund their enterprises and launder their illegally earned cash.

According to the CFO writ, Le was part of a “group” of at least three other persons, including a “cashier” and “cook,” who have owned the house at different times since 2001 and used it to grow pot and launder money.

This was accomplished through the repeated sale and transfer of the house to the varying group members and the use of illegal money to pay for the down payments and monthly mortgage bills.

“Each time legal ownership of (the property) transferred during the time period from 2002-09, the group has received the proceeds from the sale of (the property),” the writ claims.

“The Group’s involvement in (the property) transfers has allowed for the group to put monies realized by illegal activities towards the purchase price of (the property) and the monthly mortgage payments, thereby allowing the proceeds from the group’s unlawful activities to be laundered through the lending institutions who held mortgages over the property.”

Mortgages for the other purchases before Le took ownership in 2007 were also taken from RBC and BMO, according to the writ. Before the 2009 bust, according to the writ, the property was busted twice for being a grow-op.

No arrests or charges were ever made in connection to these busts, according to police, who could provide no further comment, given that the property in question is the subject of a civil forfeiture action.

None of the CFO’s allegations have been proven in court.

Both banks have filed statements of defence denying all allegations outlined in writ of summons. They’ve also filed petitions to the court asking that their interests be protected and repaid. The lawyer representing both banks refused to comment, as the case is still before the courts.

A BMO spokesperson said the bank exercises “appropriate due diligence for each mortgage application.” A spokesperson for RBC offered a similar comment, noting “employees are educated about fraud prevention and how to spot red flags leading to mortgage fraud.”

Rash of marijuana arrests only helps the Mob and street gangs, says Tory senator

04 June, 14:35, by admin Tags:

MONTREAL – Police have done the Mob and street gangs a favour by cracking down on cannabis clubs, say pot decriminalization advocates.

They warn that people will now be forced to buy their stuff from criminal networks instead of tax-paying businesses.

Police arrested 35 people in raids Thursday on five cannabis clubs — four in Montreal and one in Quebec City — and seized nearly 60 kilograms of marijuana.

Sen. Pierre Claude Nolin says users of medicinal marijuana are now forced to find it elsewhere, and the vast majority will wind up getting it from criminal gangs.

“It’s the most disastrous consequence of the whole operation,” Nolin said in an interview.

“The vast majority will have to look at the black market . . . and the substance on the black market is not exactly the quality substance that are received in the clubs.

“In the clubs, they are trying to have access to organic cannabis, which is not the case with the black market.”

He says research suggests there are roughly one million Canadians who say they smoke cannabis for medical purposes, while less than 5,000 such permits have been issued by Health Canada.

That means, he says, the vast majority will have to look elsewhere to find their supply.

The Tory senator, a longtime advocate for relaxed drug laws, doesn’t blame the police. He says they were likely acting on a complaint and are bound to apply the law.

Nolin notes that the same thing happened in the past to a compassion club in Victoria, but the court decided to acquit the club.

“(It’s) basic police work,” Nolin said.

“If the police is receiving a complaint, they don’t have the choice but to intervene. That is their job. That’s the job society is asking them to do and we don’t have to judge them if they receive a complaint.”

Some neighbours who lived near the cannabis clubs complained to media after Thursday’s arrests about people loitering around the buildings and about the pungent smell emanating from them.

Nolin chaired a Senate committee that recommended in 2002 that pot smoking should be legal for any resident over 16.

35 arrests in compassion club raids

04 June, 14:29, by admin Tags:

35 people have been arrested and are facing charges after police in Montreal and Quebec City raided five compassion clubs on Thursday.

In Montreal, one marijuana distribution centre was located in Lachine, with another on Papineau Ave., and two more on the Plateau.

By day’s end, police had seized 130 pounds of marijuana and $10,000 in cash.

Authorities are convinced that many of the club’s 2,000 members are acquiring marijuana without a valid medical reason.

In May, managers at the Culture 420 compassion club told CTV that people could only purchase marijuana if they had a medical diagnosis for a condition that could be treated with marijuana, although they did not require a doctor’s prescription.

“It’s very easy, you walk in, fill out a form, and that’s it’s it’s one of the easiest things I’ve ever seen,” said Ariel Baum, who has been picking up pot to deal with back pain.

Police say that ease of access to pot was the reason for the raid.

“They are not authorized to sell,” said Antonio Iannantuoni from the Montreal police department. “The only people authorized to sell is Health Canada and authorized to supply marijuana. The people we are targetting it’s not the sick people.”

Donna Guy, who volunteers at the club and was arrested, disagrees.

“People like me again we’re stuck,” said Guy. “Why did you let them open if you didn’t want them here?”

Compassion clubs have ten-year history

The most recent compassion club opened in Lachine this year, and caused numerous complaints from neighbours and the borough.

Meanwhile, Montreal’s Compassion Centre celebrated its ten-year anniversary on October 1, 2009.

The Centre said it has 1500 members who buy pot — some daily — even though only 3-400 people in Quebec have medical marijuana permits issued by Health Canada.

According to Health Canada, there are only a handful of legitimate medical reasons to acquire marijuana, including severe pain, persistent muscle spasms or nausea caused by multiple sclerosis, a spinal cord injury/disease, cancer, epilepsy, arthritis, or HIV/AIDS.

Medical marijuana clubs raided in Montreal

03 June, 13:38, by admin Tags: , ,

Montreal police are in the process of raiding four clubs that provide marijuana for people who need it for medical purposes.

“They just walked in out of nowhere, showed us the paper and said, ‘There’s the warrant,’” said Maria Koklas, a volunteer at the Culture 420 compassion club in Lachine.

“There’s about 15 to 20 cops in here walking around inside the dispensary taking all of our membership IDs, asking them for all their personal information, asking them for their criminal records and letting them know if they don’t have criminal records they will be free to go.”

Police are also carrying out operations at three compassion clubs on the Plateau Mont-Royal.

Some people have complained about having the clubs in their neighbourhoods, while those who run the clubs say they are often hassled by police.

Koklas said the police gave no reason for the raid.