POLICE FIND 100 MARIJUANA PLANTS IN KENOSHA HOME Kenosha - Police discovered more than 100 marijuana plants growing at the home of a man who claimed the pot was for medicinal purposes. A garbage truck driver noticed five plants growing in the backyard of a home in the [address deleted] while picking up garbage on Tuesday night, police said. The yard is surrounded by a 6-foot-tall wooden fence, but the height of the truck allowed the driver to see over it, said Lt. David Krueger of the Kenosha Police Department. Police went to the home and were let in by the 57-year-old homeowner without incident. Police found the five plants in the backyard but also discovered 97 plants growing in two rooms downstairs along with lights and fans, Krueger said. The homeowner, whom Krueger wouldn't identify, claimed he smoked marijuana to ease symptoms of his failing liver.
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Saturday, October 22, 2005
Friday, October 21, 2005
Durango Students' Use of Alcohol, Pot Tops State Averages
Forum Targets Abuse in Schools DURANGO STUDENTS' USE OF ALCOHOL, POT TOPS STATE AVERAGES At a Durango School District 9-R "Reality Check" forum Tuesday, dozens of parents and community members discussed ways to prevent risky behavior in Durango schools, where students use marijuana and alcohol at rates that exceed state averages. One theme that emerged was that schools need to start prevention programs early, before teens start using drugs and alcohol. "Targeting high schools is almost a lost cause," said Monika Johnson, a Durango High School junior. A parent, Eileen Wasserbach, said that schools have the unique ability to hold youngsters as a "captive audience" and should take advantage of that by gathering data and imparting drug-prevention education. But another attendee, Durango's Walt Heikes, said drug prevention should not be the responsibility of the schools. DHS Principal Greg Spradling said the school system has "accepted responsibility for curing the ills of society, and we just can't do that." A panel of six local experts told participants about school district and community efforts to staunch youth drug use. John Lopez, an OMNI Research regional prevention specialist, described characteristics that tend to lead to drug use, including peer influence. When it comes to avoiding the bad kids, "Mom was right," Lopez said. School staff and a board member also said federal testing requirements under the No Child Left Behind Act left little room in the curriculum for drug prevention. "We're focused on reading and math and science," said Chris Paulson, a board member. "We're not focused on these things, and that's sad because these are killer drugs. Kids are going to die." In state surveys of some Durango schoolchildren, 34 percent reported currently using marijuana, above the state average of 25 percent. Local alcohol use of 71 percent exceeded the state average of 58 percent. The surveys report that, since 2001, cigarette, alcohol and stimulant use has decreased at all grade levels. However, marijuana use has increased in eighth, 10th and 12th grades. Some speculated that a thrill-seeking culture fed by extreme sports has led students to seek chemical thrills. A survey reported "sensation seeking" behavior in Durango students far above the state average. "You have to prevent them from seeking a mind-altering thrill," said John Marchino, assistant principal at Durango High. He recommended that the community focus on what students do between 2 and 6 p.m., when many juvenile crimes occur. Marchino and other panelists also applauded such techniques as diversionary courts and using Breathalyzers at high school functions to battle drug and alcohol use among 9-R students.
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Wednesday, October 19, 2005
Former Cop Offers New Spin on 'Drug War'
FORMER COP OFFERS NEW SPIN ON 'DRUG WAR' UPPER DARBY - Former Police Captain Peter J. Christ challenged local Rotarians recently to take a different look at the "war on drugs." "You don't go to war if it's going to last forever," said Christ. "The war metaphor doesn't fit, but it makes us feel good." Christ, who pronounces his name like "wrist," is vice director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition ( LEAP ). The international group of 350 current or former law enforcement officers and several thousand "friends" formed in 2002 to push for the legalization and regulation of currently illegal drugs. "[Prohibition] creates crime and violence that need not exist," argued Christ. "It doesn't work, and it creates an underground economic machine. The mob doesn't pay taxes, so they get to spend that money." Christ spoke to the Upper Darby/ Lansdowne Rotary Club Sept. 21 as part of their weekly lecture series. Christ worked for 20 years as an officer in a suburban police force outside of Buffalo, N.Y., before retiring and dedicating his time to speaking about the nation's drug policy. He compared the current approach to the attempt in the 1930s to outlaw alcohol. Christ said legalization wouldn't cut down on all the issues drug addiction causes, but would lessen the number of people in prison and violent crime. "I want drugs regulated and controlled," said Christ. "At LEAP, we don't have a position on what the regulated market should look like. We're concerned it's not being discussed." When exposed to LEAP's perspective, local police chief Dennis Anderson of Newtown Square disagreed. "I think if you polled most of the officers answering calls on drugs, they wouldn't support [legalization]," he said. Anderson countered that there would not be less drug-related crime after legalization, saying addiction would still make people unable to function normally. "You're still not going to be able to do your job," said Anderson. Christ said the federal government's spending of $400 million in Afghanistan in the 1990s illustrates an example where prohibition did work temporarily. At the time, that country, he said, was America's leading heroin supplier. Christ said the Taliban regime took the money and cracked down on opium growers, causing a heroin shortage. That shortage was ended when the producers of U.S. supply moved to South America, according to Christ. When the Taliban fell, Christ said, opium production began in Afghanistan again. "[Heroin] is cheaper than it's ever been before," said Christ. No matter what the justifications, however, Clifton Heights Police Chief Walter Senkow objected to legalization on a moral basis. "At that point, we're telling our kids, it's okay to abuse their bodies," Senkow said. Anderson argued that education and good parenting, rather than legalized regulation, is a superior alternative. "You've got to start communicating with your kids," said Anderson. "Be a parent. Ask questions." Anderson also praised a Pennsylvania Law passed in 2004 that requires treatment for drug addicts sent to prison in the state. Christ, on the other hand, said the current national drug policy is flawed, and at the very least, further dialogue is needed. "We have the biggest prison system in the world right now," said Christ. "It hasn't made the problem any better. We need to have this discussion."
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Tuesday, October 18, 2005
Chavez & Drugs: Addicted to Power
CHAVEZ & DRUGS: ADDICTED TO POWER By hindering U.S. efforts to curb the flow of cocaine and heroin through Venezuela, President Hugo Chavez reveals a mind-warping addiction that unhinges all reason. Indeed, no narcotic is as addictive, or as destructive, as the sense of power in a misguided mind. Little Castro has ordered his leftist regime to stop cooperating with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, accusing it of espionage. Under the influence of corrupting power, reason is the first thing that rots. Chavez's own National Guard is involved in drug trafficking, authorities say. Guardsmen have stolen thousands of dollars in U.S.-donated surveillance equipment. Caracas fails to crack down on coca and poppy fields near its border with Colombia. And Chavez has replaced Venezuela's top drug cops with his own stooges. Meanwhile, cocaine and heroin pass through Venezuela en route to the United States and Europe. Even if Chavez doesn't have a direct hand in this -- and that remains to be seen -- perhaps his government is benefiting in other ways. The U.S. has since removed Venezuela from its allies in the war on drugs but will continue to supply aid to pro-democracy groups that oppose Chavez. That still leaves open the Venezuelan drug connection. Illegal drug trafficking is a worldwide anathema. As such, Chavez must show that Venezuela is part of the solution -- not part of the problem.
Monday, October 17, 2005
County Eradication Team Cleans Up Marijuana Grow
COUNTY ERADICATION TEAM CLEANS UP MARIJUANA GROW YREKA - Hunters alerted Siskiyou County sheriff's deputies to a marijuana garden they had come across in the Long Gulch area, 10 miles north of Yreka on Tuesday. The hunters told sheriff's officials that two males were spotted in the area of the garden, both believed to be Hispanic. Siskiyou County's marijuana eradication team went to the area Wednesday morning and discovered a garden among brush and scrub oaks in the same area identified by the hunters. Two small reservoirs filled by area springs were constructed with the use of tarps and were being used as a water source for the garden. Even though it appeared that some of the plants in the garden had already been harvested, 8,000 plants were recovered by deputies for destruction. A living area was found and a pellet gun, .22 caliber ammunition, two backpacks and a five-gallon propane tank were recovered from a campsite near the garden. Deputies were assisted by a helicopter from Brim Aviation in Ashland, Ore. in removing plants from the garden for destruction. No suspects were located when the deputies were at the location of the garden and no arrests were made.
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Sunday, October 16, 2005
Kids And Alcohol
KIDS AND ALCOHOL When is it time to talk to your kids about alcohol and other drugs? Imagine your son is starting middle school next week, your freshman daughter is dating a senior and your twins are off to college. All are facing stressful situations and will encounter peer pressure to experiment with drugs and alcohol. If any of these scenarios fit, now is the time to talk to your children about alcohol and drug use. While the conversation may be different depending on your child's maturity, it is important to remember that your child is listening even when they don't show it. You play an important role in preventing their chances of future substance use. Children are more likely to listen at an early age but it is never too late to start the conversation. The National Youth Anti-Drug media campaign, "Parents รข?" the Anti-Drug," reports that 74 percent of fourth graders said they wished their parent would talk to them about drugs. Parents or caregivers who talk to their children about alcohol and drug use have kids who are "36 percent less likely to smoke marijuana, 50 percent less likely to use inhalants, 56 percent less likely to use cocaine and 65 percent less likely to use LSD." When talking to your children, you need to provide them with information that is both appropriate to their level of understanding and factually accurate. These are emotionally-charged issues and require the right setting for you to encourage your child to talk. It is important for you to listen, without forming judgments as you are establishing the foundations for future communication. Help your child struggle with the questions and form their own opinions. Young people are less likely to use tobacco and other drugs if their parents make clear rules, consistently apply consequences and reward positive behavior. Knowing what your child is doing reduces the chance of him or her becoming involved with drugs and peers who use drugs. Including your child in creating the rules and consequences, planning what your child will do if a situation involves alcohol or other drugs, asking where your child is going and knowing if parental supervision will be present are additional ways to reduce the chances of drug and alcohol use. In spite of all the best prevention, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health reports, "25 percent of 6th graders admit to being drunk at least once, nearly 4 percent of 8th graders have used cocaine and 16 percent say heroin is easy to obtain." The American Council for Drug Education reports "two-thirds of eighth graders use alcohol and more than two million teens drink enough to be called 'heavy' drinkers." The challenge for parents is to see the early signs and intervene quickly. If you notice changes in your child's behavior, sleeping patterns, choice of friends, acting-out and lack of interest in school, friends and activities, it will be important for you to calmly talk to your child and get the help your child needs. You may want to seek consultation from a substance abuse professional to assist you in connecting your child to needed services. Too often we hear parents say, "I missed the signs, I just couldn't believe my child had a substance abuse problem." Specialized treatment for adolescents and children must address adolescents' unique cognitive, emotional, physical, social and moral development. The treatment needs to be tailored to the age and maturity of the child and include opportunities for a complete assessment, individual and family counseling, education and peer group therapy. Denial is a predictor of continued use, treatment is the best hope for recovery. Communication is the best avenue to preventing your child future drug and alcohol use. Start paving the road this fall.
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Saturday, October 15, 2005
No Justice In Berkshire Courts
NO JUSTICE IN BERKSHIRE COURTS To the Editor of The Eagle: Within the same week in which Kyle Sawin and his inexplicably proud parents posed grinning outside the courthouse, two young gentlemen of color were convicted in Pittsfield court for the same violation of the law as Sawin, promptly sentenced and consequently incarcerated as specified by law. One nation? With liberty and justice for all? Hardly. Where's the rage? Bob Gray Housatonic
Friday, October 14, 2005
Sawin Jury's Verdict Should Be Respected
SAWIN JURY'S VERDICT SHOULD BE RESPECTED To the Editor of The Eagle: Regarding the letter from S.L. Kozlowski of Sept. 28, ( "Surprised by trial outcome" ) I do not understand his surprise and confusion. A jury found Kyle Sawin not guilty of the charges he was accused of committing, and that should be the end of the matter. That jury was privy to evidence and witnesses that may not have been shared with the media. Kyle's frequenting an area known for drug dealing and use is not a crime for which he was accused. Furthermore, we are not at liberty to ask that Mr. Capeless prosecute for an action in order that we not see a crime committed in the future. That is patently unconstitutional. As for Kyle's parents and the family's happiness at his acquittal, I would be delighted at any time my child was found not guilty of any crime he did or did not commit, in order that he not spend time in prison. How this family deals with any possible transgressions on the part of their son is simply none of our business. Perhaps they have done something within their home to discourage Kyle's friendships with people they'd rather he not be seen with. Perhaps they feel Kyle has already learned something through his ordeal. Whatever, these things have no bearing on a happy family photograph printed in the newspaper. Most importantly, let us not be so quick to question the verdict of a jury of one's peers when it makes a decision based on law, not emotion. This particular jury found no reason to make Kyle guilty of the crimes of which he was accused, and under our system of justice, that is the end of his trial. There is no further need of prosecuting him in the media. Penny Lundberg Dalton
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Thursday, October 13, 2005
It's About Time
IT'S ABOUT TIME The news that Victoria plans to amend privacy legislation this spring to make it easier for BC Hydro to give municipalities information on customers using unusually large amounts of electricity is long overdue. It's ridiculous that the RCMP and municipal police forces don't have access to this information - which would give them a virtual blueprint for where the biggest grow ops are in each community. While it's true B.C. residents don't agree on whether pot should be legalized or decriminalized, few want a massive grow op next door - since it may lead to their own home being shot up or broken into by thugs trying to commit a grow rip. There's been more than a few cases of innocent people being terrorized by would-be grow rippers who target the wrong address. And nobody wants the fertilizers, the moulds and the fire risks that go with large-scale pot grows. Make no mistake, we're not talking about some hippie with a few weed plants on his windowsill. Big grow ops - and we've seen our share in the Tri-Cities - are big business for organized crime, and the proceeds are used to fund all sorts of criminal enterprises. The sooner BC Hydro supplies municipalities with a list of suspect homes, the sooner police can begin dealing with the problem.
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Legislation Would Allow Hydro To Pinpoint Grow Ops
LEGISLATION WOULD ALLOW HYDRO TO PINPOINT GROW OPS Legislation that could allow BC Hydro to release information that could help police uncover marijuana grow operations is expected to be introduced in the legislature next spring. Changes to the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act could allow the utility company to pass on to police information about residences legally using an inordinately high amount of electricity. Police currently receive tips from BC Hydro if electricity is being stolen using an electrical bypass, but under the act, BC Hydro is unable to provide information about customers' high ( or low ) use of electricity unless the information is sought by police as part of a criminal investigation. The legislation is the latest in a long list of ideas to help municipalities stamp out grow ops, including pilot projects like that unveiled in Surrey earlier this year. There, a team of firefighters, police and electrical inspectors investigated homes with unusually high electrical power consumption. If the residence was found to be a hazard, or an inspection was not permitted in a reasonable time, power was shut down. A permit and an inspection by the Surrey electrical inspector was then required before power was restored. Statistics show that a house with a grow op is 25 times more likely to go up in flames. - - With files from the Vancouver Sun
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
Charges For Emery
CHARGES FOR EMERY A Vancouver man plans to file criminal charges against pot activist Marc Emery - just to prove a point. David McCann said he's doing it to spark a national debate on Canadian sovereignty and drug policy. He said the government has condoned Emery's behaviour by allowing him to run his Vancouver seed-selling business and collecting taxes on his profits. The charges McCann will file in court today are virtually identical to the ones Emery faces in the U.S., which is trying to extradite the activist. The theory is that local charges will throw a wrench in U.S. extradition plans for Emery, allowing him to serve any punishment in Canada. "This is about sovereignty and hypocrisy ... Every now and again I think Canadians have to stand up and say to the government, "You're doing something wrong here."
Monday, October 10, 2005
Chester Chief Stands By His Decision To Cut D A R E
CHESTER CHIEF STANDS BY HIS DECISION TO CUT D.A.R.E. CHESTER -- No headway was made on restoring the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program to Chester Academy during a meeting between Chester Police Chief Al Wagner and the board of selectmen Thursday night. However, both sides agreed the possibility of restoring the program for the second semester remains alive. Wagner sent a letter to Chester Academy on Aug. 4 informing the school that, for the first time in nine years, the police department would not be funding a $160-a-day DARE-school resource officer program that puts Deputy Chief Bill Burke in the building one day a week during the school year. In his letter, Wagner said townwide budget cuts were the reason for the change. At Thursday night's selectmen's meeting, Selectman Michael Weider said budget cuts should not be the reason. The only money cut from Wagner's proposed budget, Weider said, was money for a full-time officer. Funds for current programs and staffing had remained in place, he said. Weider also said that when Wagner had met with the board only a few days before the letter, he had not expressed any concerns over having the money to keep the DARE program intact. "There should've been a conversation before telling the school that," he said. "I wish we had known before you did that." Wagner said that despite selectmen's claims that his budget still had the money, he has yet to receive a finalized budget for this fiscal year, which started on July 1, and so did not want to commit to any programs. "I do not have a working budget," he said. "I think it's unfair to commit to something. I don't know if I have the money." Wagner never agreed to fund the program, but did say that when he does receive his final budget he would consider trying to find the money to re-establish the program in January. The program, which is supposed to run for 17 weeks, would cost roughly $3,000, and several audience members said they would be willing to raise that amount if necessary. Wagner also said that it was ultimately his decision, because it is his department. "We're not trying to tell you how to run your business," Weider said. "Sure sounds like it," Wagner replied. Selectman Leroy Scott suggested that the DARE program, which several audience members and selectmen praised as extremely valuable, was more necessary than other priorities Wagner was still funding. "I think the DARE program may be more important than some conferences and seminars we might be paying for," Scott said, referring to money earmarked for police training.
Sunday, October 09, 2005
Australia's Drug Shame Revealed
AUSTRALIA'S DRUG SHAME REVEALED AUSTRALIA is suffering an acute drug problem, according to an international report which found that the country has one of the highest rates of ecstasy and amphetamine abuse in the world. The US Drug Enforcement Administration report, obtained under Freedom of Information, paints a grim picture of illegal drug use in Australia. The report found that criminals are cultivating 5000ha of marijuana crops each year an area equivalent to more than 2500 Sydney Cricket Grounds and there are more than 200,000 heroin users in Australia. The extent of Australia's cannabis cultivation and dependency on illegal substances is revealed in a new US intelligence report which has been obtained by The Sunday Telegraph. The report also found that ecstasy manufacturers are using oil from the sassafras plant to make the drug, with increased seizure of the oil by customs and police officers. Cocaine is currently being smuggled into Australia on flights from South America and cocaine importation is set to rise. It states that inconsistent state laws on precursor chemicals is hindering the fight against drug makers. The DEA Drug Situation Report for Australia says marijuana is Australia's "most popular and most abused illicit drug" and names NSW and Queensland as "the primary growing areas for outdoor cultivation", with South Australia, Victoria and the ACT also having outdoor plantations. The report says that methamphetamine manufacturing in Australia is dominated by outlaw motorcycle gangs, with Queensland, NSW and South Australia being the primary production states. And the report, compiled by the US Government's key drug-fighting agency, warns drug manufacturers in Australia are using a naturally occurring oil to make ecstasy. It says that among the ingredients being used to make the drugs is oil from the sassafras plant. "Australian law enforcement and customs officials are seizing increasing amounts of sassafras oil being smuggled through various ports of entry, such as Sydney and Melbourne. Sassafras oil produces safrole, which can be used as a precursor chemical in the manufacture of MDMA ( ecstasy )," the report says. The report, compiled in July, 2005 says the majority of cocaine is being smuggled into Australia "by couriers on flights originating in South America" and, once in Australia, cars and parcel post are used to distribute the drugs around the country. "As trade links with South America and immigration to Australia increase, the opportunities for cocaine traffickers also increase," the report says. "As the number of direct commercial airline flights between Australia and South America increase, so does the opportunity for courier smuggling." South-east Asia is cited as the major source of heroin in Australia, with Sydney being the main point of entry through airports and shipping containers. The report is based on intelligence gathered by the DEA in Canberra in liaison with local authorities and will be used by the DEA in the global fight against drug trafficking. Australia's lack of uniform drug laws also attracts criticism in the DEA report.
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Saturday, October 08, 2005
Philippines: Column: Immigration Solutions
Immigration Solutions Lawsuit Filed To Correct Inappropriate Medical Exam Questioning And Misapplication Of The Law At The US Embassy In Manila, Philippines Reeves & Associates, an immigration law firm, has filed a lawsuit against the Department of State and the US Embassy in Manila, Philippines to stop improper questioning of individuals concerning experimental use of drugs in order to impose a lifetime bar for qualified visa applicants seeking to enter the United States. The case was filed on August 29, 2005 and will be tried before the Honorable Percy Anderson, Case No. CV 05-6408 PA ( SSx ). This lawsuit will address improper actions of physicians at the medical exams as well as misapplication of the law by officers during the consular interview. Reeves & Associates expects this case will have a far-reaching impact on thousands of visa applicants who have been barred from the United States by the Manila embassy. Robert DuPont, attorney for the Reeves Firm comments "This is not a case about admitting drug addicts or drug dealers into the United States. This case concerns the permanent denial of visas to persons who have admitted one time experimental use of drugs such as marijuana, or who admit drug use that is remote in time. We have studies from the National Institute on Drug Abuse which show over one-half of American high-schoolers have experimented with drugs. Even US Presidents have admitted to experimentation with drugs. Congress never intended youthful experimentation to be a reason to exclude qualified visa holders." The case challenges the Manila Embassy's use of the medical exam to extract "admissions" from unwitting visa applicants. The medical exam is a requirement for all immigrant and some non-immigrant visa categories. The purpose of the medical exam as defined by the Centers for Disease Control is to identify medical conditions, including current use or addiction to drugs, not to identify youthful experimentation for the purpose of developing evidence to bar visa applicants for life. It is believed that certain officials at the US Embassy in Manila are instructing physicians to obtain admissions of past drug use, even experimentation, and then use that information to permanently bar visa applicants from entry into the United States. The danger here is that once applicants learn they should not share information with physicians at the medical exam, applicants will also not share crucial information concerning the state of their health. "Physicians are reportedly using deceit and misrepresentation, by misleading individuals as to the consequences of answering repeated questions regarding drug use. These actions undermine the whole medical exam process which depends on trust in a doctor patient relationship and that patients are forthcoming with their medical information." stated attorney Robert DuPont. The lawsuit also seeks to force the Embassy to recognize statutes and regulations enacted by Congress for one-time experimental use of drugs, or proof of recovery from drug addiction. Consular officials have ignored specific provisions in the law which effectively excuse experimentation with drugs or drug use that is remote in time and instead apply a very broad provision concerning admission of conduct which violates a law involving a controlled substance. Attorney DuPont stated "Embassy officials cannot and should not ignore the clear intent of Congress in drafting laws which provide relief to individuals who admit to long past experimentation with drugs." It is expected that this lawsuit will affect thousands of cases in which qualified visa petitioners were wrongfully denied entry based on an admission of past drug use at a medical exam. The effects of this lawsuit will be dramatic as most individuals who have been refused entry to the United States still have a valid immigrant visa petition. "Once we get the declaratory relief we believe our clients are entitled to they can return to the embassy and reapply for admission based on their long-approved visa petitions." The lawsuit includes spouses, sons and daughters of United States citizens and legal permanent resident petitioners. "We think this case will have a dramatic impact and re-unite families separated and ruined by these policies and practices which appear to be unique to the US Embassy in Manila." states attorney DuPont. "If you or your family members have been refused admission to the US based on admissions made at a medical exam, it is crucial that you contact a qualified immigration attorney who can examine the facts and determine whether you should consider trying to re-apply for admission or seek other remedies in court." Author's Note: The analysis and suggestions offered in this column do not create a lawyer-client relationship and are not a substitute for the individual legal research and personalized representation that is essential to every case. * * * Atty. Reeves has represented clients in numerous landmark immigration cases that have set new policies regarding INS action and immigrants' rights. His many successes have been published in Interpreter Releases, Immigration Briefings and AILA Monthly which are nationally recognized immigration periodicals widely read by immigration lawyers, State Department and immigration officials. His cases are also cited in test books as a guide to other immigration practitioners. His offices are located in Pasadena, San Francisco, Beijing and Makati City. Telephone: 759-6777 E-mail: rrphil@rreeves.com Website: www.rreeves.com
Friday, October 07, 2005
Aussie Drugs Woe in Report
AUSSIE DRUGS WOE IN REPORT CRIMINALS are growing 5000ha of marijuana in Australia every year, an area the size of 689 Melbourne Cricket Ground precincts, according to a US intelligence report. The Drug Enforcement Administration ( DEA ) report, obtained by the Sunday Herald Sun under Freedom of Information, paints a grim picture of illegal drug use in Australia. It says: AUSTRALIA has one of the world's highest rates of ecstasy and methamphetamine abuse. THERE are 200,000 heroin users in Australia. ECSTASY manufacturers are using oil from the sassafras plant to make the drug. COCAINE is being smuggled into Australia on flights from South America, and importation is set to rise, and AD HOC state laws on precursor chemicals are hindering the fight against drug makers. The DEA's Drug Situation Report for Australia said marijuana was our "most popular and most abused illicit drug" and named New South Wales and Queensland as "the primary growing areas for outdoor cultivation". It said methamphetamine manufacturing was dominated by motorcycle gangs in Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia. The report by the US Government's key drug-fighting agency, compiled in July, said the majority of cocaine was being smuggled into Australia "by couriers on flights originating in South America". Once in Australia, cars and parcel post were used to send the drugs around the country. South-East Asia is cited as the main source of heroin in Australia, with Sydney being the main point of entry through airports and shipping containers. It said "recent information" indicated that criminal organisations from Greece, Poland and Vietnam were "involved in the cultivation of cannabis in Australia".
Thursday, October 06, 2005
Zero Tolerance War Leaves Casualties
ZERO TOLERANCE WAR LEAVES CASUALTIES Many low-level drug dealers who want to come clean will no doubt need drug treatment ( "Dear Baltimore drug dealers," Sept. 24 ). The zero tolerance drug war poses a formidable barrier. Law enforcement and rehabilitation are mutually exclusive. Would alcoholics seek help for their illness if doing so were tantamount to confessing to criminal activity? Would putting every incorrigible alcoholic behind bars and saddling them with criminal records prove cost-effective? The United States recently earned the dubious distinction of having the highest incarceration rate in the world, with drug offenses accounting for the majority of federal incarcerations. This is big government at its worst. At an average cost of $26,134 per inmate annually, maintaining the world's largest prison system can hardly be considered fiscally conservative. Prisons transmit violent habits rather than reduce them. Imagine if every alcoholic were thrown in jail and given a permanent criminal record. How many lives would be destroyed? How many families torn apart? How many tax dollars would be wasted turning potentially productive members of society into hardened criminals? Drug abuse is bad, but the drug war is worse. Robert Sharpe Arlington, Va. The writer is a policy analyst for Common Sense for Drug Policy.
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Medical Marijuana Advocates Rally
MEDICAL MARIJUANA ADVOCATES RALLY Advocates for legalizing marijuana for medical use in Wisconsin are rallying support at this weekend's Great Midwest Marijuana Harvest Festival for a bill they say is expected to be introduced by Rep. Gregg Underheim, R-Oshkosh. Underheim, who chairs the Assembly's Health Committee, said in June that after talking with cancer survivors while he was receiving treatment for prostate cancer, he planned to introduce legislation to allow limited use of medical marijuana when prescribed by a doctor. He could not be reached for comment on Saturday. Local advocate Gary Storck said members of the Wisconsin Coalition for Safe Access plan to make an announcement at the Capitol on Monday, when they also will deliver cards signed by medical marijuana supporters to state legislators. The cards cite surveys that found 80 percent of people in Wisconsin and across the country support access to medical marijuana. Storck said there are already 15 co-sponsors of the bill, including Reps. Mark Pocan and Spencer Black, both Madison Democrats. Pocan said many people he has talked to believe that marijuana can be helpful in alleviating pain and creating an appetite, and provides a more holistic option to treating symptoms than other drugs. Black said he sees no reason why marijuana should not be available to help patients with cancer and other illnesses when prescribed by a doctor. "Many states ranging from conservative to progressive have passed legislation like this," Black said. "I would hope Wisconsin would as well." "I think we have our first real chance," said longtime local advocate Ben Masel. A medical marijuana bill introduced four years ago never made it out the Assembly's Health Committee, Masel said, adding that Underheim, who also chaired the committee then, opposed it at that time. Storck, who helped establish the organization Is My Medicine Legal Yet?, credits the marijuana he has used daily for more than 30 years with saving his eyesight by reducing pressure caused by glaucoma. Marijuana also alleviates his chronic pain caused by degenerative disc disease and arthritis, he said. After almost dying following heart surgery in 1997, Storck said, "I decided to use this extra time I was given to get medical marijuana ( legalized ) in Wisconsin." The 35th annual Great Midwest Marijuana Harvest Festival brought advocates from California and Washington, D.C., to join local supporters Saturday in speaking out in favor of legalizing marijuana for medical and recreational purposes. The festival will continue at 1 p.m. today on Library Mall with bluegrass music by Barleycorn and a parade up State Street to a rally on the Capitol steps. The parade will begin at about 2:45 p.m. Dr. Tod Mikuriya, a leading figure in the medical marijuana movement in California, said that nearly 150,000 patients have benefited from medical marijuana since it was legalized in that state nearly 10 years ago. Mikuriya said the federal government is protecting big pharmaceutical companies by opposing medical use of marijuana in favor of drugs that are less effective and can have severe side effects. Other advocates, such as R. Keith Stroup of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws in Washington, D.C., and Mikki Norris of the Cannabis Consumers Campaign in El Cerrito, Calif., are drawing on the battle for civil rights by gays and lesbians in urging recreational marijuana users to come out of the closet. Stroup said many people were brought up amid cultural opposition to marijuana in the era of "Reefer Madness" and have an image of pot smokers as long-haired hippies burning draft cards. But that is changing, Stroup said, adding that 47 percent of Americans today have smoked marijuana. "We're within a couple of years of having more Americans who have smoked than not." In the last year, 27 million Americans smoked marijuana, Stroup said. "We're just average Americans. We're certainly not criminals." Of the 755,000 arrests for marijuana in the United States last year, he said, 88 percent were for simple possession. Norris' group also is working to dispel the myths and negative stereotypes associated with marijuana use. Its Web site - http://www.cannabisconsumers.org/ - features photos and profiles of 260 marijuana users "to show we are basically good, contributing members of society."
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Wednesday, October 05, 2005
Families Light The Way For Change
FAMILIES LIGHT THE WAY FOR CHANGE Albertans Encouraged To Bring Light To Justice Reform By Turning On Their Porch Lights 8 To10 P.M. Oct. 3 A young widow angry her sons will grow up without a father broke her silence at a ceremony honouring peace officers killed in the line of duty with a strong call for action. Kim Gordon, whose husband Const. Anthony Gordon and three fellow RCMP officers were shot dead March 3, spoke out Sunday for the first time publicly on the need for tougher sentences for criminals and stricter marijuana laws. "We needed to grieve first and now we want to take some action,"said Gordon yesterday. She joined approximately 1,500 people -- including hundreds of officers from police services across the province -- gathered on the legislature grounds for the annual ceremony to honour fallen police and peace officers. They joined 4,000 others in Ottawa, where a similar ceremony was held on Parliament Hill. Led by pipers, a sombre parade of officers marched onto the grounds where the names of 90 men and women who have died since 1876 were read. Six news names were added to the roll call, including constables Leo Johnston, Brock Myrol and Peter Schiemann. Gordon, a registered nurse left alone to raise her children Spencer, 3, and infant Anthony, said her husband had strong feelings about marijuana, a drug he believed led to "a path of destruction." At the time of their deaths, the officers were guarding a small marijuana grow operation on gunman James Roszko's property near Mayerthorpe. She said her husband often despaired he did not have all the legal tools necessary to do his job. "He and many of his colleagues felt their efforts were wasted by the time criminal charges were disposed of. Whether it was plea bargains, thrown-out charges or minimal sentencing, he felt his job, that of putting the bad guy away, couldn't be accomplished," she said. Her thoughts were echoed by Brock Myrol's father, Keith Myrol, who urged judges to be stricter with sentencing, and for parole board officers to keep offenders behind bars longer. "Start penalizing these violent animals for what they have done," he said. The families are asking Canadians to show their support for these reforms by leaving their front porch lights on from 8 to 10 p.m. on Oct.3. Conservative justice critic Vic Toews applauded the families' efforts. He said his party continues to fight for an end to conditional sentences for violent or repeat offenders, and a return to earned, as opposed to mandatory, parole. He also said everyone convicted of a violent offence should have a period of parole tacked on to the end of their prison sentence.
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Flyng Smugglers Gain Ground
FLYNG SMUGGLERS GAIN GROUND Cars and trucks are still the preferred method for drug smugglers, but helicopters and low-flying aircraft are starting to break into the business in a big way, says the RCMP. "The amount of aircraft being used to move illicit drugs ... has definitely increased over the last few years," said Randall Wong of the RCMP's Border Integrity Enforcement Team. And, "two years ago it was mainly fixed-wing planes and nowadays all we hear about is helicopters." As a result, the U.S. implemented the Bellingham Air and Marine Branch last year, the first of five border patrol agencies that target aircraft and boats that attempt to cross into the U.S. illegally.
Monday, October 03, 2005
Cleanup Crew Hired For Grow Ops
CLEANUP CREW HIRED FOR GROW OPS The Coquitlam RCMP has a working agreement with a professional group that includes retired police officers to help take down marijuana grow ops. The group will act as a cleanup crew after police officers have wrapped up at a scene. "Literally, they will only dismantle it and bring some stuff back, end of story. They're not doing any of the other police work at all," said Cpl. Jane Baptista. Coquitlam's Marijuana Enforcement Team ( MET ) will continue to do all investigations, get warrants, enter the buildings, secure the scene, deal with evidence and arrest and process suspects. Certain steps have to be done for court and there are police protocols that have to be followed, so police will continue to do all police work. However, instead of spending hours at a scene putting plants into bags and clearing out equipment, the group - which Baptista described as a security group - will come in to do the grunt work. "There's absolutely no change in the police work," Baptista said. "It just, hopefully, will increase that unit's investigative capacity because the members will continue on to do more investigations instead of spending just hours cleaning up these things." Officers can spend four or five hours just cleaning up after a bust, and police are hoping that the extra help will allow the officers to streamline the process. Baptista said an organization with retired members was chosen to do the work because they have experience dismantling grow ops. "People who have back experience, you know, they know how to safely take these down because it's not a situation that you're just going to put anybody from the general public into," she said. The helpers are called out as needed and work at a scene under the control of a police officer. Baptista said she's not sure where the idea came from, but Surrey RCMP has been using a similar professional group for the past six months. Police began working with the group during the past few weeks and has been out to four or five grow ops. "They're going to try this out and basically if it can save a few hours of a couple of other members' time, those two members can be going on to the investigation or taking down the next grow," she said.
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Big Day For Grow Ops
BIG DAY FOR GROW OPS Coquitlam RCMP Are Setting Records For Speed, Taking Down Three Coquitlam Marijuana Grow Ops In One Day. Monday's first grow op, in a home in the 2600 block of Uplands Court, was busted at 10:30 a.m. Marijuana Enforcement Team ( MET ) members entered the three-level home on a warrant for theft of hydro, finding four grow rooms and an electrical bypass in the garage. Police seized 379 plants, all in the vegetative, or flowering, stage. Two people were found living inside the home and arrested. A 44-year-old Vancouver man and a 37-year-old Vancouver woman could face charges of theft of hydro, production of a controlled substance and mischief. At 5 p.m. in the 1100 block of Madore Avenue, the team took down its second grow op of the day. On a tip from BC Hydro, the MET was granted a search warrant for the three-level home. Inside, police found a bypass on the main floor, in what would be the rec room. There was one grow room which, according to police, used to be two rooms, but a wall was taken down to make one large room for growing. Police seized 588 plants in the flowering stage, and also found a hockey bag full of freezer-sized bags full of marijuana. In each of the 22 bags was a half-pound of weed, all packaged and ready to be shipped and sold. Two people were arrested: a 28-year-old Coquitlam man believed to be living in the home and a 21-year-old Coquitlam woman. The two could face charges of theft of hydro, production of a controlled substance and mischief. The third grow op, busted around 8:50 p.m., was the largest of the day, netting 640 plants in various stages of growth. MET members entered the three-level home in the 2900 block of Cliffrose Crescent after obtaining a warrant on a tip from BC Hydro. Nobody was living in the home, but police found an electrical bypass in the garage and five grow rooms. One 47-year-old man, of no fixed address, was arrested and faces possible charges of theft of hydro, production of a controlled substance and mischief. Const. Dave Babineau credits the speed to an agreement the detachment has with a group of ex-law enforcement types that can be called to come clean up after a grow op is busted.
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Sunday, October 02, 2005
Reporting Dealers Is Only The Beginning
REPORTING DEALERS IS ONLY THE BEGINNING Of the many challenges crystal methamphetamine can relay into a community, law enforcement can be one of the most frustrating, say Parksville residents and local police. "There are a lot of challenges when it comes to that drug," says Corporal Garry Cox about the RCMP's role in enforcing anti-possesion and distribution laws. One difficulty is when the public reports drug dealers or suspicious houses, and then nothing seems to be done. That was the frustration of one senior Parksville resident who's lived in the community for seven years. He came to The News frustrated specifically with one female who he says he knows is dealing drugs in the city. "I've informed the RCMP a few times about their certain person and they just seem to turn their head, or they don't listen," says the many, who requested annonymity because of fear of retribution. His call is one of a few concerns raised in public and private discussions about the seemingly slow response by police to complaints about drug activity in the area. Cox says as police, they hear that concern quite often, but assure the public it's not that they're not listening. In fact, what they are doing is listening a lot, and collecting as much information as they can, before they can legally perform a search of suspicious people. "That piece of information may be good, but we have to put other information into a package," says Cox of calls from the public. Getting a package loaded with enough solid evidence, can be a challenge sometimes. For drug dealers on the street he explains, "the problem is that they often don't have the drug with them. When someone looks to buy, they will walk to a storage spot - be it a car, or bush, or house - and then pass the drug off. For homes where it's suspected that drugs are being dealt from, Cox says "the problem becomes how do we prove that the product will be in the house when we do the search," says Cox. "That's a problem, whether it's cocaine, crystal meth or marijuana. While Cox says he understands the frustration of citizens who do report drug-related activities to the police, he encourages them to continue their calls. "That's great [to phone], we want to know about that because we may already have a file," says Cox, or if not, the RCMP can start a new investigation, and collect the information the need over time. "I know we have quite a few drug investigations on the go all throughout the district," says Cox. Any one of those, he adds, could be wrapped up by the right phone call. "The information that we get from the public is great because that might be the missing piece of information that we need," says Cox. To contact the Oceanside RCMP detachment, phone 248-6111
Saturday, October 01, 2005
Ask Jane Brady About Her Discretion in Sentencing
ASK JANE BRADY ABOUT HER DISCRETION IN SENTENCING Now that Jane Brady has apparently tired of being attorney general, and is seeking a golden parachute in the form of a judgeship at taxpayer expense, perhaps someone in the Minner administration will be sufficiently roused from their second-term torpor to ask her the following question before rubber-stamping this sweetheart deal: Madame AG, you, along with most members of the General Assembly, led the fight for mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenders. By so doing, you removed the discretion from distinguished judges in this matter and precipitated the single-largest prison expansion in our state's history. Millions of dollars for schools and highways were diverted to pay for this expansion. As a judge, do you feel capable of exercising discretion in sentencing nonviolent drug offenders and, if so, don't you owe the citizens of our state an apology for this unprecedented boondoggle? And, if not, what, other than your desire for a golden parachute, qualifies you for this position? Steve Tanzer, Arden
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