Cops announce support for marijuana legalization
Via Tom Angell at LEAP:
A group of police officers, judges, and prosecutors who support Proposition 19, the California ballot measure to control and tax cannabis (marijuana), will hold simultaneous press conferences Monday, September 13 in front of Oakland City Hall and in West Hollywood Park near Los Angeles at 10 AM PDT to release a letter of endorsement signed by dozens of law enforcers across the state.
"At each step of my law enforcement career - from beat officer up to chief of police in two major American cities - I saw the futility of our marijuana prohibition laws," said Joseph McNamara, former police chief in San Jose and Kansas City, MO, now a speaker for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. "But our marijuana laws are much worse than ineffective: they waste valuable police resources and also create a lucrative black market that funds cartels and criminal gangs with billions of tax-free dollars."
Former LAPD sergeant and Los Angeles County deputy district attorney William John Cox, added, "This November, Californians finally have a chance to flip the equation and put drug cartels out of business, while restoring public respect for the criminal laws and their enforcement by passing Proposition 19 to control and regulate marijuana."
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Prop 19 would not overturn or replace Prop 215. Section 11300(a)(i) of Prop 19 says that possession of "not more than one ounce" shall not be a crime, which means that even people without marijuana cards will be able to legally possess an ounce or less. People with marijuana cards will not be affected because section 11300(a) only lists things that "shall not be a public offense" - it is granting rights not taking them away. The same applies to the provision for personal cultivation under section 11300(a)(ii) - your rights under Prop 215 will not be affected. Purpose #6 is to "provide easier, safer access for patients who need cannabis for medical purposes." The statute will be construed in a way that is consistent with this purpose. Your faulty assumption is that section 11300(a), which lists things that "shall not be a public offense," somehow criminalizes things that are not listed there. The language "not more than one ounce" means "one ounce or less." It does not mean "more than one ounce shall be prohibited." Prop 19 does not prevent people from consuming in public parks. Section 11301(j) says that local governments have the power to pass ordinances that prohibit public consumption. I'm sure that this is redundant and that they have this power already. The Stoners Against Prop 19 blog makes another logical error when they quote Prop 215 and claim that it allows people to smoke cannabis in public. The language quoted on the blog says that smoking cannabis is prohibited wherever smoking is prohibited. Bizarrely, they twist that to mean that Prop 215 allows cannabis smoking anywhere cigarette smoking is allowed. If places have not yet passed ordinances prohibiting smoking cannabis in public, they're probably not going to just because Prop 19 says they can. You lucky motherfuckers will still be able to smoke in Golden Gate Park or on the Berkeley quad or whatever. The language is there to try to make Prop 19 appeal to soccer moms so people without the bullshit medical marijuana card will be able to enjoy their freedom and smoke. If local governments cannot ban dispensaries under current law, what do you call this: [link] I agree that the section "Prohibition on Furnishing Marijuana to Minors" could be better, but this is no reason to vote against Prop 19. It can always be amended later. The NORML blog that Concerned linked to points out that the penalties are the same as you'd get for furnishing alcohol to minors. This was included to preempt the inevitable "what about the children?" argument. Hopefully, it won't be construed to limit the ability of people under 21 to get medical marijuana. Under section 11301(g), a city can punish you for getting cannabis illegally. But as the NORML blog says, "You can grow your own or you can buy it from a licensed store. You and your friends can share what you grow, up to an ounce each." Sounds pretty damn good to me.
You cannot speak for me. I'm not voting against my best interest. My best interest is either keeping the medical marijuana gray market or enacting regulation that is better than the medical marijuana laws. Prop. 19 is more restrictive. Why would I vote for it? Why would I vote for something /more/ restrictive than what we have now? Let's review facts:
It would restrict marijuana to over 21. This is wrong on so many levels I will not vote yes based on this alone. Current MMJ laws allow anyone of any age to consume cannabis if they need to. Prop. 19 is more restrictive. Prevents people from consuming cannabis in public or in recreational spaces like public parks. Prop 215/SB 420 allows me to consume in public and in parks. Prop. 19 again, is more restrictive. Allows local counties to choose whether to license any dispensaries at all. This is more restrictive than Prop. 215/ SB 420 as currently counties have no choice on whether to allow collectives or not, they can only regulate them. Prop. 19 gives them the power to ban them completely. Authorizes a tax in addition to sales tax for marijuana. This is more restrictive than Prop. 215 / SB 420 as mmj dispensaries already pay sales tax. More tax with Prop. 19. Creates crimes for giving, sharing, or selling marijuana to a person under 21. Again, this is more restrictive than current law. Limits personal possession to 1 ounce or less. This is more restrictive than the current judicial interpretation of prop 215 / SB 420. I can currently possess whatever my recommendation allows. Limits cultivation to 5x5 area. This is more restrictive than many existing county limits as well as the judicial interpretation of Prop 215/SB 420 This bill is far more prohibitive than Prop. 215 and I have listed exactly how. I am voting 'no' in the interest of Cannabis freedom, not some desperate attempt to take what I can get. I refuse to be guilt-tripped, this is the best way to vindicate those imprisoned by Cannabis crimes. I invite you to read the Jack Herer initiative for 2012.
especially cannabis consumers, please read [link] I've been doing the research and fighting against the nay sayers for 19 ( who all seem to have something to lose monetarily by the legalization of cannabis) for too long, and hear the same tiring arguments. If people are convinced to vote against their own best interests, giving ammunition against the legalization or even medical elsewhere in the country and beyond, and don't care about the thousands in california that get arrested every year despite the "low priority", we are beyond help as a society. It's a tiring fight. This has finally been put on the ballot after so long of a fight, and although it's not ideal, ideal doesn't have a chance to even get on the ballot. Not yet. Baby steps people, you don't lose any rights but gain so much by voting yes on prop 19. Don't be fooled.
"--Thus, the initiative's exact words--"prohibit and punish... the possession... of cannabis that was not obtained lawfully... from a person who is licensed or permitted to do so"--mean exactly this: ***IT WILL BE ILLEGAL TO POSSESS MARIJUANA THAT WAS PURCHASED ANYWHERE OTHER THAN A LICENSED DISPENSARY.*** I asked Richard Lee, principle investor in this initiative, directly about this in an interview: "Let's say I get pulled over by a cop and I'm carrying an ounce. How will I be able to prove that it was 'lawfully obtained?'" I asked. Lee's response: "You'll have to keep your receipt." Not only is this inconvenient, but it sets the industry up to be monopolized. This prohibition also means that even if you are in possession of marijuana that was gifted to you-—if it was purchased from anywhere other than a licensed dispensary, you will be illegally in possession of "unlawfully obtained" cannabis, and you will be subject to punishment under Prop. 19. And there are very few licensed dispensaries in California, by the way. In Oakland, there are four—-Richard Lee owns one of them—-and a cap has been placed in that city so that there can be no others. (Cha-ching!)" I could go on and on about why I refuse to advocate Prop 19, but I'd just be reiterating what [link] the Stoners Against Prop 19 website says. Read it for yourself, and read the entire proposition for yourself before blindly supporting it. [link]
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