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Will Foster Extradited to Oklahoma

Medical marijuana patient Will Foster is en route to prison in Oklahoma after being picked up Friday by Oklahoma law enforcement officials. He had been held at the Sonoma County Jail in Santa Rosa, California, for the past 15 months as he fought bogus marijuana cultivation charges there--he was a registered patient with a legal grow--and, after the California charges were dropped, on a parole violation warrant from the Sooner State.

Foster had been arrested and convicted of growing marijuana in Oklahoma and sentenced to 93 years in prison in the 1990s. After that draconian sentence focused national attention on his case, he was eventually resentenced to 20 years in prison. He later won parole and moved to California, where he served three years on parole and was discharged from parole by California authorities.

That wasn't good enough for vindictive Oklahoma authorities, who wanted to squeeze more years out of Foster. He refused to sign Oklahoma paperwork requiring him to return there to serve out the remainder of his sentence. He also refused to sign paperback that extended his original service. Oklahoma authorities issued a parole violation warrant, and the governors of both states signed it.

Foster had sought to block extradition by filing a writ of habeas corpus--he had won a similar writ against Oklahoma earlier--but that effort failed on Friday, and Oklahoma authorities were there to whisk him away. Foster is scheduled to be held at the Tulsa County Jail before being assigned to a prison in the Oklahoma gulag.

Efforts by Foster supporters to secure his release continue and are now focusing on Oklahoma parole authorities and the state governor. For more information about the Foster case, see our Chronicle story here and at Ed Rosenthal's blog here.

Drug War Chronicle will continue to follow the Foster case. Look for a feature article next week.


Great questions

I think everyone who agrees with the need to Stop the Drug War, should copy those questions (add in the one about the patent on cannabis, too) and send it to everyone you know requesting they ask those questions of their "representatives" in congress (all three), and do the same thing, yourselves.

Demand that your "representatives" respond to those questions with thoughtful, lucid, "lawful" (Constitutionally lawful as opposed to legal by legislation) and science based answers. Tell them you give them only a month to research the questions and formulate their response. If enough people do that they will be inundated with those questions and forced to respond in some manner, privately to each constituent asking or publicly to all of your state, or even nationally.

We should also send the questions to our local and national media. If the legislators refuse to respond publicly, send the media their private response, too; or if they refuse to respond at all (a very likely outcome), send that info to the media as well.

I'm pro-choice on EVERYTHING!

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