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The letter of the law...
Defined as criminal under title 18 (Crimes and Criminal Procedures) of the United States Code;
Title 18 U.S. Criminal Code -- Chapter 13
Section 241.
CONSPIRACY AGAINST RIGHTS OF CITIZENS
If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten or intimidate any citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or because of his having exercised the same; or
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Feature: Colombia Annouces Shift to Manual Eradication of Coca Crops
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has announced that his government will deemphasize aerial spraying of coca crops and emphasize manual eradication. The move comes as Congress ponders ways to cut funding for the drug war in Colombia.
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Feature: Snitching in the Spotlight -- House Committee Holds Hearing on Informant Abuses
When Atlanta narcotics officers shot and killed 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston last November after falsely telling a magistrate an informant had named her address as a drug hot-spot, they opened a window on a very shady part of the American criminal justice system. Now, Congress has taken a look and some key members are ready to rein in the snitch system.
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Weekly: This Week in History
Events and quotes of note from this week's drug policy events of years past.
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Southwest Asia: State Department Says US Afghanistan Drug Policy Will Shift, But Not Much
A high-level State Department official said last week that the US will shift its opium eradication policy in Afghanistan, but there is less there than meets the eye.
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Marijuana: Yesterday Marked 70 Years of Federal Pot Prohibition
This week, we mark the 70th anniversary of federal marijuana prohibition. We would much rather be writing its obituary.
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Search and Seizure: California Supreme Court Just Says No to Seizures of Drug Buyers' Cars
For the last decade, some California cities have seized the vehicles of people caught trying to buy drugs. Those days have come to an end, thanks to a California Supreme Court decision.
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Search and Seizure: Arizona Supreme Court Limits Vehicle Searches
The Arizona Supreme Court has limited the ability of police to search the vehicles of people they have arrested outside the vehicle.
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Law Enforcement: FBI Lowers Bar on Past Marijuana Use by Would-Be Agents
Looking to be an FBI agent? The rules on disqualifying applicants based on past drug use, especially marijuana use, just got a little more lax.
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Law Enforcement: This Week's Corrupt Cops Stories
This week we have a pair from the US-Mexico border, where temptation is always close at hand, and a pair from Florida, where corruption seems to thrive in the steamy atmosphere.
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Weekly: Blogging @ the Speakeasy
Reader Blogs picking up, all sorts of marijuana stuff, Clinton & Obama on needle exchange, drug policy softball team scores top spot in league, more...
In The Trenches
The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News & Updates - 8/02/07
Florida: Now that it's Official, Hurry up Already
Writing in the Palm Beach Post, Mark Schlakman urged Gov. Charles Crist and his Cabinet to speed up the rights restoration process for the nearly one million citizens convicted of a felony. Reaching this goal would help to ensure that citizens can vote in time for the Presidential election, regain full citizenship, and be gainfully employed - particularly with regard to occupational license eligibility. Further, Schlakman argued that clemency issues should be considered apart from employment eligibility issues as they slow down the state's current process of identifying who is now eligible to vote. In the spring, Crist's Cabinet reinstated the right to vote to citizens convicted of non-violent felonies.
Washington: After Supreme Court's Decision, Lawmakers Aim for Legislation
"[The] ruling is just plain mean-spirited," the editorial board of the Columbian wrote in response to the Washington state Supreme Court's 6- 3 ruling last week that bans individuals from voting until court fees and restitution is paid. As a result, House Majority Leader Lynn Kessler and Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, in January, will rally for legislation that allows citizens charged with convictions the right to vote despite unpaid restitution or court fees, according to the Olympian. The two lawmakers are unsure of a victory considering the upcoming election season as Rep. Kessler said it will be a "difficult issue for my [Democratic] caucus." "The bottom line with my bill is that ... people not in prison, after meeting residency requirements and following registration procedures, would be eligible to vote," Kohl-Welles was quoted as saying in the Ballard News-Tribune.
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