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Poking Around in a Teenager's Panties is a Sick Crime (Unless It's a Drug Search)

At age 13, Savana Redding was strip-searched by school officials who suspected her of possessing prescription Ibuprofen. It turned out their information was bad, but they are so proud of what they did that they've defended their actions all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Soon, the right to drug-search young girls' underpants may be firmly enshrined in our jurisprudence, so that the whims of drug hysteria will decide when it's appropriate to do that, rather than some old list of high-minded legal principles.

That this incident even happened is disturbing enough before one tries to come to terms with the fact that the Supreme Court appears likely to uphold the search. Perverts.
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Event

Joplin NORML Benefit Concert

Benefit show this Saturday - BE THERE! Invite your friends and family to the benefit concert w/ performances by Josh Heinrichs (formerly of Jah Roots), Seedlove, Berlin Drop, and Josh Mullin @ the Kitchen Pass in 3 easy steps! 1) Go to the event page page here: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=54452127631 2) Click “Invite People to Come" on the right side of the page... 3) Now, add all of your friends to invite them to spend a night with Joplin NORML and these great acts! There will be raffles, giveaways, and new Joplin NORML merchandise including brand new Joplin NORML shirts!!!! AGE: 21+, COST: $6. For more information, contact 417-291-0135 or [email protected]. Thanks for your support in helping reform Missouri's outdated marijuana laws! See you Saturday!
Event

Voluntary Committee of Lawyers Reception

You are invited to a special Law Day reception sponsored by the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers. Come and learn more about the VCL's exciting initiatives across the country to foster important discussion and debate about our arcane and failed War on Drugs. As we approach a national "tipping point" in drug policy reform, the VCL's work is ever more important as we move the professional community to wield its influence to get drug policy reform on the legislative agenda. Please take the time to visit the VCL's website, at www.VCL.org. Announcement: The Board and Officers of the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers request the honor of your company at our Law Day Reception and presentation of the Joseph H. Choate, Jr. Award for Leadership to Judge Robert W. Sweet, United States District Court, Southern District of New York. The event features hors d'oeuvres and hosted bar. Please RSVP to Rachel Kurtz at 206-267-7069 or [email protected]. Donations appreciated. The VCL is a 501(c)(3) corporation. If you cannot make the event but would still like to support the VCL, visit us here: www.VCL.org.
In The Trenches

TODAY is National Call-In Day: Call Your Representatives NOW

TAKE ACTION

Capital

 

     Today, be one of thousands of people across the country to phone your members of Congress to call for an end to the sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine. Your calls will make an important difference.
 
     This National Call-In Day is part of Crack the Disparity National Month of Advocacy, a month-long coordinated push to eliminate the sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine.
 
     The current law:

  • overstates the relative danger of crack cocaine compared to powder cocaine;
  • contributes to the growth of our prison population, increasing the financial burden on taxpayers;
  • disproportionately affects African Americans; and
  • uses limited federal resources on low-level street dealers rather than on the major drug traffickers.

      Twenty-three years of a failed policy is long enough!  It's time to end this unjust and disproportionate sentencing policy. To participate call the U.S. Capitol Switchboard right now at 202.224.3121, and ask to speak to your representatives in the Senate and House. Urge them to support and co-sponsor H.R. 265, the Drug Sentencing Reform and Cocaine Kingpin Trafficking Act in the House and legislation in the Senate that eliminates the 100 to 1 disparity between crack and powder cocaine.

    You should place three calls because you have one representative and two senators.
 
     Use this link to help you with your calls to Congress.

Click here for talking points and script
In The Trenches

Meet the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers

Dear Friends:

As you know, the "War on Drugs" has been a tragic policy failure, degrading public order and public health and eroding trust in the justice system and respect for the law.  Now you have a chance to participate in an intensive national effort underway to bring about a fundamental shift in our drug control policies.   

If you haven't already met, let me introduce you to the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers!  The VCL is working successfully across the nation to amplify the voice of the legal profession, calling for a serious examination of the "War on Drugs" and its harmful consequences.

 

During National Alcohol Prohibition in the 1920s, a respected group of New York lawyers founded the original Voluntary Committee of Lawyers, building a national network to set up the state constitutional conventions that eventually led to the repeal of Prohibition in 1933.  The modern VCL is organizing lawyers and judges around the country today to criticize our current prohibition-style drug policies and to suggest workable alternative approaches.  Through state and loc al bar associations in New York, Colorado, Alabama, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Washington and other states, the VCL is spurring important discussions in professional circles that wield considerable influence in the policymaking process.  

We are approaching a historic turning point in the drug policy debate.  In these troubling times, the fiscal strain of excessive incarceration is leading states to shift their criminal justice policies.  Violence from illegal drug markets is about to spill across the Mexican border.  Leading newspapers regularly highlight the disaster of the "War on Drugs."  The Obama Administration has also made some important signals recently.  Now is the time for the VCL to leverage its deep history and advance the mature legal dialogue about shifting to a more rational drug control policy.

Thanks to your support we can continue this important work.

We are expanding the VCL as a membership organization of lawyers, judges and other professionals, strengthening the call for an exit strategy for the "War on Drugs."  You are invited to join our growing network by becoming a member of the VCL today.  Click here.

To learn more about the VCL and its membership and activities, please join us on Law Day, Friday, May 1st, at the Culture Center on Manhattan's Upper West Side for a reception and presentation of the VCL's Joseph H. Choate, Jr. Award for Leadership to U.S. District Court Judge Robert Sweet.  Then get dinner with us afterward and continue what is sure to be an evening of engaging discussion.

We welcome you to join the VCL and help us push for sanity in our drug control policies.  Thank you very much for your support, and we look forward to working together with you!

Very truly yours,

Roger E. Goodman

Executive Director
In The Trenches

Happy Birthday ASA!

 

Happy Birthday ASA!

Hello ASA Supporter,

Seven years ago a handful of patients, doctors, and providers came together to stand up against federal intimidation and to chart out a plan for protecting safe access to medical cannabis. Today, we have turned that handful into thousands of committed advocates across the country. Through ASA we have built a strong, engaged movement.

Please donate $100 to ASA today to support this growing movement!

As a movement we have celebrated countless victories in the realm of access and extended patient protections. As a movement we have mourned together as our brothers and sisters left us. And as a movement we have shouted and protested the sight of our friends and family being harassed, detained, persecuted and jailed.

I have been truly amazed and touched by the family that has come together to fight for safe and legal access. Over the past seven years I have had the honor of meeting many of you. I have listened to story after story about the benefits that medical cannabis has brought to you and your loved ones. I have listened to countless stories about the hardships of lack of access and police harassment. And what is truly amazing is that in each of those stories you have also shared the inspiration of your willingness to stand up for yourself and those around you.

I carry those stories with me, as does the ASA staff. Your experiences define the work we do and the manner in which we do it.

We have already accomplished so much together. Our successful lobbying, media and legal campaigns have resulted in important court precedents, new sentencing standards, and more compassionate community guidelines. Together we have rolled back public ambivalence and media bias to make medical cannabis a national issue.

Now the time has come to ramp up our work - we have an administration that is open to moving safe access forward, and now we must show our strength and share our vision. This is ASA's most important year and we need your support to move forward. Opportunity is there but we must Engage for Change! Please donate $100 today to support ASA's work this year and beyond.

Happy B-Day ASA family!

Yours truly,


Steph Sherer
Executive Director
Americans for Safe Access



Americans for Safe Access is the nation's largest organization of patients, medical professionals, scientists and concerned citizens promoting safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic use and research.

Become an ASA Member!

Please support the work of Americans for Safe Access

On The Web:

ASA's Mission

What We Do

ASA Forums

ASA Blog

Legal Info

Take Action

Condition-Based Booklets

Join ASA Email Lists

ASA's Online Store

"Gear up" for medical cannabis activism with ASA's new T-shirts, hats, stickers, bags and more! All proceeds go to ASA advocacy

Americans for Safe Access

1322 Webster St., Ste. 402
Oakland, CA 94612
Phone: 510-251-1856
Fax: 510-251-2036

Email us!

 

In The Trenches

Press Release: Will Charles C. Lynch Be the Last to Go to Federal Prison For a Misguided Policy?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE   
APRIL 22, 2009

Will Charles C. Lynch Be the Last to Go to Federal Prison For a Misguided Policy?
Advocates Call For Leniency in the Name of Justice

CONTACT: Bruce Mirken, MPP director of communications ............... 415-585-6404 or 202-215-4205

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA -- The Marijuana Policy Project is calling for leniency in Thursday's federal court sentencing of Charles C. Lynch, a California medical marijuana provider who worked scrupulously to follow state and local laws but now faces five years in federal prison. MPP officials will be available by phone for comment after the sentencing, scheduled for 3 p.m. at the federal courthouse in downtown Los Angeles.

     In February, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced that henceforth the Drug Enforcement Administration would only conduct enforcement actions against medical marijuana defendants who were violating both state and federal law, reversing the Bush administration's policy of ignoring state medical marijuana laws. But Holder did not indicate whether this change would affect handling of older, leftover cases such as that of Lynch, who was convicted last year. 

     "We can't help but wonder if Mr. Lynch will be the last American to go to federal prison for a mistake, the final victim of bad policy that has been repudiated but whose mean-spirited effects still linger," said MPP executive director Rob Kampia. "Putting Mr. Lynch in prison would be a cruel and pointless miscarriage of justice. At a time when federal law enforcement at the Mexican border is so overwhelmed that traffickers coming through with up to 500 pounds of marijuana are let go, even one more hour spent persecuting Mr. Lynch is an outrageous waste of resources."

     "Mr. Lynch's medical marijuana collective was licensed by the city of Morrow Bay, and officials routinely inspected the facility for compliance with state and local laws," said MPP California policy director Aaron Smith. "Because federal law still makes no statutory allowance for medical marijuana, any discussion of California's medical marijuana law was explicitly barred from his trial. In the interest of fairness, the judge should follow the example of Judge Charles Breyer in the 2003 case of Ed Rosenthal, and issue a token, one-day sentence. Charles Lynch is simply not a criminal in any rational sense of the term."

     With more than 27,000 members and 100,000 e-mail subscribers nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. MPP believes that the best way to minimize the harm associated with marijuana is to regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol. For more information, please visit http://MarijuanaPolicy.org.

####

In The Trenches

Important 4th Amendment Supreme Court Victory

Dear Friends:

Today, the Supreme Court handed down a great ruling in Arizona v. Gant, which increases 4th Amendment protection against warrantless vehicle searches. We've been following the case for a while, and this outcome is exciting.

Please visit our blog for FYR Associate Director Scott Morgan's analysis on the decision's likely impact.

Sincerely,                                                                                                                     

signature

Steve Silverman

P.S. Flex Your Rights is the only organization focused solely on defending the 4th Amendment and teaching citizens to understand their rights during police encounters. If you support our efforts, please consider making a one-time tax-deductible donation today. As you know, we can't do this important work without your support.

© 2009 Flex Your Rights Privacy Policy

If you choose to unsubscribe from the mailing list, click here.

In The Trenches

Please Join Us - May 1st Reception in NYC for Voluntary Committee of Lawyers

Dear Friends:
 
You are invited to a special Law Day reception in New York City on Friday, May 1st, sponsored by the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers.  I really hope you can join us for this special event.  Please see the announcement below.
 
Come and learn more about the VCL's exciting initiatives across the country to foster important discussion and debate about our arcane and failed War on Drugs.  As we approach a national "tipping point" in drug policy reform, the VCL's work is ever more important as we move the professional community to wield its influence to get drug policy reform on the legislative agenda.
 
Please join us in the late afternoon on May 1st.  Please also take the time to visit the VCL's website, at www.VCL.org. See you on May 1st!
 
Roger
 


 

Save the Date!

 

The Board and Officers of the

Voluntary Committee of Lawyers

request the honor of your company at our

 

Law Day Reception

and presentation of the

Joseph H. Choate, Jr. Award for Leadership

to

 

Judge Robert W. Sweet

United States District Court

Souther District of New York

 

May 1, 2009

5:30 PM to 7:30 PM, remarks at 6:30 PM

 

at the

Culture Center

410 Columbus Avenue (between 79th and 80th Streets)

New York NY

 

Hors d'oeuvres and hosted bar

 

RSVP to Rachel Kurtz at 206-267-7069 or [email protected].

 

Donations appreciated.

The VCL is a 501(c)(3) corporation.  If you cannot make the event but would still like to support the VCL, visit us here.

www.VCL.org

  

 

Organization logo

 

 

 

Blog

Wow, These 4/20 Celebrations Are Surprisingly Safe

Actually, I'm not very surprised. But this should come as a shock to anyone who thinks we need cops to protect us from the dangers of marijuana:
SANTA CRUZ -- The phrase "getting baked" took on a dual meaning Monday for several thousand marijuana enthusiasts who braved record-breaking heat to smoke up at the annual 4/20 party in Porter Meadow at UC Santa Cruz.
…
Despite the 96-degree heat, which shattered a 110-year-old record of 88 degrees for the day, there were no medical incidents reported. [San Jose Mercury News]
There were also no reported incidents of anyone stealing from their little sister, or getting straight D's, or leaving their ex-girlfriend 27 messages, or making their mother cry, and other stuff like that…