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One of the Worst Drug Warriors Makes It Back, Under Mysterious Circumstances
Jeralyn Merritt pointed out on TalkLeft tonight that Jay Apperson -- an infamous drug warrior who was fired from his job working for now-former hard-line Judiciary Committee chairman Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) for an inappropriate intervention attempt in a federal drug case -- is back and that his name has come up in a Washington Post article as a hiree for whom DOJ officials bypassed the usual process. It's not clear whether the irregular hiring is part of the larger US Attorneys affair.
Read more about this heartless, awful man and his dark works in our 2005 Chronicle report on the aforementioned Sensenbrenner incident.
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Announcement: New Format for the Reformer's Calendar
Visit our new web site each day to see a running countdown to the events coming up the soonest, and more.
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Announcement: DRCNet RSS Feeds Now Available
A new way for you to receive DRCNet articles -- Drug War Chronicle and more -- is now available.
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Announcement: DRCNet Content Syndication Feeds Now Available for YOUR Web Site!
Support the cause by featuring automatically-updating Drug War Chronicle and other DRCNet content links on your web site!
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Weekly: Blogging @ the Speakeasy
In addition to the weekly reporting you see here in the Chronicle, DRCNet also features daily content in the way of blogging, news links, redistributed press releases and announcements from our allies and more.
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Minorities Must be Criminals, Otherwise There Wouldn't Be So Many of 'Em in Prison
New DOJ data confirming that minorities receive harsher treatment than whites during traffic stops came as no surprise to us. Last week I discussed the study, warning that DOJ's poor reporting could embolden racial profiling apologists, despite the obvious disparities revealed in the data. Unfortunately, I was right.
Profiling skeptic Steve Chapman now exploits DOJ's report in a widely published editorial that's as sloppy as it is wrong:
By relying on the argument that increased searches of minorities are justified by their criminality, Chapman exposes his own unfamiliarity with the data he's discussing. The previous DOJ report, released in 2005, addresses this issue directly:
The great irony here is that Chapman offers his made up statements about the heightened criminality of minorities while arguing that racial profiling doesnât exist. His premise fundamentally endorses profiling and any officer who agrees with him is highly vulnerable to the exact behavior Chapman denies. It is really just priceless to find gratuitous racial stereotypes in an article about how the days of gratuitous racial stereotyping are behind us.
Profiling skeptic Steve Chapman now exploits DOJ's report in a widely published editorial that's as sloppy as it is wrong:
Why would black drivers be arrested more often? Maybe because African-Americans commit crimes at a far higher rate and are convicted of felonies at a far higher rate. In 2005, for instance, blacks were nearly seven times more likely to be in prison than whites.This is textbook circular reasoning of the sort that will earn you an F in Philosophy 101. By Chapman's logic, police could stop investigating white people entirely and we'd soon see that minorities commit 100% of all crimes.
By relying on the argument that increased searches of minorities are justified by their criminality, Chapman exposes his own unfamiliarity with the data he's discussing. The previous DOJ report, released in 2005, addresses this issue directly:
Likelihood of search finding criminal evidenceThis data comes straight from a report referenced by Chapman, yet he insists that "a motorist of felonious habits is also more likely to have illegal guns or drugs on board," and "the average black driver is statistically more likely to be a criminal than the average white driver."
Searches of black drivers or their vehicles were less likely to find criminal evidence (3.3%) than searches of white drivers (14.5%), and somewhat less likely than searches of Hispanic drivers (13%).
The great irony here is that Chapman offers his made up statements about the heightened criminality of minorities while arguing that racial profiling doesnât exist. His premise fundamentally endorses profiling and any officer who agrees with him is highly vulnerable to the exact behavior Chapman denies. It is really just priceless to find gratuitous racial stereotypes in an article about how the days of gratuitous racial stereotyping are behind us.
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In The Trenches
Hemp Olympix World Record
[Courtesy of HEMP Embassy]
Nimbin Cannabis Law Reform Rally one of the best despite...
The police this year led the media to believe greater numbers of police would be present, but told us that there would be less. That made us distrustful, but at the event there were significantly less police. I estimate half the strength of last year. For reasons of their own, they wanted the public to think otherwise. The saliva testing Winnebago barely appeared, while we had a drug-wipe saliva testing kit make a false amphetamine positive as the ABC was recording the demonstration. We hope they use the recording. We believe the Winnebago may prove to be a white elephant, or a millstone, or both.
We feel that this was one of the best organised MardiGrass weekends we have presented. We concentrated on running a full program in Peace Park, without gaps in activities so that people would be less prone to wandering away leaving a less attractive half filled venue. This year the nights were not as cold, and that helped make the night time program more enjoyable and better attended. The weather was good, and everything ran smoothly.
In events using volunteers conflicts between members can emerge or some members may attempt to dominate, creating frictions that undermine morale and impede progress. We had an exceptionally trouble free MardiGrass Organising Body this year, and were blessed with exceptional MardiGrass volunteers from all over the world. I cannot praise their group spirit and dedication enough. They did everything asked, and came back for more. While last year's excessive police presence may have deterred some people, the people who came together for the 2007 MardiGrass were more determined than ever to show that we are no danger to anything, and that we are not criminals. The police have not deterred us, but united us.
In 1937 there was a reefer madness campaign, which convinced millions of otherwise sensible people that cannabis caused instant insanity lust and murder. A new reefer madness campaign began in 2004, which left out the lust and murder, and reduced the number of instantly insane. The original reefer madness campaign created a prejudice, and the new reefer madness campaign seeks to sustain that prejudice through selective quotation, exaggeration and distortion of research. The truth will out eventually.
The Nimbin Hemp Embassy and Nimbin MardiGrass will continue to oppose these unjust laws.
The HEMP Olympix filled Peace Park this year as its reputation grows.
Bob the Builder and Smurf set a new joint world record in the Speed Roll (3 papers plus filter) of 15 seconds in a tie for the Green Medal. In the roll off, Bob won in 17 seconds after Smurf stumbled. Bob also won the Green Medal again in the Artistic Roll this year, with a ârainbow coloured rosesâ joint.
The Growersâ Ironperson Event Green Medal was won by local lad Ruben in 71 seconds. The Womensâ won by Lily from France in 101 seconds. The Bong Throw and yell won by Gary the plumber for the second time with a throw of 39.1 metres, Sarah from England won the Womensâ with 27.8 metres.
Nimbin HEMP Embassy
Phone 66891842 â a/h 66897525
In The Trenches
Harm Reduction Project News Digest May 7, 2007
News & Opinion This Week
1. A Letter on Rape in Prisons
2. Why Can't Gay Dwarves Get Married In Middle-Earth?
3. A Woman's Brain Hit Harder by Alcohol Abuse
4. Sacrificial Wolfie
B Upcoming Conferences and Events
C Quote
D How To Help
E About HRP
F Subscription Information
-----
I. A Letter on Rape in Prisons
By David Kaiser, Reply by Jason DeParle
In response to The American Prison Nightmare (April 12, 2007) New York Review Of Books
The following letter was received in response to Jason DeParle's "The American Prison Nightmare" in the April 12 issue of The New York Review.
To the Editors:
Jason DeParle's thoughtful and wide-ranging overview of American incarceration policy and its consequences hardly mentions rape in detention. Yet this is not a rare or trivial part of life behind bars. Neither is it, as some believe, an inevitable one.
Prisoner rape has been largely ignored: by journalists, advocates, policymakers, and researchers. The available data therefore, especially on its frequency, are not very good. Still, it is possible to have some notion of the problem's magnitude. Recent studies of prisons in four midwestern states suggest that approximately 20 percent of male inmates are pressured or coerced into unwanted sexual contact; approximately 10 percent are raped.[1] Rates of sexual abuse in women's facilities, where the perpetrators are most likely to be male staff, seem to vary more by institution but are as high as 27 percent of inmates.[2]
Since the US now incarcerates more people than any other country, both relative to population and in absolute terms, these percentages translate into horrifying real numbers. The congressional authors of the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 (PREA), which DeParle does mention (and which is the only piece of federal legislation ever to address the issue), estimate in the bill's "Findings" section that in the twenty years preceding its passage over one million inmates were victims of sexual abuse in American facilities. That number should be recognized as something of a guess; but in the absence of more authoritative studies, it does not seem unreasonable. Prisoner rape is arguably this country's most serious human rights problem.
In The Trenches
Drug Truth Audio & Video Update - May 7, 2007
Drug Truth Network Update: Cultural Baggage + Century of Lies + 4:20 Drug War NEWS Half Hour Programs, Live Fridays... at 90.1 FM in Houston & on the web at www.kpft.org.
+ FOUR New Videos Posted!
Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, www.audioport.org and at www.radio4all.net. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates in the US and Canada.,
Cultural Baggage for 05/04/07 FIVE Houston City Council candidates discuss the drug laws MP3
MP3 Link: http://www.drugtruth.net/007DTNaudio/FDBCB_050407.mp3
Century of Lies for 05/04/07 Marc Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture magazine discusses potential life sentence in US prison for selling pot seeds, Black Perspective & Drug War Facts MP3
MP3 LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/007DTNaudio/COL_050407.mp3
4:20 Drug War NEWS 05/07/07 to 05/13/07 now online (3:00 ea.):
Monday 05/07/07 LA Times: US Allies Seen as Losing Drug War, I of 2
Tuesday 05/08/07 LA Times II of II
Wednesday 05/09/07 DTN Editorial, per R Givens I of II
Thursday 05/10/07 DTN Editorial II of II
Friday 05/11/07 Terry Nelson Reports for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
Saturday 05/12/07 Poppygate
Sunday 05/13/07 Drug War Facts & Black Perspective on Drug War
NEXT Friday:
- Cultural Baggage 8 PM ET, 7 PM CT, 6 PM MT & 5 PM PT. TBD
- Century of Lies 2 PM ET, 1 PM CT, Noon MT & 11 AM PT. TBD
NEW VIDEO ONLINE!
This week we uploaded 4 new videos to YouTube:
1. Report on National African American Drug Policy Coalition with Judge Arthur Burnett and Kurt Schmoke, former mayor of Baltimore. Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKADap4bgYg 9:25
2. Lynn Paltrow, director of Advocates for Pregnant Women, dispels myths at National Methamphetamine Conference in Salt Lake City. Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-9amUyx0YI 9:49
3. Dr. Robert Melamede: "Marijuana and the Free Radicals".
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf9MwJZXod8 6:16
4. Sanho Tree of Institute for Policy Studies on Plan Colombia.
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9kpC1XneKA 9.59
Please let us know what you think of this series of videos. Radio stations are invited to use the audio as they see fit. Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform.
"Those who support drug prohibition, through complicity, ignorance or silence are the best friends the drug lords could ever hope for." - Reverend Dean Becker, Drug Truth Network Producer
Dean Becker
713-848-6869
In The Trenches
Prison Art Gallery: Our First Online Auction in Partnership with a Top Justice Advocacy Nonprofit
Thousands of people visit our Prison Art Gallery in Washington, DC, and/or our outdoor exhibit at the corner of K St and Connecticut Ave NW, DC. But what about the many art lovers and justice advocates who don't come to DC? Now we have a way for you to view and acquire outstanding prison art. Introducing our first ever online auction. It's being done in partnership with NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) who will use a portion of the proceeds to further its important work. As usual with any prison art we offer either on our own or through a distinguished nonprofit such as NORML, a substantial portion of the proceeds goes to the incarcerated artists who created the work. As a prisoner of 10 years duration (and currently a performing artist), our director Dennis Sobin insists on no less. Please click the link below to be part of the auction excitement. You'll be helping hardworking people in and out of prison while helping yourself to bargains in superb original art.
For more information, see http://www.prisonsfoundation.org/.
Directions: Located three blocks from the White House, the Prison Art Gallery is served by two Metro stations (Farragut North on the Red Line, and Farragut West on the Orange and Blue Lines). Note that the entrance is on 16th Street, at the corner of K Street. Open Mon to Fri, 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM, and Saturday and Sunday, 12:30 to 5:30 PM (also open evenings by appointment - groups welcome - admission is always free)
Event
NORML Legal Seminar in Aspen
Join NORML this summer for a two-day CLE program at The Gant in Aspen, CO.
CLE Seminar Topics include:
* Drug Courts
* Legal Research on the Internet
* Fighting the Government in "Terrorist" Times
In The Trenches
Constitutional Challenge of Canada's Medical Cannabis Program
Contact: Philippe Lucas, tel: 250-884-9821, E: [email protected] or Kirk Tousaw, tel: 604-836-1420, E: [email protected]
In May of 2004, the Vancouver Island Therapeutic Cannabis Research Institute (VITCRI), a research and cultivation facility overseen by the Vancouver Island Compassion Society, was raided by the West Shore RCMP. Mat Beren and Michael Swallow were charged with multiple counts of cannabis production, and over 900 plants were seized and destroyed, temporarily leaving the critically and chronically ill members of the VICS without a safe source of medicine.
The ensuing court case and Constitutional challenge - which is taking place from May 9th-18th in B.C. Supreme Court, 850 Burdett Avenue - will establish that the federal medical cannabis program is violating the constitutional rights of critically and chronically ill Canadians by a) unnecessarily restricting access to the program; b) supplying an inadequate source of cannabis; and c) instituting arbitrary limitations on production and distribution.
"This ineffective, onerous and expensive program has long been an impediment to safe access" says Philippe Lucas, a medical cannabis user and founder of the VICS, "and clearly isn't protecting Canada's sickest citizens from arrest for their use of medical cannabis". The VICS legal team consists of Mr. John Conroy QC from Abbotsford, BC, and Mr. Kirk Tousaw. Witnesses for the defense include Senator Pierre-Claude Nolin (chair of the Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs), Dr. Robert Melamede (Biology professor at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs). "We look forward to challenging the constitutionality of these regulations and demonstrating to the court that Health Canada is not meeting its obligations to Canada's critically and chronically ill", says Mr. Tousaw.
If successful, this challenge will make the legal medical use of cannabis more accessible, and potentially legalize the community-based distribution of cannabis. A similar challenge in Ontario from 2003 resulted with the courts striking down the prohibition on the recreational adult use of cannabis in Ontario, thereby legalizing the personal use of cannabis for over 18 months. This case may lead to a similar outcome in B.C.
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