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Latest News
Latest News
DRCNet friend and future Speakeasy blogger Cliff Thornton is first African American to run for governor of Connecticut
Check out the <a href="http://www.norwichbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060626/NEWS01/606260303/1002">Norwich Bulletin</a> for Cliff's latest press coverage.
Programs & Campaigns
Programs & Campaigns
Programs & Campaigns
Chronicle
Weekly: The Reformer's Calendar
Showing up at an event can be the best way to get involved! Check out this week's listings for events from today through next year, across the US and around the world!
Chronicle
Weekly: This Week in History
Events and quotes of note from this week's drug policy events of years past.
Chronicle
Web Scan: Len Bias, UN Coca Survey, Oaksterdam News
Len Bias, UN Coca Survey, Oaksterdam News
Chronicle
Medical Marijuana: National Multiple Sclerosis Society to Fund Study
In what could be the first sign of a course reversal by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, which has scoffed at medical marijuana in the past, the group announced this week it will fund a study.
Chronicle
Latin America: Venezuela-Funded Coca Factory Opens in Bolivia
Bolivian President Evo Morales traveled to the town of Irupana in Bolivia's Yungas coca-growing region Saturday to preside over the opening of a factory where coca leaves will be made into legal products.
Chronicle
Africa: Nigerian Narcs in Losing Battle with Marijuana Farmers
Nigeria's booming marijuana trade is more than the nation's drug enforcement agency can handle, their commander for a region that's a hotspot for the trade told a major newspaper last week.
Chronicle
Europe: Scottish Drug Czar Says Drug War Is Lost, Causes Big To-Do
Despite decades of drug war, Scotland has some of the highest drug use rates in Europe and more than 50,000 heroin addicts. Now Scotland's drug czar has unleashed a week of furious debate -- not the first in recent months -- by declaring that the war on drugs is lost and can never be won.
Chronicle
Canada: In Harm Reduction Bid, Vancouver Police to Stay Away From Overdose Calls
Citing Australian research showing that police presence during overdose calls increases the likelihood of overdose deaths by increasing drug users' fear of arrest, Vancouver police have formalized an already existing informal policy of leaving it to the paramedics.
Chronicle
Drugged Driving: Michigan Supreme Court Upholds State DUID Law -- Now You Don't Even Have to Be High to Get Busted
If you smoke a joint Friday night and drive to work bright-eyed and bushy-tailed Monday morning in Michigan, you can be arrested, charged, and convicted as a drugged driver because inactive chemical traces of THC, or metabolites, remain in your bloodstream.
Chronicle
Marijuana: West Hollywood Passes "Lowest Priority" Resolution
West Hollywood became the first Southern California city to adopt a "lowest law enforcement priority" measure toward marijuana when the City Council approved a resolution (albeit nonbinding) similar to Oakland's "Measure Z" on Monday night. Similar measures will go to voters in Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz and Santa Monica in November.
Chronicle
Law Enforcement: This Week's Corrupt Cops Stories
A federal prison contraband-for-sex scandal exploded into lethal violence Wednesday. And then there's the run of the mill: A one-time Wisconsin deputy goes down in a major marijuana bust, a former Mississippi deputy goes down for meth, a San Francisco prosecutor goes to prison for taking Ecstasy bribes, and a former Alabama deputy gets ready to go to prison for providing a gun and some crack rocks to an ex-con.
Chronicle
Alert: Major Medical Marijuana Vote in Congress Next Week!
For the fourth consecutive year, an effort is underway in Congress to stop the Justice Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration from arresting and prosecuting medical marijuana patients and providers in the 11 states where it is legal. Amendment sponsor Rep. Maurice Hinchey and others spoke with DRCNet about its prospects. Next week the US House of Representatives will vote again on the Hinchey-Rohrabacher medical marijuana amendment, which if passed will forbid the US Dept. of Justice from interfering with state medical marijuana laws. It's crucial that more members of Congress vote for medical marijuana this year than did last year.
Chronicle
Book Offer: Burning Rainbow Farm: How a Stoner Utopia Went up in Smoke
In fall 2001, activists Tom Crosslin and Rollie Rohm were gunned down by state and federal agents, after desperation drove them to set fire to the buildings on their beloved Rainbow Farm campground and concert site. A new book tells the heart-wrenching story.
Chronicle
Offer and Appeal: Important New Legalization Video and Drug War Facts Book Available
Get your copy of the Law Enforcement Against Prohibition video that Walter Cronkite called a "must-see for any journalist or public official dealing with [the drug] issue."