Drug WarRant by Pete Guither Heading Image

Last updated:
5/12/07; 11:09:13 PM


I'd love to hear from you!
Send comments, tips,
and suggestions to:


Why is marijuana illegal? -- learn the real history.
A picture named flame.gif
Bong Hits 4 Jesus -- A Guide to the Supreme Court student speech case.


Drug WarRant Amazon Store -- great ideas for your library and gifts for friends. Books, music, video, hemp food, clothing and fun items.

Drug WarRant CafePress Store -- Drug WarRant merchandise including buttons, magnets, coffee mugs, T-shirts, boxer shorts and, our most popular item -- thongs (great gift!)

Google

For fun:

Even More Drug WarRant Sites:
Vigil for Lost Promise -- what about the promise of those lost due to the drug war?
DEA Targets America -- a response to the DEA Museum Exhibit
Why should I support reform? -- answers for liberals, conservatives, grieving relatives and more.
End Needless Death -- a debunking of Andrea Barthwell's drunk driving project.


Link to me:
www.DrugWarRant.com

If you feel like it,
make a small contribution,
or buy me a present.


My Other Web Sites:


May 2004
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          
Apr   Jun


Join us at the Messageboard

Action alert: Senate committee vote will be taking place very soon on repealing the bad financial aid provision. Go to http://www.SchoolsNotPrisons.com/help/ and take action now.

Monday, May 10, 2004

In Medina, Ohio, smoking pot is as bad as beating your wife

With court approval, Medina is re-implementing an unusual ordinance, which goes further than the state law and carries a mandatory three-day jail sentence.

While the rest of the state considers possession of less than 100 grams of marijuana to be similar, in a legal sense, to jaywalking - punishable by a $100 fine - Medina's ordinance classifies it as a first-degree misdemeanor, the same category as domestic violence. ...

... the ordinance makes carrying a marijuana cigarette in Medina a worse crime than possessing heroin, cocaine or methamphetamine.

None of those drugs carry mandatory jail time. ...

If police follow through, Medina [population 25,000] will spend $20,000 a year to feed and jail people convicted under the marijuana law...

Well, after all, they just passed an income tax increase in Medina in November. They've got to spend it on something.

Just so you know what to avoid, Medina is just southwest of Cleveland, off I-71.

6:34:08 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



Constitutional Shenanigans

You've heard me rail about Ernest Istook's bizarre spending provision that would actually prevent metro systems from accepting advertising that promotes legalization of marijuana (despite what Istook says, it doesn't prevent advertising illegal activites, but only advertising advocacy for a particular political position). It's very hard to get any more unconstitutional than preventing the expression of a particular political viewpoint.

Well, a little over a week ago, the ACLU, Change the Climate, Drug Policy Alliance, and the Marijuana Policy Project argued their case in court. I wasn't able to report on it in detail at the time, but I've enjoyed reading the court filings and wanted to share a little with you.

Of course, Section 177 is so bad, it's amazing the government lawyers are even able to mount a defense. In fact, their defense has depended on misdirection and outright inapplicable legal references. Embarrassing.

It makes the ACLU's response (pdf) to the government's defense (pdf) quite delightful to read. The ACLU realizes how absolutely consitutionally indefensible the government's position is and they can't help getting in some digs. (Of course, these sarcastic passages are in addition to detailed, strong constitutional arguments by the ACLU -- the Memorandum of Plaintiffs (pdf) is a thing of beauty.)

Opening statement in the reply brief:

It is disappointing that the Government decided to attempt to defend the indefensible – a statute designed, and already operating, to restrain one side of an active political debate. Justice would better have been served had the Justice Department not imposed the entire burden of defending the Constitution on the plaintiffs and the Court.

Ouch! Nice score. But wait, it gets better. The government had tried to argue that they weren't regulating content since the metro system could, on their own, decide to eliminate all speech.

For example, a transit system could bar all advocacy statements relating to marijuana use from any point of view. Of course that would unconstitutionally discriminate against marijuana policy as a topic, so maybe the transit system could bar all advocacy of legal change, or maybe all advocacy altogether, or maybe all advertising altogether.

The Government might as well argue that a statute withholding federal funds from transit systems that permit black women to sit in the front of the bus would be constitutional because a transit system could comply in an even-handed manner by removing all seats.

Oooh! Two points. But there's more:

As the Court will recall from the conference setting the briefing schedule, the filing of the opposition brief was delayed for some weeks to permit ample time for “coordination” among various unidentified organs of Government. In the brief’s closing peroration, however, we see exactly what that coordination has yielded:
An order enjoining enforcement of Section 177 would undermine Congress’ legitimate interest in not promoting or providing the means for the expression of ideas that run contrary to and may serve to undermine federal policy adopted to protect the public’s well-being.
Gov’t Opp’n Mem. at 22. This passage is followed by a “cf.” site to two cases that do not support it, because the only direct support is to be found in the likes of Brave New World and 1984.

There is no government interest, none at all, in suppressing ideas that run contrary to federal policy. There is rather an interest in robust free debate and expression, and in preventing government efforts to suppress ideas that run “contrary to federal policy.” That is exactly why Section 177 should be enjoined without further delay.

Game. Set. Match.

Now all we have to do is wait for the court decision.

12:09:09 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []






Drug Policy Reform Links:


Drug Policy Focus:


Drug Policy Plus: (Left, Right, and Libertarian)
Hit and Run

Illinois Politics/Media:


Law and Justice:


If you've got a blog you'd like me to visit, feel free to drop me a line.





There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

Drug WarRant
© Copyright 2007 Pete Guither. Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Steal what you want. Give me a link.
Last update: 5/12/07; 11:09:14 PM.
Powered by






Listed on BlogShares

Bloggapedia - Find It!