Posts Tagged ‘marijuana’

State Senate Committee Approves Marijuana Bill

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

San Diego criminal lawyers say that recreational marijuana use is one step closer to legalization today, as the the state Assembly’s Public Safety Committee has approved a marijuana bill that would let users of the drug smoke risk-free. The bill has been largely touted as an important step in helping California take control of its budget crisis through the major income stream that would rise out of the taxes on the largest cash crop in America.

Under the bill marijuana users, sellers and growers would have to be over 21 years of age and the state would charge a 9% tax on all sales, which is estimated to run at about $50 of taxes per ounce.

The victory for marijuana advocates is considered to be largely symbolic, as the bill must still be reviewed by another senate committee before it will be voted on. This second committee will not look at the bill for some time. Regardless, the drug’s supporters are still optimistic.

”We’re thrilled. This to me, this is the formal beginning of the end of marijuana prohibition in the United States”, said Stephen Gutwillig of the Drug Policy Alliance, a pro-legalization group.

To read more on the measure, see the article in Top News. Image Via Eric Caballero [Flickr].

Federal Government Revisiting Drug Policies

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

r0bzU.S. Attorney General Eric Holder told federal prosecutors to stop pursuing cases against medical marijuana patients. Drug advocates are hoping this is the first sign of the country’s willingness to legalize the drug, but San Diego criminal lawyers see it merely as the federal government’s modernization of their marijuana laws. While 14 states permit medical marijuana usage, the federal government still classifies the drug as a Schedule I drug, on the same level as heroin –offering no medical benefits.

The announcement came days after the senate’s second-ranking Democrat introduced a bill that would help stop the sentencing discrepancy between suspects caught with crack cocaine and those caught with the drug in its powder form. This two-decade long law has often been held as evidence of the government’s preference for arresting and imprisoning African Americans over Caucasians, as black males are much more likely to be selling the drug in its crystallized form.

Legislation to support a federal needle exchange program is also moving through the house. Localized measures for needle exchanges have shown reductions in the spread of disease in the communities that take advantage of the practice.

The efforts all seem to back one of Obama’s election promises, to focus the drug war on violent offenders and those who sell to children and take some pressure off of non-violent drug users. Republicans are criticizing the efforts, claiming they may help speed the flow of money to the violent Mexican drug cartels.

“We cannot hope to eradicate the drug trade if we do not first address the cash cow for most drug trafficking organizations: marijuana,” Republican representative Lamar Smith said.

Some San Diego advocates are skeptical. After a similar recent announcement, feds still worked with San Diego police to shut down over 14 medical marijuana dispensaries in the city.

To read more about these federal changes to the law, see the article on The Spokesman Review. Image Via R0bz [Flickr]

Police Raid 14 Medicinal Marijuana Dispensaries

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

caveman 92223Even as the state considers legalizing marijuana in an effort to increase tax revenues, the San Diego police have sent out a strong message that illegal drug-related activities will not be tolerated in the meantime. Last week, fourteen marijuana dispensaries were raided. A total of thirty one people were arrested, $700,000 in cash was seized, as well as six guns.

County officials assured the public that the raids were not intended to punish legal dispensaries, but to stop the proliferation of dispensaries that illegally deal narcotics.

“They’re doing so under the guise of helping people who are sick. But we’re not fooled and the public shouldn’t be fooled either,” District Attorney Bonnie M. Dumanis said.

Under state law, all dispensaries must be non-profit institutions. Recent estimates say there are around 60 marijuana dispensaries in San Diego, only a few of which are non-profit.

San Diego criminal lawyer James Warner believes many of the employees will not be prosecuted, as they may have been unaware that the dispensaries were operating outside the law.

For more information, please read the article in NBC LA’s news. Image Via Caveman 92223 [Flickr].

California’s Marijuana Enforcement Decidely Racist

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

elana CXLIVArrest rates for all crimes have dropped 40% since 1990. Unfortunately, despite our state’s seemingly more liberal attitudes towards marijuana use, evidenced by medicinal marijuana legalization and discussion of complete legalization of the drug, arrests for marijuana possession have skyrocketed 127% since 1990.

What’s more shocking is the correlation between arrest rates and race. Half of those people arrested for marijuana possession in 1990 were nonwhite. The number has risen to 62% this year. When it comes to youths, 28% of those arrested were under age 20 in 1990. Now 42% of the arrestees are under 20. Marijuana possession arrests of nonwhite youths have risen from a little over 3,000 in 1990 to over over 16,000 in 2008. The increased percentage of arrests were three times the population growth of that group in California.

When it comes to just African Americans, the arrest numbers are even more disheartening. While blacks make up only 7% of the state population, they make up 22% of all people arrested for marijuana offenses and 33% of felony marijuana arrests. This discrepancy is not related to use rates for the group. Whites and blacks have equal marijuana usage rates and when the results are broken down by age, 18-25 year old African Americans use marijuana less than whites.

San Diego criminal attorneys see the discrepancy on a regular basis. For this reason, the Law Offices of James Warner urge the public to think about this racism when considering the effect of statewide marijuana legalization. Not only will the taxes help the state, but the unfair incarceration of young minorities will be reduced significantly.

For more information, please read the opinion article in the L.A. Times. Image via Elana CXLIV [Flickr].

Mexico Decriminalizes Drug Use

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

cfraustoAfter years of warfare between authorities and rivaling drug cartels, Mexico has taken a progressive stand towards stopping the bloodshed by legalizing limited personal drug use. The effort may help save the Mexican government quite a bit of money on catching and penalizing drug users, which may free up more resources to battle the mafioso’s themselves.

How this will affect drug importations into America, particularly San Diego, has yet to be seen, but it may make defense strategies easier for drug offenders and their San Diego criminal lawyers.

While many other countries have moved to legalized marijuana, even California has been discussing the idea in an effort to raise tax money, Mexico has legalized the use of all types of drugs, including cocaine, LSD, heroin and more. The only other country to have legalized this spectrum of drugs is Portugal. Public consumption and large quantities are still explicitly illegal.

When this same initiative was attempted in 2006, San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders called the proposal “appallingly stupid.” Three years later though, things have changed. US authorities have so far issued nothing but praise for the government as it wages war with cartels:

“We know that Mexican law enforcement authorities are continuing their efforts to target drug traffickers,” Department of Justice spokeswoman Laura Sweeney said Friday. “Our friends and partners in Mexico are waging an historic battle with the cartels, one that plays out on the streets of their communities each day.”

For more information on this historic decriminalization law, please read the rest of the article in the Cristian Science Monitor. Photo Via Christian Frausto Bernal [Flickr]