Archive for March, 2004

Bogus prohibition highlights "Mode of Use" anomaly

March 31, 2004

Abstract: An elderly Waimate couple have fallen victim to debased “harm reduction” policy under Helen Clark and the so-called progressive Labour government.

Mild Greens say that aside from the glaring natural injustice, it is significant that the medicinal cannabis was not being smoked, since avoidance of that potentially damaging mode of use highlights the practice of harm reduction which is supposed to be underpinning New Zealand’s official National Drug Policy.

Press Release: Mild Greens 01/04/04

Bogus prohibition highlights “Mode of Use” anomaly

An elderly Waimate couple have fallen victim to debased “harm reduction” policy under Helen Clark and the so-called progressive Labour government.

Dawn Sarah Willis, a 68-year-old caregiver, was convicted for cultivating and preparing cannabis into bread and cakes for her sick husband, and has received a sentence of 100 hours community service for her ‘crime’.

Mild Greens say that aside from the glaring natural injustice, it is significant that the medicinal cannabis was not being smoked, since avoidance of that potentially damaging mode of use highlights the practice of harm reduction which is supposed to be underpinning New Zealand?s official National Drug Policy. Government medicines watchdog, Medsafe, say smoked cannabis could never be prescribed, and that the Minister of Health is awaiting British development of a cannabis spray Sativex before legal prescription is possible.

But why is eaten cannabis not considered as a “SmokeFree” way forward by our stupid government?

Is it too obvious that in moderation this is a safe and user-friendly mode of use?

The Mild Greens say the Willis case (amongst many, many others) is about a gross failure in duty of care, and weak leadership in NZ, pandering to a global War on Drugs protection racket.”It is an abomination to deny people in daily need of the social lubrication and medical efficacy of cannabis, and to punish those most vulnerable for what is an everyday activity for tens of thousands of ordinary Kiwis.”

“Politicians and Police need to take on board the simmering discontent of a significant proportion of the population who realise the draconian prohibition and enforced black-marketeering of cannabis is devoid of any integrity or credibility (c.f. the NZ Police undercover programme)”.

Community leaders also need to heed the advice of the 2003 Health Select Committee who recognised medicinal availability of marijuana should be prioritised, along with formulation of the most appropriate legal status for general widespread use in the community (a task which the HSC found itself incapable of, despite this being its 3-year brief).

And Health Minister Annette King needs to explain, without lying (if that is possible with Labour Ministers), why ‘Mode of use’ was deleted from the statutory evidence based criteria for classification of substances she passed into law in the year 2000.

Perhaps the Minister could also explain the ongoing suppression of a certain cost-effectiveness investigation into prohibition methods required by the Ministry of Health under National Drug Policy development in 1996. The evidence clearly shows that prohibition of drugs is notorious for incentivising distribution networks, corrupting governments and law enforcement, and rendering drugs completely uncontrolled and subject to the most dangerous methods of use.

“Unfortunately, Police, Judiciary and the majority of Parliamentarians have self-servingly ignored the gross deficiencies of their policy which divides and dyfunctionalises New Zealand.”

Regarding the 100hr community sentence dished out to Dawn Willis, (given there were 80 plants seized – ordinarily warranting a stiff jail sentence), Mild Greens ask should the public of NZ be grateful that the system has moderated its bad behaviour so that we don’t notice or complain too much? Late last year, Christchurch businessman Ian Jackson walked free on the basis that he was able to demonstrate the medical efficacy of the cannabis he was cultivating and heavily consuming, while still running a highly successful company. Meanwhile, it is understood that another South Island cannabis enthusiast, who produces and gives away ‘cookies’ to people in need, is up before the Christchurch District Court this week, no doubt facing more contradictory and typically hypocritical and posturing, so-called ‘justice’.

And as an aside, the Mild Greens ask New Zealand to consider how many criminalised young Maori receive ‘preferential’ Police services and are herded through the courts and prisons on false charges based on the bogus and unsubstantiated cannabis law and the criminality it engenders?

MildGreens commend Dawn Willis for her initiative and fully support the exoneration of her, and her husband – and demand that the Government make amends for the forfeitures and persecution of all Victims.

“We also support the prosecution of Ministers and Officials who have conspired to fraudulently maintain dangerous and unjust prohibitionist policies.”

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.com

STOP WAR ON DRUGS, SAYS EX-COP

March 28, 2004

STOP WAR ON DRUGS, SAYS EX-COP New Zealand – drug war

Drug testing in the workplace and in schools should stop because it does more harm than good.

So says former drug-busting American policeman of 26 years, Jack Cole, who’s part of a national speaking tour next month.

Other speakers coming to Auckland, Wellington, Palmerston North or Christchurch include Eleanor Schockett, a retired judge from Florida, and Eddie Ellison, a British officer of 30 years. They are part of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition ( LEAP ), which is trying to stop the war on drugs.

Stop War On Drugs, Says Ex-Cop ; Sunday Star-Times

March 27, 2004

New Zealand – drug war, drug testing; “Stop War On Drugs, Says Ex-Cop”:

Drug testing in the workplace and in schools should stop because it does more harm than good.

So says former drug-busting American policeman of 26 years, Jack Cole, who’s part of a national speaking tour next month.

Other speakers coming to Auckland, Wellington, Palmerston North or Christchurch include Eleanor Schockett, a retired judge from Florida, and Eddie Ellison, a British officer of 30 years. They are part of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition ( LEAP ), which is trying to stop the war on drugs.

Speaking to the Sunday Star-Times from Boston, Cole, a former New Jersey State undercover policeman who spent 12 years in the narcotics bureau, said he didn’t want to tell the government how to run the country but to warn of the consequences its policies might have. He also offers alternatives which he claims will lower drug crime and addiction.

Workplace drug testing – one of Cole’s targets – is common in New Zealand, particularly in the forestry, fishing and transport industries. Air New Zealand wants testing for its 10,000-strong workforce, while schools are increasingly testing students for drugs.

Cole said drug testing could convert soft drug users to harder drugs like heroin or ecstasy, which shows up in a person’s system only up to four days after use. Cannabis can be detected up to 28 days later, meaning users have more chance of getting caught.

Employers and school heads were ‘kidding themselves’ if they did not think this switch to harder drugs could happen, said Cole. It was a fact of life that people experimented with drugs.

While he didn’t encourage drug use, he said it was a waste of police time prosecuting mostly ‘normal people’ for taking minor drugs.

He said police should spend more time dealing with violent criminals and clearing the streets of potentially lethal drink drivers.

The millions spent targeting drug offences would be better spent educating the public on the bad effects of drugs, he said.

Cole said a conviction could hinder work, study and other opportunities.

‘We should be trying to help these people and bring them back into society and give them hope there is a future. If you give people hope they will leave drugs behind,’ he said.

LEAP’s more than 50 speakers, based in the US and other countries, are all former ‘drug warriors’ – police, judges, prosecutors, parole, probation and corrections officials”

URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n520/a06.html
Newshawk: LEAP http://www.leap.cc
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Sun, 28 Mar 2004
Source: Sunday Star-Times (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2004 Sunday Star-Times
Contact: feedback@star-times.co.nz
Website: http://www.sundaystartimes.co.nz
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1064
Author: Rachel Grunwell
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)
Cited: http://www.leap.cc/ (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition)

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition tour of New Zealand

March 27, 2004

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition tour of New Zealand:

A former US judge, a former undercover narcotics cop and the former head of Scotland Yard’s drug squad will be in New Zealand in early April to raise awareness about the dangerous consequences of following the US on drug laws.

“Growing violence and drug use will be the result of New Zealand’s tough new stance on illegal drugs, says American former Judge Eleanor Schockett, because this is exactly what happened when the US took the same approach.” – NZ Listener, “Out on the Streets”, April 3-9, 2004, p26.

Together with retired New Jersey undercover cop Jack Cole and former Scotland Yard drug squard chief Eddie Ellison, Schockett represents an organisation of ex-cops, former prosecutors and judges from the US, Canada and Britain called Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP).

They will be speaking to public meetings and Rotary clubs from April 6, asking what New Zealand can learn from the failed US experience, in a visit supported by the Coalition for Cannabis Law Reform and the MildGreens.

“This controversial and hard-hitting tour comes soon after a group of former New Zealand undercover police officers broke their silence and alleged perjury and corruption are a regular part of the police’s undercover programme. If LEAP’s predictions are true, this will just be a taste of what is to come if we continue enforcing a US-style War On Drugs.”

Germany: Dope laws up in smoke

March 15, 2004

Germany: Dope laws up in smoke

That is the ostensible reason. The real reason is that authorities in Berlin have given up trying to police the pot possession problem.

“The ban was based on a drug policy which has failed utterly,” says FDP City Senator Martin Lindner, who introduced the bill.

“We are not trying to play down this drug,” he adds, “but are simply striving to attain a more realistic approach to this drug.”