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Medical-Cannabis Allies Tell Dea: Get Off Our Backs.


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US WA: Medical-Pot Allies Tell DEA: Get Off Our Backs

 

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URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v12/n465/a05.html

Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm

Votes: 0

Pubdate: Fri, 21 Sep 2012

Source: Seattle Times (WA)

Copyright: 2012 The Seattle Times Company

Contact: opinion@seattletimes.com

Website: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/

Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409

Author: Jonathan Martin

 

 

MEDICAL-POT ALLIES TELL DEA: GET OFF OUR BACKS

 

Its Action Closes Some Dispensaries

 

Some Officials Join Courthouse Rally

 

The allies and the sellers of medical marijuana rallied Thursday against federal intervention, demanding local control over a plant that is simultaneously legal and illegal.

 

At a Seattle City Hall news conference, the political friends of marijuana denounced recent cease-anddesist letters sent by the Drug Enforcement Administration, which led to the closure of about two dozen of Seattle's 150-some medical marijuana dispensaries.

 

"The federal action to close down the medical-cannabis providers is making our neighborhoods less safe," said Seattle City Councilmember Nick Licata, who recently proposed new regulations for the dispensaries.

 

The letters, sent in late August, went to the landlords of 26 local dispensaries which the DEA said operated within 1,000 feet of a school zone, threatening forfeiture if the businesses didn't shut down within 30 days.

 

Similar letters were sent in many of the 16 states that allow medical marijuana, fueling marijuana activists' frustration against the Obama administration. Under his administration, there have been at least 200 raids and 70 indictments against medical-marijuana providers in six states, according to data collected by Americans for Safe Access, an advocacy group.

 

The City Hall news conference, and a rally at the federal courthouse in Seattle, coincided with protests in California, Arizona, Colorado and Washington, D.C.

 

Rep. Roger Goodman, D Kirkland, said targeting dispensaries within school zones was a "subterfuge," questioning why dispensaries were more dangerous to youth than grocers, who recently began selling hard liquor.

 

"Our message to the federal government: Get off our backs. We're doing it right," said Goodman, a proponent of marijuana legalization.

 

State law does not clearly allow dispensaries, but the storefronts operate under a broad legal interpretation as networks of medical marijuana "collective gardens," which are legal. A 2011 state law empowers cities to regulate the businesses, resulting in a patchwork of ordinances and a clustering of dispensaries in marijuana-friendly Seattle.

 

Goodman said he and Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, may reintroduce legislation to legalize and regulate dispensaries, depending on the outcome of the fall election, including Initiative 502, which would legalize and tax recreational sales of marijuana statewide.

 

DEA spokeswoman Jodie Underwood said no additional letters have been sent, but noted that federal law preempts state law when the two conflict. "The DEA enforces federal law, and we're going to continue to enforce federal law," she said.

 

At the courthouse rally, about 75 medical-marijuana providers and patients inveighed against the federal ban on marijuana, with stories of sick patients aided by cannabis. They held signs such as, "I'm a Business Owner Not a Criminal."

 

Many in the crowd opposed I-502, saying its approach to legalization is too restrictive, and a provision in the initiative against driving while stoned would result in drugged-driving convictions against patients.

 

"Legalization is more important now than it ever was before," said activist Don Skakie, who was collecting signatures for an alternative to I-502.

MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom

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This is now truly reaching the laugh-out-loud insane point of prohibition. It is OK to sell alcohol, one of the most dangerous and addictive substances on earth, and pharmaceuticals within 1000 ft. of whatever, but by god try to sell a relatively innocuous substance like marijuana and you are going to be sent to HELL. People use commonly prescribed pharmaceuticals to get "high" and that seems to be OK with law enforcement, but use a relatively innocuous substance like pot to "get high" and, by god, we are going to send you to HELL.

 

Maybe the prohibitionists are beginning to be seen as the rabid, foaming-at-the mouth crazies that they are.

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