Issue #550, Sep 05, 2008- Editorial: How Much Does It Cost to Build an Air-Conditioned Drug Smuggling Tunnel?
- Feature: Venezuela, US Governments Spar Over Drug Fighting
- Chronicle Book Review: "On Speed: The Many Lives of Amphetamine," by Nicolas Rasmussen (2008, New York University Press, 352 pp, $29.95 HB)
- Offer: Unique and Important New Book on Medical Marijuana
- Law Enforcement: This Week's Corrupt Cops Stories
- Presidential Politics: Both Major Party Tickets Include Former Drug Users
- Drug Use: Prescription Pills Up, Cocaine and Meth Down, Marijuana Holds Steady
- Medical Marijuana: Los Angeles City Council Extends Moratorium
- Marijuana: Fayetteville, Arkansas, Lowest Priority Initiative Turns in More Signatures
- Marijuana: SAFER Takes on the NFL, Cites "Hypocrisy" of Player's Huge Fine for Marijuana Possession
- Australia: Drug Researcher Says Ecstasy Safer Than Binge Drinking, Causes Flap
- Latin America: Mexican Drug Violence Taking Toll on Pres. Calderón's Popularity
- Weekly: Blogging @ the Speakeasy
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Issue #543 – 7/18/08
subscribe now | make a donation | search- Meeting in Vienna last week, representatives of more than 300 non-governmental organizations concerned with various aspects of drug policy crafted a consensus document calling for a fundamental shift in global drug control.
- Two sociologists take on medical marijuana and Santa Cruz's Wo/Men's Access to Medical Marijuana (WAMM) collective. We review their efforts and find them worthy.
- StoptheDrugWar.org's executive director recently did a 25-minute debate on drug legalization on a network that airs across Europe and the Middle East. Video is online here.
- Apply for an internship at DRCNet for this fall (or spring), and you could spend the semester fighting the good fight!
- A North Texas officer snitches for the Zetas, a Louisiana cop gets a package of pot from Mexico, a New Jersey Transit cop gets popped with pounds of pot, a Mississippi cop gets nailed for stealing from the dope fund, and an Ohio narc goes to prison for stealing cocaine.
- Washington has a medical marijuana law and Seattle has a lowest law enforcement priority ordinance, but that didn't stop Seattle cops from seizing hundreds of patient files from a Seattle co-op.
- You can't strip search a school girl to see if she's carrying a low-grade pain reliever, the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled. The only shocking thing about this verdict is that five out 11 of the justices disagreed.
- Voters in Switzerland will have a clear choice on drug policy as they go to the polls November 30.
- Austria's parliament has taken a first step toward making medical marijuana available. A bill it approved allows a state agency to grow it.
- Italy's highest court has recognized the religious use of marijuana in a case involving an Italian Rastafarian.
- Indonesia had not executed anyone for four years as its high court considered a constitutional challenge to the death penalty for drug offenders. But the challenge is over, the death penalty remains, the executions have started again, and there are more on tap.
- Selling equipment used to grow marijuana is not in itself a crime, a British appeals court has ruled.
- Events and quotes of note from this week's drug policy events of years past.
- The Marijuana Policy Project has openings for an Office Administrator/Bookkeeper, a Director of State Policies, a Membership and Events Fellow, and a State Policies Intern in their headquarters in Washington, DC.
- Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) is seeking a highly motivated, well-organized Outreach Director for its Washington, DC or San Francisco office to assist with strengthening the student movement to end the failed War on Drugs.
- Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM) seeks a Media Relations Director to prepare and disseminate information on FAMM's federal and state campaigns through newspapers, periodicals, television and radio and other forms of media.
- "Drug Testing Advocate Gets Busted For Drugs," "U.S. Drug Warriors Interfere With Vienna Drug Policy Summit," "Former Staffer Accuses Drug Czar's Office of Faking Statistics," "Opponents of Marijuana Reform Can't Keep Their Story Straight," "The Link Between Sagging Pants Laws and the Drug War," "Prosecutors Spend Confiscated Drug Money on Margarita Machine, Win 'Best Margarita' at County Fair," "Save the Children, Legalize Drugs," "How Many Patients You Say??... Well Here Are Their Names, Addresses, and Card Numbers."
- Drug War Chronicle is seeking information on serious police misconduct or misjudgments in the treatment of informants. Confidentiality will be protected.
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- Visit our new web site each day to see a running countdown to the events coming up the soonest, and more.
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