• Drug War Chronicle, Issue #968 -- 4/14/17 - Table of contents with live

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    Drug War Chronicle, Issue #968 -- 4/14/17
    Phillip S. Smith, Editor,psmith@drcnet.org http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/968

    A Publication of StoptheDrugWar.org
    David Borden, Executive Director,borden@drcnet.org
    "Raising Awareness of the Consequences of Drug Prohibition"

    DISCOUNT REGISTRATION FOR NATIONAL CANNABIS SUMMIT, JUNE 12-14, USE CODE STDW15, EARLY-BIRD PRICING UNTIL APRIL 21:http://go.gsmiweb.com/stdwcbs17

    Table of Contents:

    1. TRUMP DRUG CZAR NOMINEE: TOUGH ON COLOMBIAN PEASANTS AND US MARIJUANA USERS Pennsylvania Republican Congressman Tom Marino reportedly gets the nod. It's not good news for progressive drug policy reform.
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/11/trump_drug_czar_nominee_drug_warrior

    2. SENATORS' FALSE CLAIMS PAVE WAY FOR DANGEROUS DRUG BILL [FEATURE]
    Nobody's selling strawberry-flavored meth to your kids, but this bill could still hurt some people.
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/12/grassley_feinstein_bill

    3. WATCH: FLORIDA SHERIFF'S CREEPY TOUGH GUY VIDEO THREATENS HEROIN DEALERS Nothing inspires confidence like masked cops, right? http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/10/watch_florida_sheriffs_creepy_to

    4. MEDICAL MARIJUANA UPDATE
    West Virginia is poised to become the next medical marijuana state, New Mexico's GOP governor vetoes a bill that would have allowed medical marijuana for opioid addiction, Ohio takes another step toward getting its system up and running, and more.
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/12/medical_marijuana_update

    5. CHRONICLE AM: URUGUAY LEGAL POT SALES TO START IN JULY, ID GOV VETOES FORFEITURE REFORM, MORE... (4/7/17)
    The Uruguayan government sets the date for legal marijuana sales in pharmacies to begin, West Virginia is just a governor's signature away from becoming the 29th medical marijuana state, Idaho's Republican governor vetoes a broadly-supported asset
    forfeiture reform bill, and more. http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/07/chronicle_am_uruguay_legal_pot_s

    6. CHRONICLE AM: NM GOP GOV VETOES MEDMJ & OD BILLS, CANADA MJ BILL THURSDAY, MORE... (4/10/17)
    Congressional drug policy reform bills are piling up, New Mexico's GOP governor vetoes medical marijuana and overdose prevention bills, Canada's Liberals roll out their marijuana legalization bill Thursday, and more.
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/10/nm_gop_gov_vetoes_medmj_od_bills

    7. CHRONICLE AM: TRUMP NAMES DRUG CZAR NOMINEE, DALLAS TO TAKE UP DECRIM, MORE... (4/11/17)
    A Colorado bill barring co-op grows heads to the governor, an Oregon bill aimed at protecting marijuana consumers and an Iowa bill reforming asset forfeiture go to their governors, Trump reportedly names a new drug czar, and more.
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/11/chronicle_am_trump_names_drug_cz

    8. CHRONICLE AM: SESSIONS "SURPRISED" BY MJ SUPPORT, VT MJ BILL ON LAST LEGS, MORE... (4/12/17)
    The US attorney general admits being surprised that people don't like his stance on marijuana, Vermont's legalization bill is on a death watch, Illinois legalizers gear up, and more.
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/12/chronicle_am_sessions_surprised

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    1. TRUMP DRUG CZAR NOMINEE: TOUGH ON COLOMBIAN PEASANTS AND US MARIJUANA USERS http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2017/apr/11/trump_drug_czar_nominee_drug_warrior

    President Trump will name Pennsylvania Congressman Tom Marino (R) to head the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP (https://www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp) -- the drug czar's office), CBS News reported Tuesday (http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pennsylvania-
    congressman-to-be-named-drug-czar-by-donald-trump/). The White House gave no official comment, but sources told CBS that an official announcement would come soon.

    Marino's legacy of legislative achievements around drug policy offers little comfort to reformers looking for signs that the "law and order" theme of the Trump administration may not be as bad as it sounds. Marino is a former prosecutor now in his third
    term in the House. His 2016 Transnational Drug Trafficking Act (https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/114/s32) expands the ability of US prosecutors to use extraterritoriality to go after international drug traffickers, but while the law is touted as
    aiming at "kingpins," but observers (http://extract.suntimes.com/news/10/153/19836/new-united-states-drug-war-policy-expands-extradition-transnational-drug-trafficking-act) south of the border have argued that the law "targets people on the lowest rungs
    of the trafficking ladder, i.e. Colombia's coca farmers." Marino has also been a reliable vote in opposition to marijuana reform (https://www.mpp.org/news/press/statement-marijuana-policy-project-regarding-reports-congressman-tom-marino-will-named-next-
    white-house-drug-czar/) in Congress.

    Marino's rural congressional district has seen rising concern about heroin and opioids, and he serves on the House bipartisan committee combating the opioid epidemic. A bill he was an author and key supporter of in that area may suggest a more complex
    picture -- the 2016 Ensuring Patient Access and Effective Drug Enforcement Act (https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/senate-bill/483/text), which supporters characterized as balancing the needs of patients, the pharmaceutical industry, and law
    enforcement, but which critics describe (https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/the-dea-slowed-enforcement-while-the-opioid-epidemic-grew-out-of-control/2016/10/22/aea2bf8e-7f71-11e6-8d13-d7c704ef9fd9_story.html) as a means of undercutting the DEA'
    s ability to hold pharmaceutical drug distributors accountable for the diversion of large amounts of opioid pain relievers.

    The ability of pain patients to have access to the drugs that can help them is a continuing -- and under-covered -- issue in the debate around prescription opioids. So is the ability of physicians to appropriately prescribe them within running afoul of
    regulatory authorities or even drug enforcement authorities. If Marino's bill reflects a concern with such issues, or a more general willingness to treat DEA pronouncements on such matters with skepticism, that could be useful. Conversely, however, the
    nation is also in the midst of a much more well-covered increase in the misuse of opioids. ONDCP has a role to play in promoting public health measures that can reduce overdoses and the risk of addiction. If Marino is too deferential to the preferences
    of big pharma lobbyists, while otherwise hooked on hard-line drug war approaches, opportunities to advance positive approaches for reducing the risks that go with opioids may be squandered.

    In the fight over the 2016 Act, Marino, as chairman of the House Judiciary Committee on Regulatory Reform, clashed repeatedly with DEA Office of Diversion Control head Joseph Rannazzisi. In a 2014 conference call with congressional staffers, Rannazzisi
    warned that the bill, backed by a pharmaceutical industry lobbying campaign, would protect corporations engaged in criminal activity.

    "[If t]his bill passes the way it's written we won't be able to get immediate suspension orders, we won't be able to stop the hemorrhaging of these drugs out of these bad pharmacies and these bad corporations," Rannazzisi recalled (https://www.
    washingtonpost.com/investigations/the-dea-slowed-enforcement-while-the-opioid-epidemic-grew-out-of-control/2016/10/22/aea2bf8e-7f71-11e6-8d13-d7c704ef9fd9_story.html) telling them. "What you're doing is filing a bill that will protect defendants in our
    cases."

    Rannazzisi's opposition infuriated Marino, who ripped into the veteran DEA official's boss, then-DEA Administrator Michele Leonhart at a congressional hearing later that year.

    "It is my understanding that Joe Rannazzisi, a senior DEA official, has publicly accused we sponsors of the bill of, quote, 'supporting criminals,' unquote" Marino said (https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/the-dea-slowed-enforcement-while-the-
    opioid-epidemic-grew-out-of-control/2016/10/22/aea2bf8e-7f71-11e6-8d13-d7c704ef9fd9_story.html). "This offends me immensely."

    A week later, Marino and Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) demanded that the Justice Department Office of the Inspector General investigate Rannazzis for "intimidating" members of Congress. Rannazzissi was replaced and retired in October 2015.

    Marino's record is good enough for anti-marijuana crusader and former ONDCP advisor Kevin Sabet of Smart Approaches to Marijuana (Project SAM). "My understanding is that Tom has a deep understanding of the issue and is excited to get started," he
    enthused to CBS News.

    But it's not good enough for anyone interested in a truly progressive approach to drug policy.


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