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. . . a weekly service for the media on news items related
to marijuana prohibition.
June 12, 1997
House Judiciary Members Voice Support For Forfeiture Reform Bill
June
12, 1997, Washington, D.C.: Several members of the
House Judiciary Committee voiced their support on Wednesday for a
civil forfeiture reform bill (H.R. 1835) introduced by Committee
Chairman Henry Hyde (R-Ill.)
"Some
of our civil asset seizure laws are being used in terribly unjust
ways and depriving innocent citizens of their property with
nothing that can be called due process," said Hyde, who
announced that he will move quickly for Congressional passage of
his bill. Hyde received bi-partisan support from many
committee members, including Ranking Democrat John Conyers
(D-Mich.), Barney Frank of Massachusetts (D), and Bob Barr of
Georgia (R), all of whom have signed on as co-sponsors.
Under
civil forfeiture laws, federal and state governments have seized
billions of dollars worth of assets over the past decade.
The law permits law enforcement to confiscate an individual's
assets, including both property and cash, if their exists
probable cause that the assets may be derived from criminal
activity or facilitated in the commission of certain
crimes. The owner does not have to be found guilty or even
formally charged with any crime for the seizure to occur.
In 1993, Hyde reported that 80 percent of the individuals whose
assets are seized by the federal government under drug-forfeiture
laws are never charged with a crime.
"We
cannot continue to unjustly take assets from property owners
unlucky enough to be caught up in civil forfeiture
proceedings," Hyde argued. "Nothing less than the
sanctity of private property is at stake here."
Rep.
Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) agreed. "In the name of the
War on Drugs, we have been surrendering our Constitutional rights
wholesale," he said. "The Gestapo should ask for
[the] powers [permitted under current forfeiture laws,] not the
United States Justice Department."
The
"Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act," introduced by Hyde
on June 10, proposes seven major changes in current asset seizure
laws:
* It
shifts the burden of proof to the government, rather than the
property owner.
* It
mandates that property owners who take reasonable steps to
prevent others from using their property for illegal purposes can
get their property back.
* It
provides for the appointment of legal counsel for indigent
owners.
* It
eliminates the 10 percent cash bond requirement for those seeking
to appeal government seizure actions.
* It
grants property owners 30 days from the time of the seizure to
contest a forfeiture -- not the current 10-20 days allowed by
law.
* It
allows for the release of property pending final disposition of a
case.
* It
allows property owners to sue the federal government for
negligence in its handling or storage of property.
NORML
Executive Director R. Keith Stroup said that he supported Hyde's
forfeiture reform provisions. "The property and cash
of individuals suspected of marijuana-related violations are
often unfairly targeted for forfeiture by law enforcement
officials," Stroup noted. "Hyde's bill puts some
common sense limits on this abusive and runaway practice."
For
more information, please contact R. Keith Stroup of NORML
@ (202) 483-5500 or Forfeiture Endangers American Rights (FEAR) @
(305) 952-0799. Copies of the "Civil Asset Forfeiture
Reform Act" are available from NORML
upon request.
Oregon Bill To Recriminalize Marijuana Moves One Step Closer To Becoming Law
June
12, 1997, Salem, OR: A Republican-sponsored bill
that would recriminalize the possession of less than one ounce of
marijuana passed a Joint Ways and Means subcommittee on Tuesday
by a 5-3 vote. The measure passed the Oregon House of
Representatives in April.
"This
bill is not about health or a message to kids; it is about
partisan politics and control," testified long-time drug-law
reform activist Sandee Burbank of Mothers Against Misuse and
Abuse (MAMA). Burbank said that recriminalizing marijuana
would unfairly and unnecessarily burden taxpayers. She
added that individuals convicted under the new law could lose
their driving privileges for six months.
Under
the provisions of House Bill 3643, possession of less than an
ounce of marijuana would be increased from a
"violation" to a class C misdemeanor crime.
Oregon
was the first state to decriminalize the possession of small
amounts of marijuana in 1973. Presently, marijuana
decriminalization laws remain in effect in ten states:
California, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska,
New York, North Carolina, Ohio, and Oregon.
For
more information, please contact either Sandee Burbank of MAMA @
(541) 298-1031 or Paul Stanford of the Campaign for the
Restoration and Regulation of Hemp @ (503) 235-4606.
Site Of Marijuana Festival Could Be Subject Of Forfeiture
June
12, 1997, Ferryville, WI: Property that was home
to this year's annual "Weedstock" music festival could
be seized by law enforcement, according to statements made by a
Wisconsin prosecutor.
Mark
Peterson, Crawford County corporation counsel, said he warned
festival organizers before the event that forfeiture laws permit
authorities to seize property that has been a site for illegal
drug use. Peterson is citing the 42 drug-related arrests
made by police during the three-day event as evidence that
illegal drugs were used on the premises. The site of the
event was leased to festival organizers by a Ferryville farmer.
Rally
organizer Ben Masel said that he and others would defend the
farmer's property if authorities tried to confiscate the
land. "A First Amendment protected activity is not a
basis for forfeiture," Masel said. Organizers
estimated that 3,500 people attended the weekend festival.
Although
local sheriff William Fillbach told reporters that this years
festival went "very smoothly," Peterson said that he is
still considering filing a petition in either state or federal
court to initiate forfeiture proceedings.
For
more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre of The
NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Weld's Support For Medical Marijuana May Jeopardize Nomination
June
12, 1997, Washington, D.C.: Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Chairman Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) is objecting to
President Clinton's choice for U.S. Ambassador to Mexico,
Massachusetts Gov. William Weld, because he supports legal access
to medical marijuana.
Helms,
whose committee must approve all ambassadorial nominees, said
that he did not feel Weld was "ambassador quality" and
criticized his support for the use of marijuana as a
medicine. Tolerance toward the use of medical marijuana
could make Weld unsuitable to be an ambassador of a major drug
producing and trafficking nation like Mexico, Helms stated.
Weld
signed legislation last year reinvigorating a statewide program
that would distribute marijuana to certified patients who suffer
from serious illnesses like glaucoma and cancer. The bill
also creates an "affirmative defense" of medical
necessity for some patients who use medical marijuana.
Earlier this year, Weld publicly stated that he has "no
problem" with the use of marijuana for medical purposes.
Clinton
said that he plans to nominate Weld for the position despite
Helms objections.
For
more information, please contact either Allen St. Pierre of The
NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751 or NORML
Mass/Cann @ (617) 944-2266.
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