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July 16, 1998
Drug Czar Distorts Facts To Malign Dutch Drug Policies
July 16, 1998, Washington, D.C.:
Statistics flaunted by Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey regarding alleged Dutch homicide
and marijuana usage rates are purposely misleading and inaccurate, NORML Foundation
Executive Director Allen St. Pierre charged today.
"It is unacceptable for a high ranking
U.S. official to stoop to using such tactics to malign the Netherlands' drug
policies," St. Pierre said.
Earlier this week, McCaffrey claimed that the
Dutch murder rate is more than twice that of America's. He further purported that
three times as many Dutch youth admit trying marijuana than do their U.S. counterparts.
McCaffrey said that liberal drug policies were to blame for the higher Dutch
figures.
In fact, however, both Dutch homicide rates and
prevalence of youth marijuana use are far lower than those in America.
"There is a very disturbing trend of
blatant misinformation coming from Barry McCraffrey, which seems to indicate that he is
woefully uninformed about key parts of the very policy he is paid to represent and
enforce," said David Borden of the Drug Reform Coordination Network, an Interet-based
information center on drug policy.
Official data from the Dutch government's
Central Planning Bureau put the country's murder rate for 1996 at 1.8 per 100,000 people.
That figure is 440 percent lower than the current U.S. murder rate of 8.2 per
100,000. McCaffrey falsely claimed that the Dutch murder rate was 17.58 per 100,000.
McCaffrey also alleged that Dutch youth
experiment with marijuana in greater numbers than U.S teens. However, 1996 data
recorded by the University of Michigan's Monitoring the Future project determined that 45
percent of America's high school seniors admit they have tried marijuana. By
comparison, research compiled by the National Institute of Health and Addiction in the
Netherlands found that less than 21 percent of Dutch adolescents have experimented with
the drug. McCaffrey falsely stated that only 9.1 percent of American teens had ever
tried marijuana.
"The Dutch overwhelmingly approve of their
current marijuana policies," St. Pierre remarked. "Those policies seek to
normalize rather than dramatize marijuana use, and separate marijuana users from the hard
drug market. If McCaffrey believes that America's marijuana policy of arresting and
jailing more than 12 million users since 1965 is more effective than the Netherlands',
then he should find no need to distort the facts and lie to the American people."
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of the NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. David
Borden of DRCNet may be reached @ (202) 293-8340.
Oregon Voters Will Decide On Legalizing Medical Marijuana This Fall
July 16, 1998, Portland, OR:
Oregonians will decide this fall whether to legalize the medical use of marijuana
under a physician's supervision. State election officials announced Friday that
petitioners Oregonians for Medical Rights qualified their medical-use proposal for the
November ballot.
"The federal government's failure to act
on the medical marijuana issue leaves proponents no choice but to bring this question
straight to the voters," NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup said.
The Oregon initiative seeks to allow patients
suffering from a "debilitating medical condition" and holding a state-issued
identification card to legally possess up to one ounce of marijuana. Registered
patients would also be able to cultivate marijuana for medical use. Cultivation
limits allow patients to grow no more than three mature plants at any one time. The
initiative also permits non-registered patients to raise the "affirmative defense of
medical necessity" if they face state criminal marijuana charges.
"This is a tightly worded initiative
designed to benefit seriously ill patients using marijuana under a doctor's
supervision," Stroup said.
Oregonians will also vote this year on whether
to accept or reject the Legislature's decision to recriminalize the possession of up to
one ounce of marijuana for recreational use. Oregon became the first state to
decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana in 1973. Last year, the
Legislature decided to increase the penalty for simple marijuana possession from a
noncriminal "violation" to a class C misdemeanor punishable by 30 days in jail
and a $1,000 fine. Petitioners Citizens for Sensible Law Enforcement collected
sufficient signatures to freeze the new law and refer the measure to this year's November
ballot.
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or Geoff Sugerman of Oregonians for Medical Rights
@ (503) 873-7927. Citizens for Responsible Law Enforcement may be reached @ (503)
239-0575.
Australian State Decriminalizes The Possession Of Marijuana
July 16, 1998, Victoria, Australia:
Victoria's Chief of Police announced that first time marijuana users will no longer
face criminal charges for possessing less than 50 grams of the drug. Victoria is the
fourth Australian state to enact marijuana decriminalization in recent years.
Police Commissioner Neil Comrie said the new
policy will take effect on September 1, 1998. A six month trial of the liberal
policy in the Broadmeadows district of Victoria had been successful, Comrie said.
"Victoria's new marijuana policy is
similar to the laws of ten U.S. states where marijuana users face a civil 'violation'
rather than criminal penalties for possessing small amounts of the drug," NORML
Executive Director R. Keith Stroup said. "It is encouraging to see other
regions around the globe adopt these reforms."
Under the new system, individuals will receive
a warning for possessing marijuana. Individuals may receive no more than two
cautions, must have no prior criminal convictions for drug offenses, and agree to being
cautioned.
Other Australian states that rely on the
caution system are South Australia, the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), and the
Northern Territory. This May, the Drug and Alcohol Council of South Australia
concluded a two year national study finding that the decriminalization of marijuana does
not lead to increased use.
Comrie said that Victoria will also begin a
pilot program for warning users of other illicit drugs, including heroin. The trial
program for hard drug offenders will have stricter conditions, he added.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Nevada Medical Marijuana Proponents To Challenge Signature Count
July 16, 1998, Carson City, NV:
A signature drive to place a medical marijuana initiative on this year's state
ballot fell short by a total of 43 signatures in two counties, the Las Vegas
Review-Journal reported Tuesday.
Dan Hart, spokesman for Nevadans for Medical
Rights, said that his group will appeal to the Secretary of State to review the results.
The group remains "confident" that the required signatures will be
restored in the necessary counties.
Petitions to qualify for the ballot fell seven
signatures short in Lyon county and 36 short in Nye County, the paper reported. The
group was successful in eleven other counties, turning in more than 74,000 signatures
overall.
Petitioners seek to amend the state
Constitution to allow patients to use marijuana upon the advice of their physician.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751 or Dave Fratello of Americans
for Medical Rights @ (310) 394-2952.
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