|
News Release |
1001
Connecticut Ave, NW - Ste 710 - Washington, DC 20036 |
July 12, 1999
NORML Calls On Congress
To Stop Arresting Marijuana Smokers
Urges An End To "Reefer Madness" Marijuana Policy
WHAT: Hearing: "The Decriminalization of
Illegal Drugs"
WHEN: July 13, 1999: 10 a.m.
WHERE: 2154 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington,
D.C.: "There is nothing wrong with the responsible use of
marijuana by adults and it should be of no interest or concern to the
government," NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. will testify
before Congress tomorrow.
Stroup is one of eight panelists who
will appear at Congress' second hearing this summer to debate U.S. drug policy.
"Marijuana prohibition is a
dismal and costly failure," Stroup says. "The debate over
marijuana policy in this country needs to expand beyond the current parameters
to include an analysis of (1) decriminalizing the marijuana smoker and (2)
legalizing and regulating the sale of marijuana to eliminate the black market.
"Congress must move beyond the
'reefer madness' phase of this debate. For too long elected officials have
attempted to frighten Americans into supporting harsh criminal penalties by
exaggerating marijuana's potential harms. It is time for Congress to end
their crusade against marijuana and marijuana smokers, and deal with this public
health issue on a rational basis."
Stroup noted that marijuana
decriminalization saves law enforcement resources without increasing marijuana
use in the ten states that have enacted such a policy. "Today,
approximately 30 percent of the American population live under some type of
marijuana decriminalization law, and their experience has been favorable,"
he said. Stroup added the only U.S. federal study ever to compare
marijuana use patterns among decriminalized and non-decriminalized states found,
"Decriminalization has had virtually no effect on either marijuana use or
on related attitudes about marijuana use among young people." Most
recently, the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine reaffirmed in
March that, "There is little evidence that decriminalization of marijuana
use necessarily leads to a substantial increase in marijuana use."
Stroup concluded: "Arresting and
jailing otherwise law-abiding citizens who smoke marijuana is a wasteful and
incredibly destructive policy. It wastes valuable law enforcement
resources that should be focused on violent and serious crime, it invites
government into areas of our private lives that are inappropriate, and it
frequently destroys the lives, careers, and families of productive
citizens. It is time to end marijuana prohibition."
For more information, please
contact Paul Armentano of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or Allen St. Pierre of The
NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
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