Pubdate: Tue, 20 Feb 2007
Source: Reno Gazette-Journal (NV)
Copyright: 2007 Reno Gazette-Journal
Contact: http://www.rgj.com/helpdesk/news/letter-to-editor.php
Website: http://www.rgj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/363
Author: Guy Clifton, Reno Gazette-Journal
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)

SENATE CONSIDERS MARIJUANA, KIDS BILL

Nevada parents who grow a single marijuana plant in their home where 
children live could be subject to a prison term of up to 15 years, 
according to a bill that was debated Monday at the Nevada Legislature.

Senate Bill 5, sponsored by state Sen. Joe Heck, R-Las Vegas, would 
subject parents who grow or sell marijuana in the presence of 
children to the same penalties as adults who operate methamphetamine 
labs in front of children.

Lawmakers approved a bill in 2005 that created tough prison sentences 
for people who cook meth, or manufacture or sell any illegal drugs in 
the presence of children as a way to fight the meth epidemic that 
many lawmakers say is sweeping Nevada.

Selling and growing marijuana was left out of the 2005 legislation, 
so now, Heck wants to include it.

"You are exposing children to dangers when you are selling any 
illegal substance out of your house or growing any illegal substance 
out of your house, so you should be held to the higher penalties," 
Heck told the Senate Human Services and Education Committee.

"If a guy has a couple of (marijuana) plants in there (now), he could 
be out in a week," Heck said. "But if there is a child present, with 
this, now he could serve five to 15 years for exposing that child to 
the dangers of this activity."

Members of the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada and the Clark 
County Public Defenders office said the bill needs to be re-written 
to exclude parents who grow small amounts of marijuana. "The way the 
bill is currently drafted states that someone could be growing 
marijuana for their personal use and not for the purposes of 
distributing it, selling it or engaging in drug trafficking and they 
would be treated as if they were engaged in those activities," said 
Gary Peck, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada.

The new law could negatively impact Nevada's overflowing prison 
population, said Peck, who noted the Nevada Department of Corrections 
is seeking $300 million over the next two years for prison 
construction projects.

"No one who is testifying in support of the bill can actually talk 
about the implications in respect to the incarceration rate," Peck said.

"What we could be doing is shooting fleas with cannons and that is 
unfortunate," Peck said. Children who are in the same home where 
marijuana is grown are in danger, Heck said.

"The very behavior of small children puts them at risk around these 
materials, including marijuana," Heck said. "As any parent knows, the 
first place a toddler places anything they find is in their mouth. 
What if this object is a marijuana plant?"

A representative of the Clark County public defender office said his 
organization did not advocate the legalization, cultivation or use of 
marijuana, but the law that provides penalties for parents who cook 
meth in front of children or sell other illegal drugs in front of 
children should not be applied to those who may grow a few marijuana plants.

"The reason that statute was written the way is was is because meth 
labs have a tendency to explode and the chemical components, the 
fumes and the chemical burns -- the exposure to those -- were the 
reasons for the greater penalties," said public defender Jason 
Frierson. "As I read it, this is treating the growth of one marijuana 
plant similarly with the existence of a meth lab in the presence of children."

Chairman Maurice Washington, R-Sparks, said he would like to pass the 
bill out of committee but urged, Frierson and Heck to iron out differences.

Reno officials, the Nevada District Attorneys Association, the Nevada 
Sheriffs and Chiefs Association and the Peace Officers Research 
Association of Nevada spoke in favor of the bill.

"It is our belief that anytime you have drugs and children together, 
it is a dangerous combination, a dangerous mix," said Kristin 
Erickson, a Washoe County deputy district attorney speaking for the 
state association.

Increased penalties for smoking marijuana in front of children are 
not part of the bill, Heck said.

"We're not trying to lock to up -- as much as I would like to -- 
somebody for smoking a doobie in front of their kids," Heck said. "We 
are looking at the person who is selling out of their house and 
growing out of the house and exposing those children to those dangers."
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