Pubdate: Wed, 21 Dec 2011
Source: Metro Times (Detroit, MI)
Column: Higher Ground
Copyright: 2011 C.E.G.W./Times-Shamrock
Contact:  http://www.metrotimes.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1381
Author: John Sinclair

WHERE THE MOVEMENT BEGAN

How, 40 Years Ago, Sinclair and Company Laid the Groundwork for Today

I'd like to offer my most profound thanks to Amy Cantu and her people 
at the Ann Arbor District Library for their heroic efforts in 
dredging up the past and making it live again in the digital age at 
their new website called freeingjohnsinclair.org, which further 
includes every page of the underground newspaper known as the Ann 
Arbor and Detroit Sun in digital form.

The AADL also sponsored two days of events in Ann Arbor celebrating 
the John Sinclair Freedom Rally of Dec. 10, 1971, including a free 
concert at the Ark featuring Commander Cody and my own band with 
special surprise guest Wayne Kramer of the MC-5 joining Jeff Grand on guitar.

The second day of the festivities included a library-sponsored panel 
discussion centered on the Freedom Rally and the struggle to legalize 
marijuana, and a reunion of the White Panther Party and its 
successor, the Rainbow People's Party, reuniting a whole lot of 
people who first carried the banner for marijuana legalization in 
Michigan back in the 1960s and early '70s.

You probably already know that I just celebrated my 40th anniversary 
of being released from Jackson Prison on Dec. 13, 1971, after serving 
29 months of a 9-1/2- to 10-year sentence for possession of two 
joints on Dec. 22, 1966.

Actually I'd been charged with giving the two joints to an undercover 
policewoman from the Detroit Police Department who had disguised 
herself as a human being to ask me a favor I couldn't refuse. It was 
three days before Christmas and she wanted a joint to take home, so I 
gave her two.

Giving away, or "dispensing," two joints of marijuana - then 
classified by the state as a narcotic - carried the same penalty upon 
conviction as selling a few hundred pounds of heroin: a minimum 
mandatory 20 years in the penitentiary, with a possible maximum 
sentence of life imprisonment.

 From my arrest in Detroit on Jan. 24, 1967, to my release from 
prison almost five years later, I carried on a fight against the 
Michigan marijuana laws that ended in March 1972 when the Michigan 
Supreme Court overturned my conviction and ruled that marijuana was 
in fact not a narcotic and a sentence of 10 years for possession of 
marijuana constituted cruel and unusual punishment - just as I had 
argued in my appeal.

My struggle was aided, abetted and fully supported every step of the 
way by that indispensable element of a successful legal battle: a 
great team of dedicated attorneys, led by Sheldon Otis and Justin C. 
Ravitz, that was motivated not by chance of profit but by intense 
social conviction. This brilliant team of attorneys and legal workers 
took up my case and advanced it exactly as I had intended from the beginning.

I wanted to overthrow the marijuana laws, get them declared 
unconstitutional, put an end to the idiotic classification of 
marijuana as a narcotic, get rid of the imbecilic and sadistic 
sentencing structure, and - in the final analysis - legalize 
marijuana. Most of all I wanted to get the police out of the lives of 
marijuana smokers and indeed, all recreational drug users.

The last two objectives haven't yet been realized, although the 
citizens' initiative to end marijuana prohibition in Michigan now 
being readied for 2012 may, if successful, finally bring us to full 
legalization, and that would certainly begin to remove the cops from 
our lives as smokers.

The legalization of medical marijuana has gone a long way in that 
direction, although Attorney General Schuette and his ilk are not at 
all prepared to give up their stranglehold on the throats of the 
smoking public, but I think it's clear that their days are now numbered.

In my case, I never intended to go to prison to prove that marijuana 
was not a narcotic and that 10 years for two joints was cruel and 
unusual punishment. I fully expected to post an appeal bond and 
proceed with my life as an American while my appeal wound its way 
through the courts to the point where the Michigan Supreme Court 
would have to consider our arguments and ultimately rule in my favor.

But Judge Robert J. Columbo considered me an unrepentant offender - 
not an inaccurate assessment - who deserved to be incarcerated 
without bond, and he sent me straight to Jackson Prison to begin my 
10-year sentence. Then I was shipped to Marquette in the Upper 
Peninsula for a year under maximum security, returned to Jackson and 
held in an isolation block until shortly before my release.

During the two-and-a-half years of my imprisonment, my lawyers, my 
political associates, scores of bands and thousands of our supporters 
rallied on my behalf in a series of countless benefits, protests, 
press conferences, and other events designed to "Free John Now," 
culminating in the John Sinclair Freedom Rally at Crisler Arena in 
Ann Arbor on Friday, Dec. 10, 1971.

But we also lobbied hard in the state Legislature during that period 
for a change in the narcotics laws, and on Dec. 9 the lawmakers voted 
to reclassify marijuana as a "controlled substance" and reduce the 
penalties to one year for possession and four years for sales or 
dispensing the evil weed. My appeal had been argued before the 
Michigan Supreme Court in October 1971 and was pending decision, so 
the judges decided that I could now be granted an appeal bond - 
having already served 2-1/2 times the new maximum sentence for possession.

On Monday, Dec. 13, I walked out of the prison gates to resume my 
life in Ann Arbor as chairman of the Rainbow People's Party and 
creative director of the Rainbow Multi-Media Corporation, a nonprofit 
artists' management and production company. Like I keep saying, that 
was 40 years ago this month, and hopefully this will be the last we 
hear about these events for at least another 10.

So many of the positive things that people accomplished back then has 
been erased from the official record and kept from the awareness of 
the people coming up, who are encouraged to believe that there's not 
much one can do about the oppressive conditions one finds oneself 
living under in the 21st century. Just now, that tide is starting to 
turn as well, and the contemporary movement needs all the information 
about past struggles that we can make available to them.

So thanks again to the Ann Arbor District Library for bringing it all 
back home this month, and as you begin to take up the cudgel for 
ending marijuana prohibition in 2012, take a droll stroll through the 
electronic pages of the digital edition of the Ann Arbor Sun and 
follow the progress of the legalization movement when it began, way 
back in the day.

By the time you read this I intend (the gods of travel willing) to be 
back in Amsterdam for the holidays and the beginning of the new year. 
I'll be back in two weeks with a report from Viper Central on the 
current efforts of the Dutch government to catch up with the leaders 
of the international War on Drugs. Happy New Year's, everybody!

- -Detroit
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom