URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v14/n933/a04.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Sat, 20 Dec 2014
Source: Palm Beach Post, The (FL)
Copyright: 2014 Associated Press
Contact:
Website: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333
Author: Nicolas Riccardi, Associated Press
LAWSUIT REVEALS STAUNCHEST OPPONENTS OF LEGALIZED POT
Social Conservatives, Law Enforcement Ready for Court Fight.
DENVER - Despite growing public support for legalizing marijuana, a
lawsuit filed by Nebraska and Oklahoma shows that at least two
segments of American society are prepared to fight the idea before
the nation's highest court - social conservatives and law enforcement.
The lawsuit seeks to overturn Colorado's experiment in legalized
recreational pot, alleging that the two conservative states are being
overrun with Colorado marijuana that is making it harder for them to
enforce their own drug laws.
Nebraska Attorney General Jim Bruning framed it as a public-safety
issue, though the complaint provides little data to support its claim
that Colorado pot is pouring into neighboring states.
The case emerges at a time when polls show growing public support for
legal weed. Even Congress this week started to ease restrictions on
the drug, barring the federal government from interfering with the 23
states that allow it for medical uses.
National law-enforcement groups have staunchly opposed the
legalization of marijuana. The lawsuit filed to the U.S. Supreme
Court cheered some police in Colorado who have been frustrated at the
public's wide acceptance of that state's recreational marijuana
market, despite some examples of people overdosing on
high-concentration edibles.
"When you work in the public-safety industry, you're impacted by this
all the time," said Jim Gerhardt, vice president of the Colorado Drug
Investigators Association. "We're seeing it. The firefighters are
seeing it. The hospitals are seeing it. But the general public can be
apathetic."
Mason Tvert, the pro-marijuana activist who helped push legalization
in Colorado, said he was not surprised by the resistance from
Oklahoma and Nebraska, two socially conservative states that were
reluctant to repeal Prohibition.
"When you think about who are the two types of people who'd never
want to try marijuana, it's people who are looking at it morally,
through religion ... and that law-enforcement attitude that this is
the law and we want to keep it," Tvert said.
The legalization movement, he added, has seen some of its stiffest
resistance in conservative, religious states in the Deep South and in
Nebraska, where activists were unable to get enough signatures to put
a medical-marijuana measure on the 2012 ballot.
Law-enforcement agencies have long said anecdotally that they are
making more marijuana arrests and seizing more of the drug since
Colorado voters legalized the drug. But there's no way to know
exactly how much legal pot is leaving the state.
In a recent report, the agency known as the Rocky Mountain High
Intensity Drug Trafficking Area wrote that the amount of Colorado pot
seized on highways increased from an annual average of 2,763 pounds
between 2005 and 2008 to an average of 3,690 pounds from 2009 to
2013. The weed was headed for at least 40 different states.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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