Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 Source: Helena Independent Record (MT) Copyright: 2015 Helena Independent Record Contact: http://helenair.com/app/contact/letters_to_editor/ Website: http://helenair.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1187 Author: Jordon Niedermeier, Billings Gazette MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION PUSH IS ABOUT MONEY, FORMER DRUG POLICY ADVISER SAYS DURING SPEECH IN BILLINGS BILLINGS -- A leading opponent of marijuana legalization delivered a three-hour talk on what he says are myths surrounding the drug in Billings on Tuesday. Kevin Sabet, who directs the Drug Policy Institute at the University of Florida and is co-founder of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, addressed about a dozen educators, prosecutors and law enforcement professionals, mostly from small towns in Eastern Montana. SAM seeks a middle road between incarceration and legalization, according to the group's website. The event was organized by the Eastern Montana Drug Prosecution Coordination Program, a publicly funded law enforcement education program. Sabet served in drug policy jobs during the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations. He described marijuana's growing popularity and the negative effects caused by the more potent weed that's now available. "The Cheech and Chong pot from 20 years ago is nothing compared to what we have today," he said. Sabet opposes legalization but he also maintains marijuana users should not be prosecuted and jailed. The legalization movement, to him, is driven more by people interested in getting rich than stoners looking to get high legally. "Legalization is about one thing, and that's money." Sabet said. "It's about profit." Sabet's presentations and his book "Reefer Sanity: Seven Great Myths about Marijuana" address the most common arguments for legalization. Among the "myths" cited by Sabet are that marijuana is harmless and nonaddictive; eaten or smoked marijuana has medicinal value and that countless people are behind bars for smoking marijuana. Sabet made several references to "Reefer Madness," a 1937 propaganda film. He said he wasn't trying to scare his audience but described one boy who died after eating a marijuana edible product in Colorado. He said the boy died after he consumed the drug and fell from a deck. He said the incident was just one of four deaths attributed to panic attacks caused by marijuana in Colorado. Sabet said he has never smoked marijuana, but his lack of firsthand experience doesn't change the relevance of his positions. "People think they can talk because they've done marijuana, but that's kind of like saying you can only talk about suicide if you've committed suicide," he said. Not everyone in the small crowd agreed with Sabet. Jace Killsback, tribal health coordinator for the Northern Cheyenne Tribal Board of Health, said he was part of one of the first medical marijuana cooperatives in California while he attended UC Berkeley in the late 1990s. He smoked marijuana until Montana tightened restrictions on medicinal use. Killsback is now researching the merits of legalization after the U.S. Justice Department announced federal marijuana laws would no longer be enforced on reservations. He has attended several informational meetings and had open discussions on the medical use of marijuana since then. Killsback said he attended the presentation because he thought Sabet would provide a balanced look at marijuana, but instead found a lot statistics presented without context. "I think it's propaganda because he's using data but not looking at other circumstances like community or economic issues that contribute to things like low educational obtainment," he said. Killsback said he hoped the other lecture attendees would think critically about the presentation instead of taking everything Sabet said "as gospel." Smart Approaches to Marijuana, co-founded by former U.S. Congressman Patrick Kennedy, recently unveiled proposals for the U.S. government to ease restrictions on scientific research into marijuana's potential as medicine, a first step for an organization of its kind. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom