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121 US OK: LTE: Selective ComplianceWed, 21 Dec 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Lipsinic, Frank Area:Oklahoma Lines:26 Added:12/22/2005

Norma Sapp (Your Views, Dec. 14) wrote that "Many upstanding citizens out there use marijuana. Until they stand up and identify themselves, their lives are in danger because of our laws." Shall the next step in destroying our culture be in selecting the laws we obey? No "upstanding citizens" selectively break laws, especially drug laws! Maybe that's why they don't stand up and identify themselves. Sapp's approach is like the North American Man/Boy Love Association saying many "upstanding citizens out there" are abusing children!

Frank Lipsinic

Oklahoma City

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122 US OK: Pain Sufferer Takes Message On The RoadSun, 18 Dec 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Gollob, Beth Area:Oklahoma Lines:74 Added:12/21/2005

A Boston man walking cross-country to raise awareness about chronic pain stopped in Oklahoma City last week to talk about treatment options and roadblocks during an OU Medical Center forum. Attorney General Drew Edmondson complained during the forum about law enforcement efforts that restrict doctors from prescribing controlled medication for chronic pain.

Dennis Kinch, a chronic pain sufferer and spokesman for the National Pain Foundation, talked during Thursday's forum about the health problems that took away everything he loved. Kinch left Chicago in September on a walking trip along U.S. Highway 66 to raise awareness about chronic pain and options available.

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123 US OK: Touted Teacher, Husband Facing Multiple ChargesThu, 01 Dec 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Previch, Chad Area:Oklahoma Lines:62 Added:12/03/2005

An elementary teacher and a youth counselor were charged Wednesday with four drug counts involving marijuana found on their property. [indentity deleted] surrendered to police after a search warrant was served at their property.

They were charged with cultivation of marijuana, unlawful possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, possession of drug paraphernalia and failure to obtain a drug tax stamp.

Acting on a tip, police searched their house about 8 p.m. Nov. 23.

Police found 33 mature marijuana plants -- all taller than 6 feet -- in a backyard shed, said [location deleted] police Maj. Mark Irwin, who heads special investigations. Police also recovered 16 saplings, a half-pound of the drug, growing lights, pipes, growing books and magazines, nine assault rifles and two handguns.

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124 US OK: Bad Stop No ConvictionSat, 03 Dec 2005
Source:Tahlequah Daily Press (OK) Author:Gibbins, Bob Area:Oklahoma Lines:44 Added:12/03/2005

A bad traffic stop in June has led to the dismissal of drug trafficking charges against a local man.

Special District Judge Sandy Crosslin, on Tuesday, granted a defense motion to suppress evidence gained in the case against Antonio Jerome Parker, 27. Jim Cosby, Parker's attorney, argued that District Attorney Investigator Clint Johnson stopped Parker June 9 in an unmarked vehicle and was not wearing an official uniform.

Cosby cited state law that requires traffic stops to be made in marked vehicles by someone wearing a uniform. His motion states the law was written because of imposters posing as officers, and that Tahlequah police, Cherokee County sheriff's deputies, Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers and others were available to make the stop for Johnson, who testified at a hearing that he stopped Parker for speeding.

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125 US OK: Meth DestructionTue, 15 Nov 2005
Source:Claremore Daily Progress, The (OK) Author:Grunden, Karin Area:Oklahoma Lines:280 Added:11/16/2005

(Editor's Note: This is the first part in a CNHI News Service series on meth use around the country.)

- -- Terre Haute, Ind., 2003

At 17 she snorted her first line.

By 23, she was shooting up.

A mere four years later, Donna Green sits on a hospital bed at a Terre Haute nursing home, where a crayon drawing by her daughter and a poster of The Doors are taped to the wall.

Dabbing her eyes with a wad of toilet paper, Green struggles to explain what drug use has done to her life.

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126 US OK: Mother's Addiction CostlyTue, 15 Nov 2005
Source:Claremore Daily Progress, The (OK) Author:Glenn, Eddie Area:Oklahoma Lines:60 Added:11/15/2005

The heart shoots meth through the twists and turns of the circulatory system. The drug grabs hold of the nervous system, forcing it to pump out massive amounts of norepinephrine, the chemical that regulates the heart rate.

At the same time, meth is barricading off norepinephrine's escape route, holding it hostage in the murky bloodstream. Along with the meth, norepinephrine is pumped through the body's tunnels, caves and slippery slides that are its plumbing -- spiking the heart rate, yet constricting blood vessels.

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127 US OK: Should Prisons Punish Or Prevent?Fri, 11 Nov 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Simpson, Susan Area:Oklahoma Lines:97 Added:11/13/2005

Experts Debate

Thousands of Oklahomans with mental illness or drug addiction are incarcerated in Oklahoma because of a system largely favoring punishment over prevention and recovery, speakers said Thursday at an emergency summit in Oklahoma City. $16,842: annual cost to house a prisoner.

Hundreds of state leaders and advocates gathered to push for ways to keep nonviolent offenders out of the state's jails and prisons. Speakers advocated early diagnosis and treatment of people with addiction or mental illness at the community level, or quickly after they enter the criminal justice system. They also want more training for police and others who respond to crisis situations. "The majority of individuals who struggle with mental illness are not violent," said Terry Cline, the state's mental health commissioner. He said programs like Oklahoma County's mental health court are a cost-effective alternative to prison. Mental health courts also are in McCurtain County and are planned in Seminole County, and Cline hopes to add 10 more next year, if funded by the state Legislature. Many counties also have drug courts diverting nonviolent drug addicts into treatment. But until more community services are available to prevent, diagnose and treat mental illness and substance abuse, the problem of overcrowded prisons will plague the state, Cline said. "These are Band-Aid approaches," he said.

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128 US OK: Edu: Column: Evidence Reveals Genuine Health PotentialThu, 03 Nov 2005
Source:Daily O'Collegian (OK State U, OK Edu) Author:Battle, Brent Area:Oklahoma Lines:111 Added:11/05/2005

Recent research and public opinion make a strong case for the legalization of medicinal and recreational hemp, or marijuana.

Denver residents voted 54 percent in favor of an ordinance decriminalizing city hemp laws, letting citizens possess up to one ounce, according to The Associated Press.

This is the latest in a hard-fought battle for changes in federal hemp policy, particularly the Angel Raich case over medical marijuana. Her case went to the Supreme Court in June, back-firing, with the high court saying local and state laws do not trump federal laws.

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129 US OK: Edu: Column: Legalize Pot, Sterilize PotheadsMon, 31 Oct 2005
Source:Oklahoma Daily, The (U of Oklahoma, OK Edu) Author:Heaton, Andrew Area:Oklahoma Lines:106 Added:10/31/2005

I have a brilliant plan that will save tax dollars, please hippies, increase tax revenue, kidney-punch organized crime and significantly shorten lines at the grocery store.

We legalize marijuana, tax the hell out of it and then add a lot of sterility drugs.

Every voting demographic can find something to love about this plan. Legal pot: Green Party, Libertarians, many Democrats. Taxing evil: Republicans. Sterility drugs: Me.

I estimate that the federal government blows $8 billion or so annually on prosecuting marijuana sales and possession. If Mary Jane were decriminalized, those same tax dollars could be spent on more worthwhile expenditures, like combating poverty or sending a chimpanzee to Titan.

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130 US OK: OPED: Prisoner Continues Education To Help OthersSun, 23 Oct 2005
Source:Chickasha Express-Star (OK) Author:Clarke, Jason Area:Oklahoma Lines:63 Added:10/28/2005

While most view prison as a place to put criminals, one man has found hope in his cell.

Prison has been a life changing experience for Robert Steven Pearcy.

"I deeply feel my time here has given me the opportunity to better my life," Pearcy said.

Pearcy is an inmate at the Jess Dunn Correctional Center in Taft, Okla.

He pled guilty in Grady County, to endeavoring to manufacture methamphetamine.

Reportedly out searching for anhydrous ammonia when the rest of the lab was busted on Nov. 5, 2004, Pearcy was picked up by a trooper while walking south along Hwy. 81 the next day.

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131 US OK: Red Ribbon Week Oct 23-31Sun, 23 Oct 2005
Source:Alva Review-Courier (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:58 Added:10/28/2005

Alva Schools Will Be Honoring National Red Ribbon October 23 - 31.

Red Ribbon Week began in 1985 after the death of Enrique "Kiki" Camerana, a Drug Enforcement Agent, who was close to uncovering the identities of key members of a Mexican drug cartel.

Angered by his death and the destruction caused by drugs and alcohol in America, those in his hometown of Calexico, Calif., began wearing red ribbons as a symbol of their commitment to fight the illegal use of drugs.

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132 US OK: Woman Turns Case Into CareerThu, 13 Oct 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Weaver, Ann Area:Oklahoma Lines:114 Added:10/20/2005

The small-town girl whose challenge to mandatory drug testing in schools went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1998 is now an Ivy League graduate and a political activist working with American Indians.

Lindsay Earls was a 16-year-old sophomore at Tecumseh High School when the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit on her behalf against Tecumseh Public Schools as a means of challenging drug- testing policies in schools nationwide.

Show airs tonight Earls' story will be featured on "ACLU Freedom Files," a 10-part television series that addresses civil rights issues and stars ACLU clients, the attorneys who defend them and well-known actors, activists and comedians.

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133 US OK: Editorial: Infant Mortality Linked To MaternalMon, 03 Oct 2005
Source:Ada Evening News, The (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:65 Added:10/03/2005

If Oklahomans needed any more evidence of the seriousness of substance abuse in the state, it was offered at a recent legislative interim study committee meeting.

The state's shockingly high rate of infant mortality and incidence of low birth weight are directly tied to maternal substance abuse, usually the highly addictive and extremely dangerous methamphetamine. The drug is so powerful women find it hard to kick during pregnancy and after giving birth, which sometimes even leads to the children being taken from them.

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134 US OK: Flight Gives Student A View Of 'War On Drugs'Tue, 13 Sep 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Marks, Dawn Area:Oklahoma Lines:66 Added:09/13/2005

When Putnam City North High School student Maddye Hayes got into the helicopter, she knew it wasn't just any ride.

Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control agents with guns followed behind to protect agents and visitors, including the 14-year-old, last Thursday during their aerial search of central Oklahoma as part of the bureau's annual marijuana eradication program.

"It was like the real deal," Hayes said.

Though the group didn't find any plants during Hayes' ride, she said it changed her perception of marijuana cultivation.

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135 US OK: Editorial: Turnaround - Prison Programs Help ConvictsMon, 12 Sep 2005
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:46 Added:09/13/2005

It's difficult not to be skeptical when we hear of convicts who have "found" religion and turned their lives around. But it does happen.

An Oklahoma City program around since 1994 is helping felons kick their addictions, find work and establish stable lives outside prison walls. Hand Up Ministries, recently profiled by The Oklahoman's Dawn Marks, is a privately funded residential program that requires former inmates to be Christian.

They must attend Bible studies twice a week and church once a week. Many enter the program straight out of prison and stay for a year or more. That time gives them an opportunity to get treatment for substance abuse, find a job and get their lives on a path different from the one that landed them in prison.

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136 US OK: Editorial: Members Of Community Working Together To GetThu, 01 Sep 2005
Source:Enid News & Eagle (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:53 Added:09/02/2005

One of the hardest problems any community has to face is the issue of substance abuse among its young people. There are so many things out there to tempt teens, one of the latest of which seemingly is innocent cough syrup. Some over-the-counter cold medications contain dextromethorphan, also called DXM. To get a cheap high, teens consume the pills and syrup in large quantities.

In Woodward, the group Partners Acting as Change Agents (PACA) is taking a proactive approach to the problem. Stephanie U'Ren said the group doesn't know of DXM being a big problem in Woodward right now, but PACA is working to get the word out to parents so they know what to look for.

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137 US OK: Joint GOP Prison Plan UnveiledTue, 30 Aug 2005
Source:Claremore Daily Progress, The (OK) Author:Engan, Luke Area:Oklahoma Lines:97 Added:09/02/2005

OKLAHOMA CITY -- When senators arrive at the state Capitol Tuesday, they might not have an agreement to approve, House Speaker Todd Hiett said Monday.

Hiett, R-Kellyville, and Sen. Glenn Coffee, R-Oklahoma City, Republican leader, unveiled a joint plan for the Department of Corrections. The agreement between the Republican caucuses merges the House GOP short-term plan and the Senate Republican plan announced earlier.

Concerns the department lacks funds to keep safe staffing levels at prisons can wait until February, when the Legislature convenes in its yearly regular session, Hiett said.

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138US OK: Editorial: Bad Cop, Jailers Tarnish The LawSun, 28 Aug 2005
Source:Muskogee Daily Phoenix (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:Excerpt Added:08/29/2005

It's disappointing that in the last couple weeks, an officer and jailer in Cherokee County and two jail employees in Muskogee County have been accused of and charged with crimes.

Yet it's encouraging area law enforcement didn't ignore accusations against fellow workers or look away, but followed up with investigations and quick dismissals of the four from their respective departments.

In Muskogee County, Stacy Lynn Gray, 26, and Shelley Ford, 39, were charged in connection with an assault by four inmates on another inmate. The two women face a misdemeanor charge of cruelty to inmates.

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139US OK: Cherokee Co. Deputy, Jailer ChargedThu, 18 Aug 2005
Source:Muskogee Daily Phoenix (OK) Author:Hales, Donna Area:Oklahoma Lines:Excerpt Added:08/24/2005

More Drug-Related Charges May Be Filed Against The Pair Today

A Cherokee County sheriff's deputy and a jailer on paid leave since Friday were charged Wednesday with misdemeanor and/or felony drug-related charges.

Both employees will be dismissed from duty today, Sheriff Norman Fisher said.

Deputy Dusty Glyn Ryals, 21, of Tahlequah was charged with felony possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine, and two misdemeanors, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Jailer Lynn McClain Trammel, 20, is charged with misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia consisting of two plastic "snorting" pipes.

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140 US OK: Deputy, Jailer Hit With Drug ChargesThu, 18 Aug 2005
Source:Tahlequah Daily Press (OK) Author:Gibbins, Bob Area:Oklahoma Lines:75 Added:08/21/2005

A Cherokee County sheriff's deputy and a jailer were charged Wednesday as part of an investigation into allegations the men were providing drugs to inmates at the county jail.

Dusty Glyn Ryals, 21, and Lynn McClain Trammel, 20, were expected to turn themselves in at the county jail this morning, according to Sheriff Norman Fisher. Both men will be terminated from their positions after the booking process.

Ryals has been charged with possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana and possession of paraphernalia; Trammel is charged with possession of paraphernalia.

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