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101 US CT: Bill Would Allow Pot Use For Ill ChildrenSun, 15 Feb 2015
Source:Middletown Press, The (CT) Author:Stannard, Ed Area:Connecticut Lines:142 Added:02/15/2015

Cyndimae Meehan, 12 years old, was suffering as many as 2,000 seizures a day from a severe form of epilepsy known as Dravet's syndrome.

The condition, which she developed at 10 months old (one day after she had been vaccinated, though the connection is unknown) jerks her body violently, over and over. The only thing that has helped has been marijuana, which she consumes in oil form.

The youngest of four children, Cyndimae and her mother, Susan Meehan, moved to Maine to take advantage of that state's medical marijuana program, which, unlike Connecticut's, allows patients under 18 to use cannabis.

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102 US CT: Official Criticizes Drug Sweep At Stonington HighFri, 13 Feb 2015
Source:Day, The (New London,CT) Author:Wojtas, Joe Area:Connecticut Lines:59 Added:02/14/2015

Stonington - Board of Education member Craig Esposito has criticized the use of police dogs to search the high school for illegal drugs in December, saying it sent a "bad message" to students.

"It's like you're the warden and the school is a prison," he told Principal Mark Friese during Thursday night's Board of Education meeting.

"You as an adult would not want to be treated that way. To me, it's overkill," he said.

His comments came after Friese offered an overview of the Dec. 12 sweep, in which eight police dogs from area departments searched school hallways, locker rooms and parking lots for illegal drugs while students remained in their classrooms. Two students were cited for possession of marijuana.

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103 US CT: New Haven Lawmaker Looks To Legalize MarijuanaSat, 07 Feb 2015
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:McQuaid, Hugh Area:Connecticut Lines:67 Added:02/08/2015

New Haven lawmaker Juan Candelaria and one of his colleagues are seeking to legalize and tax the sale of recreational marijuana in Connecticut. They want it to be seen as a revenue generator and boon to the state's economy.

Candelaria and Rep. Edwin Vargas, D-Hartford, have proposed bills to legalize marijuana this session. The state has made significant changes to its marijuana laws in recent years, establishing a medical marijuana program in 2012 and decriminalized small amounts of the substance in 2011.

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104 US CT: Board Rejects Marijuana To Treat Tourette'sFri, 16 Jan 2015
Source:Register Citizen (CT) Author:Stannard, Ed Area:Connecticut Lines:82 Added:01/17/2015

Tourette's disorder, which is actually a group of related syndromes, does not have a treatment that helps all patients, and medical marijuana would be a hopeful addition to the arsenal, according to a specialist at the Yale Child Study Center.

Tourette's was turned down unanimously by the Department of Consumer Protection's four-member Board of Physicians at this week's meeting, however, largely because of a lack of studies, according to Consumer Protection Commissioner Jonathan A. Harris.

Three new medical conditions may be added to the list of those treatable with medical marijuana: sickle cell disease, post-laminectomy syndrome with chronic radiculopathy (a specific type of back pain) and severe psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis.

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105 US CT: OPED: Will Selling Marijuana Really Help Indian TribesFri, 26 Dec 2014
Source:Hour, The (CT)          Area:Connecticut Lines:70 Added:12/26/2014

Justice Department is attempting to solve a problem that almost no one knew about with a solution that almost no one asked for. The results -- so far, confusion and uncertainty -- have been entirely predictable.

The department announced this month that it would permit marijuana legalization on 300 or so Indian reservations in 30 states. The decision has perplexed American Indian leaders, who say that the last thing many tribes want is more lax federal law enforcement.

Whatever one may think of legalizing marijuana -- and there are plenty of causes for concern, especially regarding its health effects - -- the way to do it is not to let Attorney General Eric Holder simply pick and choose which federal drug laws he will enforce. Yes, prosecutors have discretion, and it may make sense to use it when a state's voters decide to legalize pot. It makes less sense when local officials not only haven't asked, but also rely on the federal government for law enforcement, as is the case with Indian reservations.

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106 US CT: Tribe Weighs Marijuana As New Revenue StreamSun, 14 Dec 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:McQuaid, Hugh Area:Connecticut Lines:92 Added:12/15/2014

HARTFORD - New guidance from the federal Justice Department has the Mohegan tribe weighing the possible economic benefits of legalizing recreational marijuana on its reservation land.

In a memo, the Justice Department signaled it was not interested in enforcing marijuana laws on nationally-recognized tribal lands, so long as tribes adhered to rules outlined by the feds.

The rules are aimed at preventing the sale of the drug to minors, preventing people from driving while high, and preventing criminals from benefiting from marijuana sales. They mirror guidelines the feds offered last year on state medical marijuana laws.

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107 US CT: Mohegans 'Not Actively Pursuing' Marijuana ProductionSat, 13 Dec 2014
Source:Day, The (New London,CT) Author:Hallenbeck, Brian Area:Connecticut Lines:73 Added:12/15/2014

Mohegan- Don't look for marijuana sprouts to start popping up on the Mohegan reservation any time soon.

While the tribe that owns Mohegan Sun acknowledged Thursday that it is reviewing a U.S. Department of Justice announcement regarding the legal cultivation and sale of marijuana on tribal lands, it has yet to determine whether such an endeavor would be a good investment.

"We are not actively pursuing this," Chuck Bunnell, the tribe's chief of staff, said Friday. "We're absolutely not at the point where we are classifying our interest in any particular aspect of the business. There is a great deal of due diligence required."

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108 US CT: OPED: Looking At The Science Behind MarijuanaFri, 14 Nov 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Bourke, Cate Area:Connecticut Lines:115 Added:11/14/2014

If we are the parents or guardians of infants, toddlers, young children, we may be telling ourselves that we have nothing to be concerned about regarding the current marijuana controversies.

By the time our kids are tweens and teens, our story goes, issues related to marijuana (decriminalization, medicalization, and legalization) will be settled once and for all, and settled with the health and safety of our kids in mind.

If, instead, our kids are tweens or teens today, when our young people tell us that pot is very easy to acquire or that "everybody smokes weed," we're definitely relieved that "it's just marijuana" and not some more formidable drug they can easily get. And if we'd ever used marijuana ourselves we may think, "What's the big deal? I smoked pot and I turned out OK."

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109 US CT: PUB LTE: State's Marijuana Rules Need Some WorkTue, 21 Oct 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Souney, Colin Area:Connecticut Lines:51 Added:10/22/2014

I'm a medical marijuana patient registered under the Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection guidlines. I'm writing in hopes of conveying my concerns regarding Connecticut's current regulations. I'm also curious if there's national interest in our battle with these ridiculous regulations? A brief review by anyone who knows the languages used in these regulations will reveal a complete disregard for patients' rights.

In Connecticut, there's a current petition reguesting that product not be offered in its "homogenized" form. While I do agree with this, I feel the issues only begin there. Under current regulations, patient-to-patient care or trade is illegal, this is in direct conflict with just about every other compassionate model I have reviewed, and possibly the palliative care act. There's no compassionate care system for less fortunate people, and at the current rate of $95 for five grams, I'm sure you can identify the host of issues here. My final and primary concern lies in patient and co-op grows. Patients have fought for these rights, patients are the consumers until legalization, patients won't get registered if product is not only less expensive on the street and if the state doesn't support them. I can't say for certain, but I'm pretty sure that a consumer of marijuana will grow better medicine than counters of money.

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110 US CT: Lab to Test Medical Marijuana for SafetySun, 12 Oct 2014
Source:Bristol Press (CT) Author:Gallimore, Ryan Area:Connecticut Lines:230 Added:10/12/2014

WILLINGTON - Nicole Steinhilber recently graduated from the University of Hartford with a degree in chemistry and didn't have to look far to find a job.

Steinhilber is working as a lab technician in a converted former mill building here testing three strains of medical marijuana that went on sale last week at six state dispensaries.

The first medical marijuana samples will likely arrive soon-once a high-level security system is installed.

The lab, known as "theCRO," which stands for Cannabis Research Organization, is a division of Releaf Therapeutics and will perform testing on medical marijuana to ensure patients' safety and provide them with the best quality products, CEO James Bento said.

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111 US CT: Activists Want Whole Buds, Not 'Ground-Up Dust'Sun, 12 Oct 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Stannard, Ed Area:Connecticut Lines:98 Added:10/12/2014

Marijuana activists in Connecticut are asking the Department of Consumer Protection to offer whole cannabis buds in the state's medical marijuana program, rather than groundup plants.

Peter Mould of North Haven is executive director of Connecticut NORML, which advocates for reform of marijuana laws. He and others claim that homogenizing the plant, which the state requires, results in "the degradation of the cannabinoids, the actual essential oils that are in the flower," Mould said.

Mould has posted a petition at change.org (search for "medical marijuana CT"), which states: "We request that you please change your regulations to allow producers to sell the bud-form to dispensaries, in order to enable patients to have their high-quality medicine."

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112 US CT: Connecticut Medical Marijuana Activists Want Whole FlowerSat, 11 Oct 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Stannard, Ed Area:Connecticut Lines:108 Added:10/11/2014

Marijuana activists in Connecticut are asking the Department of Consumer Protection to offer whole cannabis buds in the state's medical marijuana program, rather than ground-up plants.

Peter Mould of North Haven is executive director of Connecticut NORML, which advocates for reform of marijuana laws. He and others claim that homogenizing the plant, which the state requires, results in the degradation of the cannabinoids, the actual essential oils that are in the flower, Mould said.

Mould has posted a petition at change.org, which states:

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113 US CT: LTE: Marijuana May Soon Be Legal for Recreational UseThu, 09 Oct 2014
Source:Middletown Press, The (CT) Author:Walsh, Morgan Area:Connecticut Lines:70 Added:10/11/2014

Medical marijuana is just starting to grow throughout Connecticut. Recently four producers were accepted out of the 16 applicants to open up plants to grow medical marijuana. There originally was supposed to be only three producers; however the number of patients increased from 900 to 1,700 during a short period.

The increase in the number of patients required another producer to be chosen from the applications. This amount of increase is only the start of the amount of patients there will be in the years to come, which means more and more producers will need to open up.

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114 US CT: LTE: Wall St. Will Exploit Evils Of MarijuanaWed, 10 Sep 2014
Source:Day, The (New London,CT) Author:Ezell, William H. Area:Connecticut Lines:34 Added:09/12/2014

Is it worth the risk to lose a precious child to the use of marijuana? This question is raised by the Sept. 2 story, "Will traffic deaths rise as states legalize pot?"

I applaud The Day for keeping the pot issue going, as it has by quoting several other reliable experts, since Judy Benson's front-page report, "Group urges wariness amid marijuana push: 'We need to stop this train'," (June 18).

This may hopefully make Day's readers aware of the increasing pot dangers, especially as evil "Big Marijuana" interests may start lobbying the state, even before the gubernatorial elections in November.

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115 US CT: PUB LTE: Marijuana Prohibition Not The Right MoveThu, 04 Sep 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Nelken, Michael Area:Connecticut Lines:43 Added:09/06/2014

Prohibition of a popular commodity is useless. Endless games of cops-and-robbers result. These games weed out amateur merchants, leaving only solid, well organized criminal enterprises. Prohibition of alcohol established the mafia in America. Prohibition of marijuana established the drug cartels in Mexico. The law boasts when the boss (or jefe) is captured or killed, but the organization runs itself. Alcohol is a dangerous drug. Find out. Ask any doctor. But it remains popular. Marijuana may have consequences yet unknown, despite centuries of use. We will find out, because it remains popular. Whether we like it or not, people will continue to drink, smoke and toke.

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116 US CT: Stonington Police Efforts To Make Drug ArrestsSat, 30 Aug 2014
Source:Day, The (New London,CT) Author:Wojtas, Joe Area:Connecticut Lines:84 Added:08/31/2014

Town Resident Who Is Also a Detective in Westerly Outlines Concerns in an Email to the First Selectman

Stonington - A veteran Westerly Police Department detective who lives in Pawcatuck has criticized the Stonington police department's drug enforcement efforts in an email to First Selectman Ed Haberek.

In his March email, Detective Steven Johnson said he has "witnessed multiple hand to hand drug deals, in the open, in Downtown Pawcatuck."

He added that he is aware that on a daily basis, drug deals are being conducted in a local parking lot.

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117 US CT: Column: No, One-Third of a 'Sweet Grass' Cookie DoesFri, 29 Aug 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Beach, Randall Area:Connecticut Lines:118 Added:08/30/2014

Good news, people: I survived ingesting a "brain poison," easily operated a Hertz rental car an hour or two afterward without killing anybody and lived to tell the tale. Dr. Arthur Taub, a retired clinical professor at the Yale School of Medicine, wrote a hysterical letter to the New Haven Register after I reported in my column last week that I ate one-third of a 10-milligram marijuana cookie outside a legal cannabis shop in Boulder, Colorado.

"Marijuana is a brain poison," the good doctor began. "It is an uncontrolled mixture of long acting brain-destructive neurotoxins and carcinogens."

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118 US CT: PUB LTE: Marijuana Prohibition PointlessTue, 26 Aug 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:Connecticut Lines:34 Added:08/29/2014

Regarding Randall Beach's Aug. 22 column, the people of Colorado and Washington state are way ahead of the politicians in Washington, D.C. The days when Congress can get away with confusing the drug war's tremendous collateral damage with a comparatively harmless plant are coming to an end. If the goal of marijuana prohibition is to subsidize violent drug cartels, prohibition is a grand success. The drug war distorts supply and demand dynamics so that big money grows on little trees.

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119 US CT: Column: Colorado Shows It's High Time For A Change InFri, 22 Aug 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Beach, Randall Area:Connecticut Lines:118 Added:08/23/2014

Vacationing in Colorado these days now gives you a chance to experience far more than what John Denver long ago hailed as a "Rocky Mountain high."

Oh yes, my wife and I did travel around Rocky Mountain Park last week when we went out to visit my sister in Boulder. The Rockies are breathtaking, fabulous to behold.

But there were other memorable spots on our itinerary, including a store called Cannabis in Nederland and another retail outlet, the Village Green Society in Boulder. (We also saw ads for Cannabis Station, Kindman Marijuana, Heads of State, the Weed Show, Green Fields, Cannasseur, etc.)

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120 US CT: North Haven Raises Drug Awareness With TV ShowFri, 15 Aug 2014
Source:New Haven Register (CT) Author:Walmsley, Ebony Area:Connecticut Lines:76 Added:08/19/2014

NORTH HAVEN - After trying various outlets to reach the community about drug awareness and prevention, First Selectman Michael Freda and substance abuse advocates are heading into people's homes - on the television screen that is.

In an effort to raise awareness about drug and alcohol abuse, Freda and members of the town's Substance Abuse Action Council are taping a miniseries of TV shows discussing various topics surrounding substance abuse.

Freda said the idea for the show surfaced after attempts to hold public discussions about drug and alcohol prevention.

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