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101 US FL: Ex-US Marshal Gets 10 YearsThu, 10 Mar 2016
Source:Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Author:McMahon, Paula Area:Florida Lines:111 Added:03/10/2016

Broward Man Used Service Weapon to Steal From Drug Dealers

A deputy U.S. Marshal from Broward County who used his government-issued duty weapon to steal 24 pounds of marijuana from drug dealers in northern California was sentenced Wednesday to 10 years in federal prison.

Clorenzo "Mack" Griffin, 38, who grew up and lived in Fort Lauderdale, pleaded guilty last year to one count of conspiring to commit robbery. He was fired after his arrest.

He admitted he planned, financed and participated in the Oct. 11, 2014, armed robbery in Yuba City with two friends from Miami prosecutors said he recruited to help him.

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102US FL: OPED: Heroin Epidemic Demands A Federal ResponseTue, 08 Mar 2016
Source:Tampa Bay Times (FL) Author:Buchanan, Vern Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:03/10/2016

For millions of families, including those in our own Florida communities, a drug-fueled pattern of devastation and heartbreak has become a painful part of life. Too many of our loved ones are losing their struggle with heroin and other addictive substances. The facts are sobering. Thousands of Americans die each year from heroin, the most addictive drug on the planet. In Florida, heroin overdose deaths have increased 900 percent in recent years, rising from 48 in 2010 to 447 in 2014.

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103US FL: Use Civil Citations For Pot PossessionWed, 09 Mar 2016
Source:Tampa Bay Times (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:03/10/2016

The Tampa City Council should approve an ordinance that favors civil citations over arrests for possession of small amounts of marijuana. The council gave its initial endorsement to the rule last week and should give final authorization when the issue comes up for a vote later this month.

There is no need to create potentially life-altering criminal records over minor infractions for people who could use a second chance.

Council members voted 6-1 on Thursday to allow people caught with less than 20 grams of marijuana to receive a civil citation and pay a fine rather than face jail time. Under the proposal, the first infraction would cost offenders $75. Subsequent offenses would rack up fines of $150, $300 and $450. If the council grants final approval and Mayor Bob Buckhorn backs the effort as expected, it could take effect as soon as April.

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104 US FL: Column: Marijuana Is On The March In FloridaWed, 09 Mar 2016
Source:Orlando Sentinel (FL) Author:Maxwell, Scott Area:Florida Lines:110 Added:03/10/2016

Marijuana is on the march in Florida.

Volusia County made it legal to carry small amounts last week.

South Florida counties did it last year.

Tampa is preparing to do it next week.

Even Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer is looking at the issue.

Plus, a statewide campaign to legalize medical marijuana appears poised to pass this fall.

Heck, this state's beginning to look like one big Grateful Dead show.

Really, though, all this has little to do with Floridians being eager to get high and more to do with taxpayers - and law-enforcement officers - being sick of wasting tax dollars and judicial resources on small-time possession charges that often get dropped or reduced anyway.

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105 US FL: End-Of-Life Marijuana Bill Heads to Scott, Who Is 'Iffy'Tue, 08 Mar 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Author:Kennedy, John Area:Florida Lines:90 Added:03/08/2016

TALLAHASSEE - A measure allowing terminally ill patients to use fullstrength marijuana in the last year of their lives is now before Gov. Rick Scott.

Following emotional testimony Monday, the state Senate approved the legislation (CS/HB 307) on a 28-11 vote. It cleared the House 99-16 last week.

Scott, though, has been described as "iffy" on the measure by lawmakers close to the issue.

The bill would allow marijuana to be included as an experimental drug under a state law which allows doctors to order not fully approved medication for patients expected to die within a year.

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106 US FL: Gov. Scott Gets Medical-Pot BillTue, 08 Mar 2016
Source:Orlando Sentinel (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:22 Added:03/08/2016

TALLAHASSEE (AP) - Florida's latest medical-marijuana legislation is headed to Gov. Rick Scott. The Senate on Monday approved a House version of a bill (HB 307) that expands the use of the Right to Try Act, allowing the use of medical marijuana of all strengths for patients with terminal conditions. The bill, which passed 28-11, also adds regulations to the framework of the state's nascent cannabis industry covered by the 2014 Compassionate Medical Cannabis Act. Most of the debate on the Senate floor dealt with concerns about the regulatory and economic structures.

[end]

107 US FL: OPED: Private Property Confiscation Big Problem inMon, 07 Mar 2016
Source:Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Author:Norquist, Grover Area:Florida Lines:98 Added:03/07/2016

Usually, when Americans think about the idea of officers of the law confiscating property with no warrant, trial or conviction they come up with two things: tin-pot dictatorships and dystopian movies.

Unfortunately for Floridians, they should also think about their own legal code.

This is what a controversial legal process is all about - property confiscation on the spot.

Civil asset forfeiture is the practice of taking someone's property based solely on the suspicion of a crime. The property is seized by the police on the spot and will then go directly into the pockets of the agency who made the confiscation. It may sound ridiculous, but after decades of use, police departments now take advantage of profits from taking people's stuff in order to pad their budgets.

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108 US FL: PUB LTE: Medical Marijuana Vital for Pain ReliefSat, 05 Mar 2016
Source:Bradenton Herald (FL) Author:Balog, Novie Area:Florida Lines:46 Added:03/07/2016

This letter is a response to Mike McLeod's Feb. 20 letter.

Imagine you have traumatic brain injury, back injury and leg reconstruction. Imagine being in constant, debilitating pain where everyday routines prove impossible to manage. Imagine not being able to care for your children in the way you desire and they deserve.

Imagine being tethered to oxycodone and morphine for any relief, only to endure side effects which make you rethink the pain relief. Imagine living with no true quality of life.

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109 US FL: Suspects Are A Sight To See At Music FestSun, 06 Mar 2016
Source:Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Author:Jacobson, Kate Area:Florida Lines:69 Added:03/07/2016

Val Camarillo reached into her bag of potato chips, looked out the open tent flap and watched as Okeechobee County Sheriff's deputies moved in.

Camarillo, 22, of Fort Myers, and her two friends David Wilson, 21, and Missy Salomon, 20, have been watching as people receive citations and get arrested at the Okeechobee Music and Arts Festival in Okeechobee.

Their tent, along with a slew of others', are located directly behind a makeshift substation for the Sheriff's Office-which has brought those nearby an endless supply of entertainment.

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110US FL: Editorial: Tampa's Marijuana GambleSat, 05 Mar 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:03/06/2016

It is disheartening to see the Tampa City Council move ahead with a risky plan to decriminalize marijuana use.

The council voted 6-1 Thursday to support an ordinance to issue only civil citations for possession of 20 grams or less of pot. Mayor Bob Buckhorn has indicated he supports the measure, so it's likely to go into effect soon after council gives it a second hearing on March 17.

We respect the council's concerns, but this overly lenient plan is likely to lead to more drug abuse and crime.

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111 US FL: House Backs Broader Pot BillFri, 04 Mar 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Author:Kam, Dara Area:Florida Lines:77 Added:03/04/2016

Bill Lets Terminal Patients Use Full-Strength Marijuana.

TALLAHASSEE - Nearly two years after passing a law to allow limited types of medical marijuana, the Florida House on Thursday approved a more far-reaching plan that would let terminally ill patients have access to full-strength pot.

The plan (HB 307 and HB 1313) also would revamp the 2014 law, which has been bogged down in legal challenges over the selection of nurseries to get potentially lucrative contracts. Many House members pointed during a debate Thursday to how medical marijuana could help suffering patients.

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112 US FL: Volusia Switches to Fines for Small Amounts of MarijuanaFri, 04 Mar 2016
Source:Orlando Sentinel (FL) Author:Jacobson, Susan Area:Florida Lines:100 Added:03/04/2016

Volusia on Thursday became the first county in Central Florida to decriminalize small amounts of marijuana.

The County Council by a unanimous 7-0 vote gave law officers the discretion to ticket tokers who possess 20 grams of the drug or less. Instead of being arrested and charged with a misdemeanor, violators would be fined $100.

"The only thing we learned from the war on drugs is that it didn't work," County Council member Josh Wagner said. "All it did was fill the jails."

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113US FL: Tampa Moves Toward Lessening Penalty For PotFri, 04 Mar 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:O'Donnell, Christopher Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:03/04/2016

Possession of Up to 20 Grams Would Be a Civil Citation

TAMPA - Despite concerns it does not do enough to deter repeat offenders, the Tampa City Council on Thursday voted for a new law that lowers the penalty for possession of small amounts of marijuana to a civil citation.

Council members voted 6-1 to adopt the law, which gives city police the option to issue a civil citation for possession of up to 20 grams of marijuana, roughly three quarters of an ounce.

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114 US FL: PUB LTE: Marijuana Doesn't Kill, But Tobacco Sure DoesWed, 02 Mar 2016
Source:Bradenton Herald (FL) Author:White, Stan Area:Florida Lines:34 Added:03/03/2016

Mike McLeod's statements in his Feb. 20 letter "don't allow the smoking of medical marijuana in Florida amendment proposal," regarding cannabis (marijuana) are seriously incorrect, claiming it's "just as bad or worse" than tobacco. Cigarettes kill over 1,000 Americans daily while cannabis hasn't killed one single person in over 5,000 years of documented use. That's safety on a biblical scale.

Alleging the only reason people want to smoke cannabis is to get high is equally misinformed. Many sick citizens prefer smoking cannabis, not to get high but rather desperately seeking relief from cancer, chronic pain, etc. They often wish to avoid strong, highly addictive opiates, which often makes them dysfunctional. Smoking cannabis can also help quicker, allowing people to use only a small amount as needed.

A sane or moral argument to cage sick citizens who smoke cannabis doesn't exist.

Stan White

Dillon, Colo.

[end]

115 US FL: Editorial: Florida Should Make Opioid Overdose AntidoteFri, 26 Feb 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:78 Added:03/01/2016

In 35 states and Washington, D.C., you soon will be able to go into a Walgreens and get naloxone, the heroin overdose antidote, without a prescription.

But not in Florida, where heroin is hitting with deadly impact.

CVS is another major pharmacy that is increasing its supplies of naloxone, often sold as the prescription drug Narcan. CVS, too, will be selling it widely in 35 states. In 14 of those states, including New York, California, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the chain will be providing it to patients without an individual prescription. Not Florida. Heroin deaths have soared in this state: from 48 in 2010 to 447 in 2014. And our area is arguably the epidemic's epicenter. A startling seven people have died of suspected heroin overdoses this month in West Palm Beach, bringing the total to 11 deaths since December, police reported Wednesday. At this time last year, there were none.

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116 US FL: PUB LTE: Legalize ItSat, 27 Feb 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:Chase, John G. Area:Florida Lines:36 Added:02/28/2016

Regarding "Sanctioning drug use in Tampa" (Our Views, Feb. 20): The Tribune gives too much credit to the drug and too little to the process (of prohibition). It is impossible to stamp out anything that millions of Americans want, and trying harder causes more societal damage than it prevents. Our elected leaders are torn between wanting to ease off on possession arrests, but not so much that marijuana use increases. It can't be done, and it's better to know that now.

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117 US FL: LTE: Taking Away A WinSat, 27 Feb 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:Marino, Paul J. Area:Florida Lines:39 Added:02/28/2016

Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd's recent published opposition to proposed legislation to curtail Florida's Contraband Forfeiture Act is right on target. Those of us who were in law enforcement in the 1980s worked hard to amend the law in 1982 to allow an attorney representing an agency to file a forfeiture petition in circuit civil court. This has resulted in criminals not only paying their dues to society in criminal court, but also losing any instrument used to further the criminal activity in civil court procedures pursuant to the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act. A win-win for local and state law enforcement.

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118 US FL: Smoker: Legalize It For AllMon, 22 Feb 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Author:Kleinberg, Eliot Area:Florida Lines:140 Added:02/22/2016

Stockbroker Who Smokes Pot for Pain Relief Says Latest Referendum Not Enough.

Irvin Rosenfeld believes the latest attempt to legalize medical marijuana in Florida will pass. But he doesn't believe it does enough. He wants everyone to be able to grow their own pot. Not for partying. For medicine.

The Boca Raton stockbroker knows all about it. He turns 63 on Friday. For a third of his life, he's smoked up to 10 joints a day for which he doesn't pay. Your taxes do.

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119 US FL: LTE: Don't Allow the Smoking of Medical Marijuana inSat, 20 Feb 2016
Source:Bradenton Herald (FL) Author:McLeod, Mike Area:Florida Lines:42 Added:02/20/2016

In response to the Feb. 14 Bradenton Herald editorial "Surrendering control on medical marijuana," I hope and pray this legislation to allow people to "smoke" marijuana for so-called medical purposes never passes.

What needs to be passed is legislation allowing for the "pill" or "oil" that contains the medical support that comes from marijuana. The only reason people want to smoke marijuana is to get high!

This would be detrimental to our society and to our youth growing up. There is simply no reason to allow our society to get high on marijuana when the ingredients in cannabis can be issued by a medical doctor in the form of a "pill" or "oil" prescriptions.

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120US FL: Program To Reduce Kids' Pot ArrestsSat, 20 Feb 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:O'Donnell, Christopher Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:02/20/2016

Pilot Study in Tampa Will Mean Citations for 20 Grams or Less

TAMPA - While Tampa pushes ahead with civil citations for possession of small amounts of marijuana, a plan to give the same break to juveniles caught with the drug also is in the works.

Under a planned yearlong pilot program, juveniles found in possession of small amounts of marijuana, 20 grams or less, no longer will be arrested but will instead be cited and required to attend a drug treatment program.

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121US FL: Editorial: Sanctioning Drug Use In TampaSat, 20 Feb 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:02/20/2016

Tampa City Council is playing with fire with a plan to decriminalize marijuana use.

Don't be surprised if local drug abuse explodes if the council approves the measure to issue only civil citations for possession of 20 grams or less of pot

Passage of the ordinance seems assured. The council voted 6-0 Thursday to hold an initial public hearing March 3 on the measure, which would go into effect after a second public hearing. Only Councilman Charlie Miranda seems skeptical.

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122US FL: OPED: Successful Contraband Forfeiture Act Under AttackWed, 17 Feb 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:Judd, Grady Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:02/18/2016

Taxpayers beware: There is a dangerously naive proposal making the rounds in Tallahassee. Some politicians want to significantly damage Florida's successful Contraband Forfeiture Act. This is the law that prevents criminals from profiting from their illegal acts. Just like we prohibit killers from profiting by writing books about their crimes, the civil contraband forfeiture law in Florida allows law enforcement agencies to seize assets that are linked to criminal activity with full due process protections for the accused.

Bills sponsored by Sen. Jeff Brandes and Reps. Larry Metz and Matt Caldwell (Senate Bill 1044 and House Bill 889) would make it more difficult, and sometimes impossible, to seize criminals' illegally obtained assets. As a result, more crooks will get to keep their ill-gotten money while you work, pay your taxes, and now will have to pay more to ensure law enforcement has the necessary tools to fight and reduce crime. Why should hardworking taxpayers pay more in taxes while criminals who sell drugs to our kids get to keep their dishonestly acquired money?

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123 US FL: PUB LTE: Medical Cannabis Has Been LifesaverSun, 14 Feb 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Author:Bates, Morgan Area:Florida Lines:36 Added:02/16/2016

This is in regard to your Feb. 7 editorial ("As government drags its feet, voters move on medical pot") regarding the acceptance of the medical marijuana initiative on the November ballot.

As a 75-year-old Californian who recently moved to Florida, I take no prescription drugs. Medically legal cannabis for chronic pain, insomnia and post-traumatic stress disorder has changed my life. It's shocking to see the Florida media featuring misleading images and inaccurate representations of what legalization will mean to Floridians.

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124 US FL: PUB LTE: Give Consideration To Legalized PotTue, 09 Feb 2016
Source:Citrus County Chronicle (FL) Author:Jacobs, Sheila Area:Florida Lines:40 Added:02/09/2016

I remain so disappointed in the lawmakers unwilling to see the benefits of legalizing marijuana completely. It helps with more things that ail a person than what will be medically prescribed eventually. I realize this is a backwards state, just one, among several others. The laws imposed upon us, by people who can drink their way into oblivion, if they choose, is kind of hypocritical ... don't you think? They are stuck in a time warp and can't see past their rigid beliefs. Legalize it. Put laws on it. No difference than the rules for drinking. It is not a gateway drug.

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125 US FL: Editorial: As Government Drags Its Feet, Voters Move onSun, 07 Feb 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:79 Added:02/08/2016

After utterly failing to bring relief even to children with severe epilepsy through a non-narcotic form of marijuana, Florida officials fully deserve the wrath of voters who are on the way to taking matters into their own hands - with a constitutional amendment that would make marijuana available for a wide range of debilitating medical conditions.

The medical marijuana amendment has gained enough signatures to qualify for the November ballot. It is sponsored by the same folks who fell just short with a similar amendment in 2014. Then, the measure got 58 percent of the vote. This time - in a higher-turnout, presidential election year - the chances of gaining the needed 60 percent seem in the bag.

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126 US FL: LTE: Medical Pot CautionSat, 30 Jan 2016
Source:Orlando Sentinel (FL) Author:Lineberry, Judy Area:Florida Lines:28 Added:01/31/2016

I'm not surprised that enough petitions have been collected to put medical marijuana on this year's ballot. I believe true medical marijuana would have eased my 73-year-old father's pain before his death due to cancer.

I was approached a few weeks ago at a grocery-store parking lot by someone seeking my signature on the petition. I declined because all the activists were high-school and college-aged youth. Did they all need "'medical" marijuana? I doubt it. But apparently they'd like to have "medical" marijuana legalized.

Beware of the intent and how this would be administered.

Judy Lineberry Clermont

[end]

127 US FL: Editorial: Alternatives To Marijuana ArrestsFri, 22 Jan 2016
Source:Gainesville Sun, The (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:86 Added:01/26/2016

Alachua County officials are heading in the right direction by creating alternatives to arresting people caught with small amounts of marijuana.

The police departments of the county's municipalities and college campuses, along with officials in other counties and statewide, should get on board with such an approach.

The County Commission voted 4-0 on Tuesday to move forward with an ordinance that would allow civil citations to be issued to someone caught with 20 grams of marijuana or less. The citations are an alternative to an arrest or issuing a notice to appear in court.

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128 US FL: LTE: Pot Not The AnswerMon, 25 Jan 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:Burchett, Stephen Area:Florida Lines:23 Added:01/26/2016

Regarding 'A first step' (Your Views, Jan. 20): Legalizing marijuana is going to open a can of worms. We have construction workers who have to operate heavy equipment; if they use marijuana, this would endanger everyone around the area. Then there are the ramifications of long-term usage - lung cancer, arterial disease, etc. Education is key to letting these people know marijuana is not the answer.

Stephen Burchett, Seffner

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129 US FL: PUB LTE: A First StepWed, 20 Jan 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:Chase, John G. Area:Florida Lines:35 Added:01/21/2016

Regarding: "Tampa moves to downgrade pot offense" (front page, Jan. 12): As we move toward decriminalization of marijuana, a caveat: Although decriminalization will reduce the cost of enforcement and avoid upsetting the lives of arrestees, it will not reduce the violence, the murders, the drive-by shootings, the deaths of innocents caught in the crossfire, or the grisly murders south of the Rio Grande. Credit the law of supply and demand for all that. Demand will increase, owing to the reduced cost (i.e. just a ticket, not an arrest). Increased demand will increase price, other things being equal. This will add to the wealth and violence of the street market. And if enforcement shifts from users to suppliers, as many of our leaders say it must, price will rise even higher. This is why alcohol prohibition failed. We arrested bootleggers, but not drinkers. The 1920s were, in effect, a time of decriminalized alcohol and ended only when alcohol became legal again.

It is very important to decriminalize marijuana, but know that it is just a first step in ending the violence and corruption inherent in enforcing prohibition against a substance that millions of Americans want.

John G. Chase Palm harbor

[end]

130 US FL: PUB LTE: Benefits Of Changing The LawSun, 17 Jan 2016
Source:Tampa Bay Times (FL) Author:Chase, John G Area:Florida Lines:33 Added:01/17/2016

Decriminalization of marijuana is coming as a refreshing breeze. We Americans deal ourselves a triple whammy when we enforce a law that makes a felony of behavior that is not criminal.

First, there is the waste of taxpayer money to enforce that law. Second, there's the loss to society of contributions the felon would have made if he had not been fighting the charge. Third, there's the loss of respect by the public for a criminal justice system that focuses on small offenses.

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131US FL: Editorial: Try Civil Citations In Marijuana CasesTue, 12 Jan 2016
Source:Tampa Bay Times (FL)          Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:01/12/2016

The Tampa City Council is right to explore ways to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana by issuing civil citations. Council members should look seriously at the issue and adopt a measure that will appropriately punish lawbreakers without saddling them with criminal records as a similar effort continues in St. Petersburg and Pinellas County.

In a unanimous decision last week, Tampa City Council members voted to discuss the creation of a civil citation ordinance.

In February, the council plans to look at what other local governments have done and determine how to best move forward in Tampa. Separately, Mayor Bob Buckhorn said police and city attorneys have been working on a civil citation ordinance for eight months.

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132US FL: Tampa Moves To Downgrade Pot OffenseTue, 12 Jan 2016
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL) Author:O'Donnell, Christopher Area:Florida Lines:Excerpt Added:01/12/2016

Those Caught With A Small Amount Would Face Citations Instead Of Jail

TAMPA - Close to 1,900 arrests made by Tampa police last year included charges of possession of small amounts of marijuana.

The crime is a first-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in prison or probation and a $1,000 file. Offenders can also lose their driver's license for two years, making it tough to hang onto a job.

A conviction comes with the lifelong stigma of a criminal record, a bar to jobs in law enforcement and the armed services, and eligibility for public housing and some college scholarships.

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133 US FL: PUB LTE: Bravo To Bradshaw For Stand On PotSun, 03 Jan 2016
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Author:Jacobson, Martin J. Area:Florida Lines:31 Added:01/05/2016

I applaud Sheriff Ric Bradshaw on his response to recent actions taken by the Palm Beach County Commission pertaining to marijuana laws. Our Florida Legislature enacts laws. Our police officers are trained and sworn to enforce those laws.

City and county commissions who are enacting civil penalties for marijuana possession are attempting to divert the energies of "law enforcement" to serve as revenue-enhancement agents enforcing civil penalties. Creating ordinances that cater to the pleasures of constituents indirectly supports many poor people forced to grow marijuana in lieu of food crops, the cartel, the street dealer and the families affected by the end result.

Don't vilify the police. The responsibility to prosecute or not rests with the State Attorney's Office. Sentencing, civil fines and nonadjudication are the responsibility of the judge and not the cop.

MARTIN J. JACOBSON, PORT ST. LUCIE

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