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1 US MO: Random Tests Show Little Illicit Drug Use In RaytownSun, 27 Nov 2011
Source:Kansas City Star (MO) Author:Burnes, Brian Area:Missouri Lines:153 Added:11/30/2011

Raytown's numbers are low, but district officials intend to continue random checks.

If the numbers are to be believed, illegal drug use may have stopped almost entirely among Raytown high school students.

Results of three rounds of unannounced testing at Raytown and Raytown South high schools are in. A service conducted 150 tests, 75 at each school.

At Raytown South, technicians collected a total of two positive, or what the district calls "non-negative," results indicating drug use.

At Raytown, they collected none.

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2 US MO: Couple's Lawsuit Over Columbia SWAT Raid DismissedTue, 22 Nov 2011
Source:Columbia Missourian (MO) Author:Darrough, Celia Area:Missouri Lines:79 Added:11/22/2011

COLUMBIA - A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit Monday filed against the city of Columbia and 12 police officers involved in a February 2010 SWAT raid in which two dogs were shot, one fatally.

Jonathan Whitworth was arrested during the raid on the house he shared with his wife and child in the 1500 block of Kinloch Court in southwest Columbia and later pleaded guilty to unlawful use of drug paraphernalia. His child, who was 7 at the time, was present during the raid. MoreStory

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3 US MO: Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Over SWAT RaidMon, 21 Nov 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:David, Brennan Area:Missouri Lines:77 Added:11/21/2011

Whitworths Are Exploring Appeal.

A federal judge yesterday dismissed all 18 causes of action in a civil lawsuit filed against Columbia police officers involved in a February 2010 raid.

The suit filed by Jonathan Whitworth, his wife, Brittany Whitworth, and her son was scheduled for a Jan. 23 trial in federal court in Jefferson City. U.S. District Judge Nanette Laughrey granted the defendants' request for a summary judgment, dismissing all counts alleged against the city of Columbia and the 12 police officers who were on the scene during the SWAT raid.

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4 US MO: Edu: New Bill To Legalize Marijuana Could Be On MO 2012Tue, 15 Nov 2011
Source:Maneater, The (Uof Missouri - Columbia, MO Edu) Author:Sherman, Ellen Area:Missouri Lines:128 Added:11/16/2011

The Government Spends Roughly $14 Billion Per Year On Prohibition

Legalizing the illegal substance marijuana has been a hot topic for the past decade. A synthetic weed, K2, drug cartels and an increase in potency have put pressure on the government to construct a plan for legalization. Conversely, negative health associations and some law enforcement groups have put pressure on the government to continue the criminalization.

Today it is the top cash crop in the world, worth $35 billion, beating out such staples as wheat and corn combined, according to an article on abc.com. In 2007, 14.4 million Americans ages 12 and older used marijuana at least once in the month prior to being surveyed, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.

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5US MO: Missouri Ballot Measures Proposed To Legalize MarijuanaTue, 08 Nov 2011
Source:Springfield News-Leader (MO)          Area:Missouri Lines:Excerpt Added:11/08/2011

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - Advocates can begin collecting signatures for two proposed Missouri ballot measures that would legalize marijuana.

The secretary of state's office said Monday the initiative petitions have been approved for circulation to get them on the 2012 ballot.

One proposal would amend the Missouri Constitution to legalize cannabis for people 21 and older, allow doctors to recommend use of medicinal marijuana and release prison inmates convicted of nonviolent offenses related to cannabis. It would also allow the Legislature to enact a marijuana tax of up to $100 per pound.

The second proposal is similar but would enact a state law instead of amending the Missouri Constitution.

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6 US MO: Drug-Testing Debate Shifts To MUMon, 31 Oct 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Silvey, Janese Area:Missouri Lines:69 Added:11/01/2011

Attorney Argues With New Policy.

Students enrolling in medical programs at the University of Missouri this fall were required to take drug tests - a new mandate one local attorney says is unconstitutional.

To make his point, attorney Dan Viets cites Linn State Technical College's attempt to screen its students this year. A U.S. district judge last week issued a preliminary injunction blocking those tests and warned the public college that she doesn't think the requirement passes constitutional muster.

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7 US MO: Column: Legalizing Marijuana Would Do No HarmWed, 26 Oct 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Clark, Bill Area:Missouri Lines:100 Added:10/27/2011

Question: If total legalization of marijuana was a ballot issue in our state, how would you vote?

You would be allowed to grow it, sell it, smoke it, chew it, drink it, eat it legally - no misdemeanor, no felony. Maybe marijuana would be kept under thumb as we do with age restrictions on tobacco and alcohol, but for those older than 18 or 21 - legal.

Question: How much is marijuana worth if it has been legalized?

Question: Is marijuana life-threatening?

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8 US MO: Edu: Maryville R-Ii School District Drug Testing DebateWed, 28 Sep 2011
Source:Northwest Missourian, The (Northwest U, MO) Author:Denno, Darleen Area:Missouri Lines:96 Added:10/01/2011

Random drug testing is under debate at Maryville High School. The Maryville R-II Board of Education met Wednesday, Sept. 21 and discussed the need and effectiveness of random drug testing within the district.

The topic of random drug testing within the Maryville school district has been stirring for nearly a year. The discussion started during the October 2010 Board of Education meeting. The topic was tabled until Larry Lithacum, Maryville R-II superintendent, took position in February 2011. The Board then voted to postpone a decision indefinitely. Lithacum re-presented it to the Board during last week's meeting. The Board will not vote on random drug testing in Maryville R-II Schools until Lithacum presents his recommendation.

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9 US MO: Outlawed Synthetic Marijuana Finding A Market In KansasWed, 07 Sep 2011
Source:Kansas City Star (MO) Author:Rizzo, Tony Area:Missouri Lines:114 Added:09/10/2011

When it was legal in both Missouri and Kansas, the herb-based product known as synthetic marijuana was sold openly in coffeehouses, convenience stores and gas stations across the area.

But since legislators outlawed it last year, it appears to have moved out of the stores and into the streets, where police are finding it with regularity.

Kansas City police reported that investigators recovered more than 12 pounds of synthetic marijuana during an early August violent-crime initiative. It was by far the largest amount of drugs seized in the three-day sweep -- more than the amounts of marijuana, cocaine and methamphetamine combined, according to the figures released by police.

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10 US MO: Editorial: Legal pot: Time To Make The MoveThu, 25 Aug 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Waters, Henry J. Area:Missouri Lines:68 Added:08/30/2011

A group calling itself Show-Me Cannabis is making the state's first overt move to legalize marijuana. If it succeeds, we will be on the way toward a more rational and crime-free society.

The group last month presented petition proposals to the secretary of state for approval. Next would come signature solicitations and public votes. One of the initiatives would enact a statute and the other an amendment to the state constitution. The statutory route would be best. Details of the criminal code are best determined in statutes, not constitutions.

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11 US MO: Editorial: Jail TimeSat, 27 Aug 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Waters, Henry J. Area:Missouri Lines:75 Added:08/28/2011

A New Attitude Dawns

Most of us can remember well the days when "oelaw 'n' order" was the clarion call of society and government. Legislatures fell over themselves mandating harsher punishment for criminals, mainly longer jail sentences, giving judges less latitude for judging.

Lock-'em-up types thought throwing away the key would dissuade criminal activity. Instead, jails got crowded, straining public budgets at all levels.

In the past 40 years a few fledgling alternative sentencing programs have struggled to life, such as Reality House here in Columbia. More recently state government has become more serious, reducing sentences and creating alternative courts for dealing with drug and alcohol offenders with intent to help them recover and stay out of prison.

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12 US MO: Activist Christy Welliver Dies At 59Wed, 10 Aug 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Jackson, Jodie Jr. Area:Missouri Lines:76 Added:08/12/2011

Chip Cooper remembers meeting Christy Welliver on the MKT Trail in 1999 and how they hatched an idea for Columbia to have an extensive network of trails.

"She was really psyched about the whole notion," said Cooper, who co-founded the PedNet Coalition with Welliver a year later, serving as the group's first president with Welliver as vice president.

Welliver, 59, died late yesterday at University Hospital, where she had been a patient since June 25. Welliver, who had multiple sclerosis and had used a wheelchair since 1985, was remembered today as an energetic advocate for people with disabilities. She had been in a coma and was surrounded by friends and supporters since entering the hospital. Cooper said he began gathering written tributes and memorials two weeks ago. "She was just a remarkable person in many ways," Cooper said. "Probably above and beyond everything else, it was just her commitment to community service, her commitment to friends and family, and her amazingly optimistic view of everything."

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13 US MO: Group Works To Legalize MarijuanaWed, 20 Jul 2011
Source:St. Joseph News-Press (MO) Author:Norvell, Kim Area:Missouri Lines:86 Added:07/20/2011

A petition filed with the Missouri secretary of state's office could be the first step toward the legalization of marijuana if it garners enough support.

Show-Me Cannabis is an initiative organized by a group of Missourians and businesses that believe marijuana prohibition is a failed policy and seek to legalize all forms of marijuana in the state. Local law enforcement, however, sees loopholes that are not written into the petition in regard to enforcement and punishment for those breaking the suggested new laws.

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14 US MO: Group Works On Initiatives For Legal Pot StateFri, 08 Jul 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Keller, Rudi Area:Missouri Lines:89 Added:07/09/2011

State Is Looking At 2 Proposals

Missouri voters could decide whether the state will be the first to legalize marijuana in all its forms if organizers of a petition drive can collect the necessary signatures over the next 10 months.

A group calling itself Show-Me Cannabis, led in part by some of the principal proponents of Columbia's lenient city marijuana law, turned in two proposals Wednesday to Secretary of State Robin Carnahan's office. Her office will decide whether it is ready to circulate and, if so, write the summary that will appear on the ballot.

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15US MO: Column: 'War On Drugs' Belies Availability, Madison CountyThu, 23 Jun 2011
Source:St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Author:Gauen, Pat Area:Missouri Lines:Excerpt Added:06/27/2011

One catches my eye at least a couple of times a month. It will be a big car, moderately old, maybe an Oldsmobile or a Buick, riding low in the back under the weight of its big trunk. The lone driver runs at the speed limit or a little less, casting nervous glances at passing vehicles. If I'm wondering what weighs the car down, you can bet the cops are wondering, too.

My daily commute takes me along Interstate 55-70 through Metro East, a major drug-smuggling corridor where patrols lurk and large-scale busts have been relatively regular.

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16 US MO: Commentary: Time For 'War On Drugs' To EndFri, 17 Jun 2011
Source:Kansas City Star (MO) Author:Pitts, Leonard Jr. Area:Missouri Lines:82 Added:06/17/2011

Dear President Obama:

Right after your election, somebody asked if I thought having a black president meant black people's concerns would now receive attention at the executive level. I told them I expected the opposite.

There used to be a saying - only Nixon could go to China. Meaning, of course, that only he, as a staunch anti-communist, had the credibility to make overtures to that nation without accusations of being soft on communism. By the inverse of that political calculus, I never expected that you, as a black man, would do much to address black issues.

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17 US MO: Editorial: War on DrugsTue, 07 Jun 2011
Source:Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Author:Waters, Henry J. Area:Missouri Lines:62 Added:06/08/2011

Futility Becomes More Apparent

What do former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan; former Cabinet member George Shultz, who served under Presidents Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon; former U.S. Federal Reserve Board chairman Paul Volcker; former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia; writers Carlo Fuentes and Mario Vargas Llosa; U.K. business titan Richard Branson; and the current prime minister of Greece all agree on?

They say it's time to end the war on drugs.

All are part of the 19-member Global Commission on Drug Policy, which calls on governments to end criminalization of controlled substances.

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18US MO: OPED: States Could Break Marijuana TabooMon, 23 May 2011
Source:Springfield News-Leader (MO) Author:Fraser, Ronald Area:Missouri Lines:Excerpt Added:05/23/2011

For the time being, Missourians can consider last November's defeat of Proposition 19, a California ballot initiative to legalize and regulate the personal use of marijuana, as none of their business. But as this debate spreads outward from California it will, sooner or later, reach Missouri.

Having started the war on marijuana, the federal government is the enforcer of the status quo -- even as opinion polls show the public's desire for change. So, it is up to the states, one-by-one, to replace failed drug war policies with something that makes sense. To see how the future marijuana legalization debate might spread, let's consider the work of professor Everett M. Rogers.

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19US MO: Rockwood Schools Getting Rid Of D.A.R.E.Sat, 21 May 2011
Source:St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Author:Deere, Stephen Area:Missouri Lines:Excerpt Added:05/22/2011

Studies Questioning Anti-Drug Program's Effectiveness Played Role In Decision.

The Rockwood School District is doing away with D.A.R.E. -- swayed in part by questions about the program's effectiveness -- drawing complaints from some parents and police.

"The timing stinks," said Eureka Police Chief Michael Wiegand. "We've got a large problem with heroin in west St. Louis County."

But D.A.R.E. -- Drug Abuse Resistance Education, the nation's best known anti-drug program -- has come under attack in recent years after several studies showed students in the program are no less likely to use drugs, cigarettes or alcohol.

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20 US MO: Raytown School District Considers Random Drug TestsSun, 15 May 2011
Source:Kansas City Star (MO) Author:Burnes, Brian Area:Missouri Lines:211 Added:05/16/2011

About one in four public school districts across Missouri has adopted random student drug-testing policies.

Many of those districts serve families living in rural areas.

But the first such policy at an urban Kansas City area district could be on its way. Tonight, officials with the Raytown School District are sponsoring a forum for parents and students to discuss whether a random drug-testing policy should be approved for Raytown and Raytown South high schools.

Superintendent Allan Markley believes having one at least deserves consideration, as it could give students a good excuse to resist peer pressure.

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