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1 US NE: Former Police Officer Makes Case for Legalization of DrugsThu, 24 Jul 2008
Source:Bellevue Leader (NE) Author:McDonald, Zachary Area:Nebraska Lines:120 Added:07/24/2008

A retired police officer visited Bellevue and Omaha last week to speak about drugs to the Kiwanis clubs. But he wasn't talking about the evils of drugs or encouraging them to support the war on drugs.

In fact, he was speaking in favor of giving up the war altogether and legalizing all drugs.

Tony Ryan, who was a police officer in Denver for 36 years, came on behalf of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a nonprofit organization made up of retired officers, prosecutors and judges who travel the country and speak in favor of the legalization of drugs.

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2US NE: OPED: Drug War Costs a Lot, Does LittleFri, 18 Jul 2008
Source:Omaha World-Herald (NE) Author:Ryan, Tony Area:Nebraska Lines:Excerpt Added:07/18/2008

In 36 years of continuous service as a Denver police officer, I was shot at, stabbed - threatened in several ways. That came with the territory, and my comrades and I were well protected by our equipment and training. But, frightening as that was, nothing threatens the honor and prestige of our police more than our mandate to carry out the so-called war on drugs. When we jailed a rapist or a child molester, we made the streets safer - period. But when we arrested a drug dealer - at any level - we just created a job opening that was quickly filled.

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3US NE: Stiffer Penalties for Possession of Marijuana Sent to HeinemanWed, 16 Apr 2008
Source:Omaha World-Herald (NE) Author:Stoddard, Martha Area:Nebraska Lines:Excerpt Added:04/17/2008

LINCOLN -- Getting caught with a little pot may soon be as costly as getting caught drinking before your 21st birthday.

The Nebraska Legislature Tuesday passed a bill increasing the penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana. Legislative Bill 844, introduced by State Sen. Russ Karpisek of Wilber, passed on a 40-2 vote.

If the bill is signed into law by the governor, fines would increase to $300, up from $100, for possession of an ounce or less of marijuana. Fines for a second offense would be increased to $400, up from $200, and for third and subsequent offenses, to $500, up from $300.

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4US NE: Nebraska Penalties For Marijuana Possession Called 'Too Lenient'Sat, 12 Jan 2008
Source:Omaha World-Herald (NE) Author:Reed, Leslie Area:Nebraska Lines:Excerpt Added:01/13/2008

LINCOLN - Smoking pot is just as serious a crime as teenage drinking, a state legislator says.

So State Sen. Russ Karpisek has introduced a bill to overturn the 30-year-old law that lets Nebraskans off with a $100 fine if caught with less than one ounce of marijuana.

Karpisek said marijuana users, no matter their age, should face the same potential penalties as a 20-year-old caught with a half-full can of beer - up to 90 days in jail and as much as a $500 fine.

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5 US NE: Edu: Drug Legalization Debate PlannedTue, 20 Mar 2007
Source:Gateway, The (NE Edu)          Area:Nebraska Lines:27 Added:03/20/2007

"Heads vs. Feds" will feature a debate between Steve Hager and Bob Stutman, both leading figures in the fight over drug legalization. The event will take place on Friday, March 30, at noon in the Nebraska Room of the Milo Bail Student Center.

Hager is the editor in chief of High Times magazine and founder of the Cannabis Cup. Stutman is a retired Drug Enforcement Administration special agent and credited with bringing "crack" to national attention.



[end]

6 US NE: Nebraska Professor Developing Test Strips To DetectThu, 10 Aug 2006
Source:Columbus Dispatch (OH)          Area:Nebraska Lines:60 Added:08/10/2006

CRETE, Neb. -- An assistant professor of chemistry is developing a tiny testing kit that women can carry in their purses and use to quickly detect date-rape drugs.

Andrea Holmes, who teaches at Doane College in Crete, said "this seemed to be a really, really relevant topic."

"So many women on college campuses are being affected by this," said Holmes.

Date-rape drugs -- or "roofies" -- such as Rohypnol are secreted into a person's drink. The drug incapacitates the person and causes memory loss. Men and women who have been raped while under its influence can regain their senses with no memory of the assault.

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7 US NE: Industrial Hemp: Uncle Sam Still Just Says 'No'Thu, 18 May 2006
Source:Kearney Hub, The (NE) Author:Potter, Lori Area:Nebraska Lines:77 Added:05/25/2006

HOLDREGE -- There's an alternative crop that could be the answer to some of Nebraska's water supply and rural economic development concerns.

It adapts well to Nebraska's soils and climate, uses less water than corn or soybeans, and the right hybrids can produce more oil for biodiesel. Its fibers can be processed into cloth and plastics.

There's only one hitch, according to Marvin Havlat of Milford. That crop is hemp.

Federal laws don't make exceptions for hemp hybrids used for industrial purposes, he said, even though they don't contain THC, the chief intoxicant in marijuana.

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8 US NE: Drug Dogs To Be Part Of CHS, CMS HallsTue, 27 Dec 2005
Source:Columbus Telegram, The (NE) Author:Blum, Julie Area:Nebraska Lines:79 Added:12/28/2005

COLUMBUS - Drug dogs will be utilized at Columbus High and Columbus Middle schools when school resumes Jan. 9.

Superintendent Paul Hillyer said the move is in reaction to learning about the amount of drug use in the county. Hillyer said he learned during a local law enforcement presentation Platte County has the highest rate of drug use per capita of any county in the state.

In an effort to create the safest, drug-free environment for students, Hillyer and the school board decided to use drug dogs at the high school and middle school. The animals will be brought into the schools by a K-9 force for random, unannounced visits after the holiday break. Lockers and the buildings will be searched.

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9 US NE: Board Members Want To Improve Pardon ProcessMon, 22 Aug 2005
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE) Author:Hicks, Nancy Area:Nebraska Lines:230 Added:08/22/2005

The Nebraska Board of Pardons is looking for ways to streamline the pardon process as more people seek an official pardon for past convictions in the post 9/11 background-checking era.

"We have been swamped with paperwork and agenda items," said Secretary of State John Gale. The meetings are getting very long, he said.

In June, the board spent almost four hours on 56 cases and finished just 15 minutes before the governor's first evening appointment. The board members are the secretary of state, governor and attorney general.

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10 US NE: PUB LTE: Drug ProblemFri, 08 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Hein, Linda Area:Nebraska Lines:66 Added:07/09/2005

Dear Editor,

Thought you would enjoy this as much as I did:

"The other day, someone at a store in our town read that a methamphetamine lab had been found in an old farmhouse in the adjoining county and he asked me a rhetorical question, 'Why didn't we have a drug problem when you and I were growing up?'

"I replied: I had a drug problem when I was young:

"I was drug to church on Sunday morning.

"I was drug to church for weddings and funerals.

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11 US NE: PUB LTE: Gateway EffectThu, 07 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Muse, Kirk Area:Nebraska Lines:47 Added:07/08/2005

Dear Editor,

Thanks for publishing Elizabeth Wehrman's outstanding letter: "Need A Change" (7-05-05).

Like Registered Nurse Wehrman, I have roots in the Midwest.

I grew up in Freeport and Rockford, Ill.

I'd like to add that I have never seen heroin, cocaine or methamphetamine. However, I was offered free samples of these dangerous drugs on several occasions, by my marijuana suppliers, when I was a user of marijuana, which is more than 15 years ago.

(Yet, I've never been offered a free sample of whiskey or vodka when buying beer or wine).

Like the vast majority of marijuana users, I was only interested in marijuana and no other illegal drugs.

Fortunately, I turned down all offers of free samples of other drugs. Unfortunately, many others do not--thus the gateway effect.

Best regards,

Kirk Muse

Mesa, Ariz.

[end]

12 US NE: PUB LTE: Which Option?Thu, 07 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Smithson, Mike Area:Nebraska Lines:48 Added:07/07/2005

Dear Editor,

Why anyone would be opposed to ending drug prohibition is beyond me. There are three entities that can control the manufacture and distribution of drugs: the government, the free market or a combination of these two, and third is Al Capone.

These are the only options. So, given these choices, why do we elect the worst option? Why provide organized crime and international terrorists a commodity to fund their efforts?

To those who believe we can somehow eliminate drugs from society, think again: drugs have been here since the beginning of time and they will always be with us. We cannot eliminate marijuana, coca and poppies from the earth. Period.

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13 US NE: PUB LTE: Just Want LibertyWed, 06 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Buors, Chris Area:Nebraska Lines:68 Added:07/07/2005

Dear Editor,

I am one of the "legalization lobbyists" letter writer Owen McPhillips rails against.

I am not paid. This is a labor of love for me because I am interested in liberty for all no matter where they live on the planet.

I am a Canadian. With my cannabis criminal record I will never be able to cross the border and visit McCook. American support of drug prohibition has these types of profound ramifications all over the world.

Americans with cannabis records are welcome tourists in Canada.

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14 US NE: PUB LTE: Real ProblemTue, 05 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Schaffer, Clifford Area:Nebraska Lines:57 Added:07/06/2005

Dear Editor,

The response of Owen McPhillips perfectly illustrates the real drug problem in the U.S.

First, he starts with false assumptions. Let me assure Mr. McPhillips that I do not earn my living as an activist on any issue. In fact, I work a regular job like anyone else. Some of us just have an honest interest in a better approach to a major social problem, and we are willing to put some of our own time and money into the effort.

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15 US NE: PUB LTE: Fair MindedTue, 05 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Fisher, Harry Area:Nebraska Lines:35 Added:07/05/2005

Dear Editor,

Pretending to speak for "rural Nebraskans," Owen McPhillips wrote: "The drug legalization lobbyists can say whatever they want," and "They can cite statistics until the cows come home."

Clearly, McPhillips has made up his mind and is not about to disturb it with any inconvenient facts.

I would like to think that most "rural Nebraskans" are more fair-minded than that.

Harry Fisher

Woodland Hills, Calif.

[end]

16 US NE: PUB LTE: Need A ChangeTue, 05 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Wehrman, Elizabeth Area:Nebraska Lines:46 Added:07/05/2005

Dear Editor,

In response to Mr. McPhillips' letter of July 1:

I am neither a "doper" nor a person who makes a living as a drug legalization lobbyist. I am the mother of four, the Gamma of four. I am a nurse of 32 years who has invested the last 13 years working in the fields of HIV/AIDS, homelessness, and substance use as a street nurse -- much of it in small towns in middle America.

My interest in drug policy reform lies completely in my desire to stop HIV and Hepatitis C infection and to support substance users in taking steps toward positive change. My roots, my life, and my work are firmly planted in the Midwest.

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17 US NE: LTE: Choir Of DopersFri, 01 Jul 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:McPhillips, Owen Area:Nebraska Lines:44 Added:07/01/2005

Dear Editor,

The drug legalization lobbyists can say whatever they want.

They can point to THEIR OWN WEB SITE as a definitive source if they choose. They can cite statistics until the cows come home.

Their arguments may well take root in California and Washington, D.C., but they are unlikely to have much effect in Southwest Nebraska. We just don't have the choir of dopers they're used to preaching to.

Just like Mr. Sharpe, these latest two make their living at this sort of thing. What amazes me is that they would even bother with writing to a newspaper as small as this one. Have any of them ever BEEN to McCook? Would they know where it is without consulting Mapquest?

Stick to your urban paradises, gentlemen. Rural Nebraskans aren't buying your bill of goods, and even if we did, our votes wouldn't get you where you need to be.

Or are you getting THAT desperate?

Owen McPhillips

McCook

[end]

18 US NE: Column: The War America Has LostFri, 24 Jun 2005
Source:McCook Daily Gazette (NE) Author:Hendricks, Mike Area:Nebraska Lines:135 Added:06/26/2005

A couple of weeks ago I received an email from Bruce Crosby, the editor of this newspaper, informing me of a retired police detective's ride across America on a horse to protest this countr's war on drugs. At the time, it was believed he was coming through McCook and Bruce asked if I would be interested in sitting down and talking to this guy.

Because I'm a former police officer as well and have long thought we were losing the war on drugs, I told him I would and used the contact information he provided me to introduce myself and to set up an interview. I received an immediate reply from Jack Cole, the Executive Director of LEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition).

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19 US NE: Personnel, Funds Keep Program Out Of SchoolsThu, 28 Apr 2005
Source:Seward County Independent (NE) Author:Croston, Stephanie Area:Nebraska Lines:138 Added:05/02/2005

While Milford, Utica, Staplehurst and Malcolm fifth and sixth graders are graduating from Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) programs this year, students at Seward Middle and St. John Lutheran schools won't.

Why? Because neither the Seward Police Department or the Seward County Sheriff's Office is teaching the course in the Seward schools.

Speaking as a citizen, Dan Nantkes told the Seward City Council April 19 that the Seward Police Department needed to step up.

"It's their turn," Nantkes said.

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20 US NE: Edu: LTE: Pot Smoking Won't Make Your ResumeFri, 14 Feb 2003
Source:Daily Nebraskan (NE Edu) Author:Jorgensen, David 'Ryan' Area:Nebraska Lines:38 Added:02/14/2003

Does Trish Hill (DN, Thursday) think that she should be commended for "standing up admitting her responsible drug use?" Perhaps she has smoked a bit too much. Let me say that personally, I am in no position to judge what people choose to do in their own time. However, when people like Hill wave their "responsible" banner in between lighting up, I begin to question their intelligence.

There is nothing responsible about engaging in an illegal activity. Try telling the judge you were smoking responsibly, or explaining to a prospective employer that while yes, you use illegal drugs, it's perfectly OK because you managed to maintain a 3.9 GPA. Or, perhaps you'll have more success trying to secure a federal student loan with a drug possession charge on your record.

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21 US NE: Dean - Johanns Blew Chance For Meth FundsFri, 20 Sep 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE) Author:Bauer, Scott Area:Nebraska Lines:48 Added:09/22/2002

Democratic candidate for governor Stormy Dean is criticizing Gov. Mike Johanns for the failure to obtain $500,000 in federal funding to combat the spread of methamphetamine.

"Johanns dropped the ball," Dean said.

Johanns' spokesman Chris Peterson said the money was not a grant, as Dean claimed, but was part of a federal appropriations bill. Former U.S. Sen. Bob Kerrey had earmarked the funding in past years, but no earmarking for Nebraska was made last year.

"Stormy Dean continues to embarrass himself as a candidate for governor," Peterson said. "Today's attack by his campaign raises further questions about his credibility as a candidate."

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22 US NE: Dean: Johanns Blew Chance For Meth FundsFri, 20 Sep 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE) Author:Bauer, Scott Area:Nebraska Lines:49 Added:09/21/2002

Democratic candidate for governor Stormy Dean is criticizing Gov. Mike Johanns for the failure to obtain $500,000 in federal funding to combat the spread of methamphetamine.

"Johanns dropped the ball," Dean said.

Johanns' spokesman Chris Peterson said the money was not a grant, as Dean claimed, but was part of a federal appropriations bill. Former U.S. Sen. Bob Kerrey had earmarked the funding in past years, but no earmarking for Nebraska was made last year.

"Stormy Dean continues to embarrass himself as a candidate for governor," Peterson said. "Today's attack by his campaign raises further questions about his credibility as a candidate."

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23 US NE: I-80 Arrests Investigated For Possible Terrorist TiesThu, 19 Sep 2002
Source:Grand Island Independent (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:48 Added:09/19/2002

Men Stopped Near Lincoln Being Checked For Links To Drug Ring, Terror Group

LINCOLN -- Authorities are investigating whether two Detroit men arrested over the weekend along Interstate 80 have ties to a drug ring that is believed to be linked to overseas terrorist organizations.

The Nebraska State Patrol would not say whether it has determined if the two men of Middle Eastern descent have any ties to a methamphetamine ring that the Drug Enforcement Administration claims has sent money from Michigan to terror groups such as the Lebanon-based Hezbollah.

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24 US NE: K-9 Unit Aids Drug ProgramFri, 13 Sep 2002
Source:Columbus Telegram, The (NE) Author:Blum, Julie Area:Nebraska Lines:75 Added:09/15/2002

COLUMBUS - Kai loves to play.

But when duty calls the 3-year-old is always ready.

Armed with a keen sense of smell and a commitment to his responsibility, Kai, a member of the K-9 Division of the Nebraska State Patrol, works with his human handler, Trooper Jim Bills.

Members of the Nebraska State Patrol including Kai were at Carneco Foods in Columbus this week, presenting a one-day drug awareness program. Kim Schumacher, director of human resources at Carneco, said 44 managers at the plant attended the presentation.

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25 US NE: Bruning Vows Meth BattleWed, 11 Sep 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:43 Added:09/11/2002

State Sen. Jon Bruning said Tuesday he'd target the methamphetamine drug market as attorney general.

"Nebraska's meth problem has become a scourge on our society," the Republican nominee said at a Lincoln news conference.

Efforts to combat methamphetamine would be one of his priority initiatives if he is elected this fall, he said.

Bruning said he'd focus on elimination of meth labs, a plan to reduce costs associated with cleaning up busted labs, increased public awareness of the problem and coordination with law enforcement officers and retailers.

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26 US NE: Schools Get Education On Drug DetectionThu, 05 Sep 2002
Source:Fremont Tribune (NE) Author:Lydick, Beverly J. Area:Nebraska Lines:65 Added:09/06/2002

"At least they're only drinking beer, and not doing drugs."

When it comes excusing teens using alcohol, Lt. Tom Schwarten of the Nebraska State Patrol said he's heard that one before.

Tuesday, the drug recognition expert had something to say in return about teen-agers and drug abuse in America.

Speaking before Fremont Public School administrators, counselors, psychologists and nurses, Schwarten said 2,315 youth died in this country in 1996 as a result of alcohol-related motor vehicle crashes.

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27 US NE: Undercover Drug Deals Require Money -- Lots Of ItWed, 28 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Fox, Sarah Area:Nebraska Lines:159 Added:08/31/2002

If Money Makes The World Go Round, The World Of Law Enforcement Officers Is Spinning Slower Than They'd Like.

Officers often catch methamphetamine dealers through undercover buys. When law enforcement officers run out of money -- usually toward the end of their fiscal year -- they can't make those buys anymore.

"This year, we ran out with six months left in our year," Norfolk Police Division Capt. Steve Hecker said of his anti-drug task force's investigative budget. "Once those funds are gone, you don't have the ability to make a phone call, make a buy."

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28 US NE: New Drug Court Aims At Helping Repeat OffendersFri, 30 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Pilger, Lori Area:Nebraska Lines:141 Added:08/31/2002

GRAND ISLAND -- Jerry Watson knew things weren't working.

So did Teresa Luther and Connie Hultine and even Wendy McCarty.

It all started about four years ago in Grand Island, when more and more people like Watson, Luther, Hultine and McCarty started noticing a problem.

"The thing that really made an impact on me was we were arresting the same people over and over," said Watson, the Hall County sheriff.

Before becoming sheriff in 1999, he'd worked at the Grand Island Police Department for 11 years, incarcerating the same people only to see them serve their time and go back on the streets, committing the same crimes.

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29 US NE: Don't Look For Federal Office Here Anytime SoonWed, 28 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Amundson, Chris Area:Nebraska Lines:108 Added:08/31/2002

A lot of people get squeamish when federal agents come knocking on their door.

Yet, for local law enforcement officials fighting the uphill battle against drugs, the phrase, "I'm with the federal government, I'm here to help you," really is a welcomed sound.

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and even the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) are just three of the federal agencies that play a valuable role in finding, arresting and prosecuting drug dealers.

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30 US NE: HIDTA Doesn't Mean HandoutThu, 29 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Pilger, Lori Area:Nebraska Lines:189 Added:08/30/2002

Things didn't go quite as Steve Hecker thought they would.

Sitting in his second-floor office, the Norfolk police captain said he was sure the money would start flowing in when Madison County was designated as a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) back in 1999.

"I thought once we got that designation, 'This is going to be good for us,' " Hecker said.

Three years later, Madison County has not received a cent.

"We thought we'd be able to fund what we needed to do, and to the contrary, it's been very disappointing," he said.

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31 US NE: 'We're Here To Make Sure You Make It Through This'Fri, 30 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Pilger, Lori Area:Nebraska Lines:125 Added:08/30/2002

GRAND ISLAND -- "Jason, you're looking all smiles this morning. Why don't you come up first?" Judge Teresa Luther said, beckoning Jason Derr to approach.

The 23-year-old stood up and walked past two tables of people to the bench in the Hall County Courtroom here in a maroon T-shirt and jeans, with his hands in his pockets and a big smile across his face.

"Everything got glowing reports for you. We're all proud of you," Luther said.

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32 US NE: Growing Meth Epidemic Knows No BoundariesTue, 27 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Amundson, Chris Area:Nebraska Lines:92 Added:08/28/2002

Put a map of Nebraska on the table. Close your eyes and point to any spot. Go to the town nearest that spot and you'll find methamphetamine.

Do it again and you'll get the same results -- if you know what to look for.

The illegal drug that provides users a longer and stronger high than cocaine can be found in every community in the state and throughout the Midwest, law enforcement officials say.

Unlike the cocaine epidemic of the 1980s and early '90s, methamphetamine knows no boundaries of age, class, occupation or education. It spans geography and is just as prevalent in the small farming communities as it is in metropolitan Omaha and Lincoln.

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33 US NE: Police Admit They're Losing Battle Against MethTue, 27 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Warneke, Kent Area:Nebraska Lines:96 Added:08/28/2002

The Good Guys Are Supposed To Win.

When it comes to battling illegal drugs, Northeast Nebraskans like to think their law enforcement agencies can win -- find the dealers and users, make the arrests and get the convictions -- at least most of the time.

It helps everyone sleep easier at night. It helps make Nebraska's "good life" slogan still seem plausible. It helps families think the drug problem isn't nearly as bad here as elsewhere.

But guess what? The good guys aren't winning. They aren't coming close. They won't even argue that point.

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34 US NE: Five-Day Meth Series To Begin TomorrowMon, 26 Aug 2002
Source:Norfolk Daily News (NE) Author:Warneke, Kent Area:Nebraska Lines:86 Added:08/27/2002

A Spanish philosopher once said, "There is no fear without some hope, and no hope without some fear."

In Northeast Nebraska's battle against methamphetamine, there should be fear and hope.

The fear is of the pervasiveness of the illegal drug, how it has reached virtually all corners of society.

No longer can local and area residents think that the meth problem is someone else's concern. A fellow worker, the neighbor across the street, the teen-age girl -- they all could be experimenting with or addicted to meth.

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35 US NE: EDU: OPED: Moroccans Are CraftyThu, 01 Aug 2002
Source:Daily Nebraskan (NE Edu) Author:Lane, Zack Area:Nebraska Lines:116 Added:08/02/2002

Ting-a-ling.

Dangerous Dave phoned me again. He is pissed because last month his drug pipeline clogged with Spaniards.

(This is my man, Dangerous Dave, the Northern Irishman who has a penchant for pipe/drum bands and injections of illegal narcotics.)

You see, my gentle reader, the trouble with Europe is that it has no Mexico. Not even a Colombia.

All it's got is an Afghanistan and a Morocco. And the Afghani opium market is only now starting to recover since the Taliban have been chased away.

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36 US NE: Editorial: Don't Miss Good News On YouthMon, 29 Jul 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:65 Added:07/29/2002

Drug, alcohol and cigarette use among 6-12 graders has fallen dramatically, according to a national study released last week.

The 2001-02 annual Pride Survey reported that alcohol and cigarette use is at its lowest level in 15 years. Drug use is at its lowest level in eight years, according to the survey.

The reason?

The results may reflect a cultural reaction to the terrorist attack of Sept. 11, suggested survey officials.

"Following 9/11 Americans seemed to refocus on family, community, spirituality and nation," said survey author Thomas J. Gleaton. "That renewed awareness shows up in the data."

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37 US NE: Editorial: A Call For Dialogue On Drug TestingWed, 10 Jul 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:68 Added:07/11/2002

In contrast to some Midwestern states, the idea of widespread testing of high school students for illegal drugs has never caught on in Nebraska.

Things change.

Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has placed a clear stamp of approval on such programs, community discussion should be encouraged on whether the programs are worthwhile.

Advocacy groups are sure to form, especially since corporations now see a new field for profit. In fact, the Drug and Alcohol Industry Association, made up of private drug-testing companies, already has scheduled a workshop in Washington on July 18 for school board members and principals, according to the New York Times.

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38 US NE: PUB LTE: Arrest Not Required For Drug TreatmentTue, 25 Jun 2002
Source:Grand Island Independent (NE) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:Nebraska Lines:47 Added:06/25/2002

The Central Nebraska Drug Court is definitely a step in the right direction, but an arrest should not be a necessary prerequisite for drug treatment. Would alcoholics seek help for their illness if doing so were tantamount to confessing to criminal activity? Likewise, would putting every incorrigible alcoholic behind bars and saddling them with criminal records prove cost-effective?

The United States recently earned the dubious distinction of having the highest incarceration rate in the world, with drug offenses accounting for the majority of federal incarcerations. This is big government at its worst. At an average cost of $25,071 per inmate annually, maintaining the world's largest prison system can hardly be considered fiscally conservative.

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39 US NE: Editorial: Drug Court Grant Brings Hope, PromiseWed, 19 Jun 2002
Source:Grand Island Independent (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:52 Added:06/21/2002

Even a quick perusal of the Day's Record readily reveals how frequent and common possession of methamphetamine is in the Heartland. And for each one named and charged, there stands an array of family, friends, employers, employees, co-workers and acquaintances whose lives have also been impacted to one degree or another. Eventually, either monetarily or emotionally, we all suffer the effects of meth and other treacherous drugs.

Many of us despair of finding any resolutions beyond arrests and jail time. Yet for the professionals who help drug offenders battling for their very souls, jail is not always the best solution -- especially for non-violent drug offenders.

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40 US NE: LPD Concerned With Opiate 'Resurgence'Sat, 27 Apr 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE) Author:Reist, Margaret Area:Nebraska Lines:70 Added:04/28/2002

Lincoln police and federal authorities are concerned about a growing problem in Lincoln: a deadly drug called heroin.

At a Monday news conference, federal and local authorities are expected to announce the indictment of Michael Siegrist and discuss other drug-related deaths in Lincoln.

U.S. Attorney Mike Heavican said Siegrist has not been arrested and will turn himself in to authorities on Tuesday. His initial court appearance in U.S. District Court is scheduled for the same day.

The indictment, filed earlier this month, alleges that Siegrist distributed heroin to Craig Hofer on May 9, 2001. Hofer was found dead the next day.

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41 US NE: Anti-Drug Advertising Campaign Won't WorkFri, 19 Apr 2002
Source:Grand Island Independent (NE) Author:Evans, Steve Area:Nebraska Lines:37 Added:04/19/2002

The White House drug control strategy portraying casual illicit drug users as unpatriotic and somehow responsible for Sept. 11, carries forward the same failed efforts at drug prevention as the "Reefer Madness" campaign of the 1930s.

Marijuana is by far the most popular illegal substance. Smokers know it is primarily homegrown in the U.S. and imported from Canada or Mexico, so this approach is likely to have little effect on its consumption. Its prohibition, however does help promote organized crime here and abroad. Opium production clearly occurs in Afghanistan and one could assume is helping fund the terrorists.

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42 US NE: Editorial: Treatment Could End Revolving Jail DoorMon, 01 Apr 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:61 Added:04/01/2002

Behind the astounding arrest statistics kept by the Lincoln Police Department is the sad story of a subculture caught in the revolving door of the criminal justice system. The plight of some of the repeat offenders demonstrates the need for the community to continue to support and improve services for those suffering from substance abuse and mental illness.

More than 186 people in Lincoln have 100 or more arrests or citations since 1981, according to a Sunday Lincoln Journal Star story. Among those with multiple arrests are substance abusers and the mentally ill. They are the people who might be saved, unlike the career criminals who also make up the group of repeat offenders, criminal justice officials said.

[continues 325 words]

43 US NE: Drug Arrests Up In NebraskaMon, 01 Apr 2002
Source:Lincoln Journal Star (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:42 Added:04/01/2002

GRAND ISLAND -- Drug arrests have risen in central Nebraska, and police are crediting good work from a multi-unit task force.

Seventy-seven people were arrested in a 24-county area in 1999. That number grew to 119 in 2000, and had nearly doubled to 147 last year.

Police at all levels of law enforcement began working together in Hall, Adams and Buffalo counties in 1991 to better coordinate efforts as part of the Tri-City Drug Task Force.

Grand Island, Hastings and Kearney police are part of the task force, which covers 24 counties, as are the three counties' sheriff departments, the State Patrol, the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the U.S. attorney's office and the Midwest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area.

[continues 109 words]

44 US NE: OPED: Needle Exchanges Can Save Lives And MoneyTue, 26 Mar 2002
Source:Grand Island Independent (NE) Author:Wanek, Meg Area:Nebraska Lines:98 Added:03/26/2002

If you give a clean syringe to a drug addict, are you helping the person or are you hurting them?

Many states have been trying a method called a Needle Exchange Program (NEP), which has been successful in over 100 cities. Drug addicts bring in dirty needles and exchange them for clean syringes instead of sharing with each other. The program destroys the used needles in a safe manner.

NEPs do not condone drug use. The stated mission of these programs is primarily to stop the spread of AIDS and help identify and educate drug users.

[continues 668 words]

45 US NE: Column: No Future Falling In Love With EcstasyFri, 15 Mar 2002
Source:Grand Island Independent (NE) Author:Ayoub, George Area:Nebraska Lines:105 Added:03/15/2002

The Love Drug has plenty to hate about it.

But first you have to know something.

"I have recently had parents of young adults in their 20s come in. They were wondering about (Ecstasy)," said Wendy McCarty, project director at the Central Nebraska Council on Alcoholism. "One woman's daughter had been telling her that Ecstasy was, 'Really OK, Mom. It just makes you feel good. It doesn't hurt you.'"

What you should know is that Ecstasy, known on the street as the Love Drug, Rolls, E, the Hug Drug and XTC and in the lab as methylenedioxymethamphetamine or MDMA, has drawn the attention of McCarty and others partly because it kills brain cells like April melts snow -- and partly because of marketing.

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46 US NE: Editorial: Not Just A TechnicalityFri, 01 Mar 2002
Source:North Platte Telegraph, The (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:61 Added:03/01/2002

They're Fundamental Rights

District judges have thrown out a couple of moderately-high-profile drug cases in our area recently because the suspects' constitutional rights were violated. Many find this irritating and grumble about how inconvenient these so-called rights make the job of prosecuting criminals.

Perhaps they are inconvenient for some, but they are also in large part the underpinning of our entire society.

On Feb. 19, Judge John Murphy dismissed a case against a Missouri couple because they were searched without probable cause. That case was particularly disappointing since the original arrest came as the result of an intrepid resident who suspected something was up, confirmed his suspicion and called police.

[continues 254 words]

47 US NE: LTE: Drugs Should Not Be LegalizedMon, 11 Feb 2002
Source:Scottsbluff Star-Herald (NE) Author:Alfred, Steve Area:Nebraska Lines:28 Added:02/15/2002

To the Editor:

Legalize drugs?

This is for Roger Sharpe, Steve Evans and anyone else who believes that any drug like marijuana or meth should be made legal. It is not prohibition of these drugs that ruined peoples lives; it was their abuse of them. You are right about one thing: It is the families responsibility to teach their children right from wrong. I wonder what you are, will be or have taught yours?

Steve Alfred, Mitchell

[end]

48 US NE: PUB LTE: Wake Up, America, And Legalize MethMon, 11 Feb 2002
Source:Scottsbluff Star-Herald (NE) Author:Randell, Alan Area:Nebraska Lines:51 Added:02/14/2002

To the Editor:

Re: Meth, Jan. 27

"The drug is made up of stuff that can be purchased at stores, a nasty concoction - including such things as lye, engine starter and anhydrous ammonia -that the drug dealers "cook" to produce the drug."

So what? Lye, engine starter and anhydrous ammonia are legal substances, as is rat poison, but, more to the point, what business is it of the cops if I decide to poison myself?

"It's a drug that can be dangerous and ultimately deadly, which should be obvious from the fact that anything made up of drain cleaner, among other things, is not the best for one's insides."

[continues 164 words]

49 US NE: Editorial: Ecstasy (not)Tue, 12 Feb 2002
Source:Scottsbluff Star-Herald (NE)          Area:Nebraska Lines:76 Added:02/12/2002

Use Of Notorious Club Drug Increasing, Survey Says

The Partnership for a Drug-Free America survey shows that teen-age drug use remained steady with one exception. Ecstasy use jumped by 20 percent over last year and 71 percent since 1999.

There seems to be an impression that ecstasy is harmless.

That's why a the anti-drug group also unveiled Monday, in addition to its survey findings, an ad campaign to warn parents, educators and teens about the dangers of popping the drug.

[continues 418 words]

50 US NE: PUB LTE: It's Time To Look At Legalizing Some DrugsThu, 07 Feb 2002
Source:Scottsbluff Star-Herald (NE) Author:Evans, Steve Area:Nebraska Lines:50 Added:02/08/2002

To the Editor:

Thanks to Robert Sharpe (2/1/02) for a realistic view on the drug problem facing both NE and our nation. Our noble attempt at eliminating alcohol (a dangerous and addictive drug that kills over 100,000 Americans a year) was a miserable failure. Over 30 years of marijuana prohibition has done nothing but fill our prisons, ruin thousands of lives, and cost billions of dollars. It seems our governments efforts at dictating morality (the job of family and Church) are as effective as police efforts at drug education and prevention (the job of families and schools). Authorities admit at best they are intercepting only 10 percent of illegal drugs. Would we continue to support an education program that produces a 10 percent literacy rate when proven models are available at less cost and a much higher success rate?

[continues 159 words]


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