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1 US OK: PUB LTE: Legalizing Drugs Will Solve ProblemsSun, 18 Sep 2011
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Turney, Bobbie Area:Oklahoma Lines:24 Added:09/22/2011

I agree with B.J. Brockett (Your Views, Sept. 7) and his solution to the drug problems. This has been my solution for many years. It's impossible to keep people from using drugs so let them have all they want and they'll take care of the problem by themselves.

It would save the lives of people getting killed or injured buying and selling drugs and end robberies of homes of innocent people. There would be no more drug dealers trying to sell drugs at schools and no more pharmacy holdups.

Bobbie Turney, Edmond

[end]

2 US OK: Prohibition Not HelpingSun, 04 Sep 2011
Source:Norman Transcript (OK) Author:Wooldridge, Howard Area:Oklahoma Lines:28 Added:09/06/2011

NORMAN -- Editor, The Transcript:

As my colleagues fly around in helicopters, pedophiles are not being caught in the Internet chat rooms, as they entice young teens to "meet in real life." My profession shrinks by the day, and chasing after a green plant should be at the bottom of our priority list.

In my experience, marijuana is too dangerous to leave in the hands of criminals and cartels. It should be handled like alcohol. Can anyone explain how marijuana prohibition is helping our young people, since it is easier for them to buy pot than whiskey?

Det./Officer Howard Wooldridge (retired)

Norman

[end]

3 US OK: Editorial: Spotting Marijuana Fields Made Easier ByFri, 26 Aug 2011
Source:Norman Transcript (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:37 Added:08/28/2011

NORMAN - The continuing drought makes it easier for Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics agents to spot suspected marijuana plots from the air. The plants are often the only areas that appear to have been watered. From 1,000 feet up, the green shine stands out among dead grass and weeds.

The bureau displayed its equipment and firepower for law enforcement, community leaders, judges and the media at Max Westheimer Field on Wednesday. Director Darrell Weaver said marijuana eradication is a community issue and should not be solely the concern of law enforcement. Indeed, it is a community problem that will take a changing mindset. Marijuana cultivation is big business in some areas of the state. Most of the larger growing operations are located in the eastern parts of the state, but Cleveland County has numerous plots.

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4 US OK: OPED: Oklahoma Senator Johnson's Fight To End LifeTue, 16 Aug 2011
Source:Huffington Post (US Web) Author:Papa, Anthony Area:Oklahoma Lines:106 Added:08/16/2011

Oklahoma State Senator Connie Johnson thinks Larry Yarbrough should be free. Larry, a model prisoner, is in his 17th year of a life-without-parole sentence for a nonviolent drug crime. On August 17, Sen. Johnson will speak on behalf of Yarbrough at an Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board hearing that will be considering commuting Larry Yarbrough's drug trafficking sentencing. In 2002 the Board unanimously commuted his sentence, but former governor Frank Keating overturned that decision and denied Larry his freedom.

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5 US OK: Corruption Trial Witness Says She Was Given GiftsFri, 05 Aug 2011
Source:Tulsa World (OK) Author:Gillham, Omer Area:Oklahoma Lines:204 Added:08/08/2011

Defense attorneys in a federal corruption trial involving two Tulsa Police officers pointed to inconsistencies in statements of one government witness and questioned the motives of another during Friday's proceedings.

In the fifth day of testimony against Officers Jeff Henderson, 38, and Bill Yelton, 50, an informant used by the partners said she received Christmas gifts of perfume and marijuana from Henderson.

Henderson and Yelton were indicted under seal July 19, 2010, and special prosecutors and U.S. District Judge Bruce Black of New Mexico were appointed to handle the case.

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6 US OK: LTE: Drug Demand, Weapons Fuel Mexican ViolenceWed, 15 Jun 2011
Source:Norman Transcript (OK)          Area:Oklahoma Lines:37 Added:06/15/2011

NORMAN -- Seventy percent of firearms seized in Mexico were submitted to a United States gun-tracing program. The figure could be higher, as investigators couldn't determine the origin of nearly 9,000 seized weapons.

It's further evidence of the many ways the U.S. has contributed to Mexico's violent path. America's insatiable demand for drugs has fueled cartels to turn to violence in controlling supply lines.

Three U.S. senators released the weapons report this week. Of the 29,284 firearms recovered by Mexican authorities in 2009 and 2010, 20,504 came from the United States.

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7 US OK: Drugs Land Many Women In PrisonSat, 12 Feb 2011
Source:Tulsa World (OK) Author:Graham, Ginnie Area:Oklahoma Lines:50 Added:02/12/2011

Emily Linville grew up hearing how to illegally call in a drug prescription. It was that knowledge that landed her, a sister and their mother in Tulsa County's Drug Court at the same time. But, only Linville has graduated from Drug Court.

Her sister, Mary Beth Linville, 25, violated program rules and was sent to prison in January to serve four years for prescription drug fraud and bogus checks.

Their mother, Mary Kathleen Linville, 52, was charged Dec. 16 with four counts on attempting to obtain prescription drugs by fraud. Her previous convictions include prescription drug fraud in 2007 and 2008 and an escape from prison. In 2004, she was convicted in Creek County of prescription drug fraud.

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8 US OK: Looking for Cause in Justice SystemSun, 30 Jan 2011
Source:Tulsa World (OK) Author:Palmer, Barbara Area:Oklahoma Lines:255 Added:01/30/2011

Justice System Examined in Oklahoma's Top-Rank for Female Incarcerations

Editor's Note-Oklahoma Watch is an independent investigative and in-depth reporting team that partners with news organizations and higher education to produce impact journalism in the public interest. This is the first installment in a series of stories in which Oklahoma Watch, the Tulsa World and The Oklahoman are examining the issue of Oklahoma's female incarceration rate. For more, visit tulsaworld.com/okwatch.

In 1908, Kate Barnard, Oklahoma's feisty first commissioner of charities and corrections, traveled to Kansas to investigate the alleged torture and mistreatment of Oklahoma prisoners. Oklahoma federal prisoners - and Oklahoma Territory's felons before them - were incarcerated in the state penitentiary in Lansing, Kan., because the new state had no prison. Barnard, elected to her state post before women had the right to vote, had been instrumental in lobbying the first Legislature to adopt prison laws that were then among the most progressive in the nation. "In Oklahoma," she had said, "we would do differently."

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9 US OK: Edu: PUB LTE: Legalize Cannabis Biblically CorrectThu, 11 Nov 2010
Source:Daily O'Collegian (OK State U, OK Edu) Author:White, Stan Area:Oklahoma Lines:36 Added:11/12/2010

Dear Editor of the Daily O'Collegian,

Calvin Warner got an arrow-splitting bull's eye (Legalized pot could reduce deficit, Nov. 9, 2010) exposing cannabis (marijuana) prohibition and extermination as more harmful than the plant itself.

Another reason to legalize cannabis that doesn't get mentioned is because it is Biblically correct because God, The Ecologician, indicates He created all the seed bearing plants saying they are all good on literally the very first page (see Genesis 1:11-12 and 29-30). The only Biblical restriction placed on cannabis is to accept it with thankfulness (1 Timothy 4:1-5).

What kind of government cages responsible humans for using what God says is good?

Truthfully,

Stan White

Dillon, Colorado

[end]

10 US OK: Edu: OPED: Legalized Pot Could Reduce DeficitTue, 09 Nov 2010
Source:Daily O'Collegian (OK State U, OK Edu) Author:Warner, Calvin Area:Oklahoma Lines:85 Added:11/10/2010

Since 1937, marijuana has been an illegal substance in the United States. In recent years, there has been some resurgence of dissenters to this law, but even today they are generally cast aside as "potheads" or as immoral and radical.

Yet, after examining the facts, I realized that I too found myself an advocate of legalizing marijuana. In fact, I began to think that, in a time of recession and deficit like the present, perhaps we can't afford not to.

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11 US OK: Red Ribbons And Drug EducationFri, 29 Oct 2010
Source:Pauls Valley Daily Democrat (OK) Author:Porterfield, Barry Area:Oklahoma Lines:62 Added:10/30/2010

One veteran law enforcement agent believes drug education is something that should be a regular part of the curriculum in schools and not just done during special times like Red Ribbon Week.

That was one the points made this week by Dub Turner, who brought a very serious drug prevention message to Pauls Valley's junior high students.

Local schools brought in different speakers and offered a variety of activities as part of this week's Red Ribbon campaign, which is the oldest and largest drug prevention campaign in the country.

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12 US OK: PUB LTE: Important Effects of Legalizing PotThu, 14 Oct 2010
Source:Oklahoma Daily, The (U of Oklahoma, OK Edu) Author:White, Stan Area:Oklahoma Lines:40 Added:10/17/2010

Re-legalizing cannabis (marijuana) alone will lower incarceration rates. Ending cannabis prohibition will also reduce hard drug addiction rates, which in turn lowers crime rates.

Responsible adults who use the relatively safe, God-given plant cannabis often purchase it from people who also sell hard drugs, which increases the likelihood of hard drug addiction. RE-legalizing cannabis will eliminate that gateway effect. Another reason cannabis prohibition increases hard drug addiction rates is due to DARE telling lies, half-truths and propaganda regarding the plant. How many people heard DARE say cannabis was very bad and then realize it's not nearly as bad as claimed and think other substances must not be so bad either only to become addicted to honest hard drugs?

Further, ending the sequel to prohibition will save wasted valuable limited law enforcement resources, read taxes. It may also decrease alcoholism and contempt for laws and government.

Legalizing cannabis is one of the most important issues of our time.

Truthfully,

Stan White

Dillon, Colorado

[end]

13 US OK: Edu: Column: Legalization of Certain Drugs Could Reduce High U.S. IncarceWed, 13 Oct 2010
Source:Oklahoma Daily, The (U of Oklahoma, OK Edu) Author:Cross, Tucker Area:Oklahoma Lines:87 Added:10/14/2010

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, in 2008 over 7.3 million people were on probation, in jail or prison or on parole at the year's end.

That means that right now, at any given time, about 3.2 percent of all U.S. adults are under correctional supervision. Out of that 7.3 million, about 2.5 million are prisoners.

The U.S. has 2.5 million people locked away at this moment. In fact, when you look at comparisons to other developed countries, you notice that it's a lot of people, not only by the number of prisoners, but also by proportion of the population. The U.S. has the highest incarceration rates in the world.

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14 US OK: Lawmen Locate Pot Harvesting From The AirSun, 26 Sep 2010
Source:Tulsa World (OK) Author:Marshall, Nicole Area:Oklahoma Lines:111 Added:09/29/2010

Law officers have seized marijuana plants by the hundreds in recent weeks, from sophisticated indoor growing operations to massive outdoor farms tended by growers who work for Mexican cartels.

In west Tulsa County, deputies even found it growing in trees.

It's the time of year that pot busts abound, the harvest season for outdoor growing, said Mark Woodward, spokesman for the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control.

"This is the time of year that the plants are so large they are easier to see from the air," Woodward said, referring to the bureau's efforts to spot pot patches from planes.

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15 US OK: DA Says Additional Drug Cases Under ReviewSun, 05 Sep 2010
Source:Tulsa World (OK) Author:Gillham, Omer Area:Oklahoma Lines:166 Added:09/05/2010

Following the recent indictment of several Tulsa police officers, the district attorney's office has widened its review of drug cases to include cases that involve eight officers whose names have surfaced in a grand jury investigation.

District Attorney Tim Harris' office told the Tulsa World that the number of cases under review has grown exponentially since the indictment of five police officers and the naming of two additional officers cooperating with U.S. Attorney Jane W. Duke of the Eastern District of Arkansas. An eighth officer has pleaded guilty.

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16 US OK: Digital Drugs' At Mustang High School Have ExpertsMon, 12 Jul 2010
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Colberg, Sonya Area:Oklahoma Lines:115 Added:07/13/2010

As digital drugs or i-dosing appears in Oklahoma, experts warn that it's not the sounds themselves that should worry parents. The websites where the tones are sold entice young people down a slippery slope, they say.

Schools and drug experts are warning parents to beware of "digital drugs" that Mustang High School students blamed for their apparent intoxication.

Three students were sent to the principal's office when they appeared to be high on drugs or alcohol in March, said Mustang School District Superintendent Bonnie Lightfoot. She said the kids explained that they had tried something called "i-dosers."

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17US OK: Meth Labs Again On The Rise In OklahomaSun, 11 Jul 2010
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK) Author:Brown, Vallery Area:Oklahoma Lines:Excerpt Added:07/12/2010

The one-pot recipe for methamphetamine is spreading and the addiction isn't stopping in Oklahoma.

Only rumors hint at the origins of a recipe poisoning Oklahomans.

Some credit a college chemistry student paid to perfect the process. Others say incarcerated drug cooks created a new method. However it came about, the "one-pot" or "shake and bake" process of cooking methamphetamine is spreading.

By May's end, law enforcement officers reported seizing nearly 300 meth labs, putting the state on track to exceed the 743 labs found in 2009, data from the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control shows.

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18 US OK: Edu: PUB LTE: In Response to Wednesday's Letter to the EditorThu, 15 Apr 2010
Source:Oklahoma Daily, The (U of Oklahoma, OK Edu) Author:Nitzschke, Justin Area:Oklahoma Lines:47 Added:04/19/2010

In Wednesday the 14th's letters to the editor, a retired detective argued that the government had a duty to protect the people from putting harmful substances into our bodies. He was speaking about smoking marijuana. He then went on to say that if you step outside of cigarettes, alcohol, Prozac, or Valium you will be punished in order to protect you from whatever harmful substance you used, implying that these substances are harmless.

I would like to point out that CDC statistics state that alcohol directly cause over 22,000 deaths in the US in 2006, and indirect deaths are estimated at over 100,000. This number has increased every year since. The CDC also estimates that around 443,000 die as a result of exposure to tobacco or tobacco smoke. Not to mention the costly addiction that makes it difficult to stop. Prozac and Valium have the potential to kill upon overdose, and can cause dependence after prolonged use. The current direct death toll from Marijuana is 0. No one has ever died from smoking pot.

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19 US OK: Edu: PUB LTE: 'Marijuana Laws Oppress Us All'Tue, 13 Apr 2010
Source:Oklahoma Daily, The (U of Oklahoma, OK Edu) Author:Woolridge, Howard Area:Oklahoma Lines:30 Added:04/18/2010

Regarding marijuana prohibition, the government has an interest, nay a duty, to protect its citizens from harmful subtances they might put in their body. Thus that government imposes punishment for doing so, in the name of protecting the citizen. This is a rational course of action, if that country is run by nanny-state liberals who believe the government is the solution to all problems.

Prohibition is a policy whereby the government threatens its citizens with punishment, backed up by the police, prosecutors and prisons, for anyone who steps outside the box of alcohol, tobacco, Prozac and Valium. Yes, in regards to our bodies, they are owned by the Big Brother.

Detective/Officer Howard Wooldridge (retired)

Drug Policy Specialist, COP

[end]

20 US OK: Edu: PUB LTE: 'Marijuana Laws Oppress Us All'Tue, 13 Apr 2010
Source:Oklahoma Daily, The (U of Oklahoma, OK Edu) Author:Muse, Kirk Area:Oklahoma Lines:58 Added:04/18/2010

I'm writing about Jess Eddy's thoughtful column: "Marijuana laws oppress us all".

Marijuana is the foundation of our so-called war on drugs. Remove marijuana from the equation and the whole drug war will collapse.

The so-called war on drugs is a huge industry and huge bureaucracy.

Victory in the drug war is not possible, nor is it the goal. Victory in the drug war would mean that the drug war industry and bureaucracy are out of business.

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