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1 US NM: Marijuana Debate Stirs Up Governor's Race In New MexicoThu, 19 Apr 2018
Source:Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Author:Bryan, Susan Montoya Area:New Mexico Lines:93 Added:04/24/2018

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jeff Apodaca on Thursday called for the expansion of New Mexico's medical marijuana program and for legalization of recreational use, saying the poverty-stricken state is missing out on millions of dollars in tax revenues and jobs that could be spurred by the industry.

Apodaca released his plan solidifying his position as a supporter of legalization as the race for governor heats up.

Apodaca pointed to New Mexico's history as the first state to allow for research and experimentation with marijuana as a therapeutic drug. It was his father, then-Gov. Jerry Apodaca, who signed that legislation in 1978.

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2US NM: Officials: 5th Grader Mistakenly Gave Pot Candy In SchoolThu, 18 Jan 2018
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL)          Area:New Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:01/18/2018

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- Officials at an Albuquerque charter school say a fifth-grader mistook her parents' medicinal marijuana for candy and passed it out to other students.

KRQE-TV in Albuquerque, New Mexico, reports the Albuquerque School of Excellence student handed out the pot edibles last week before teachers noticed her acting strangely.

Kristy Del Curto, Dean of Elementary Students, says that student also complained she couldn't see.

Del Curto says three students ate one gummy and the student who passed out the candy ate three or four pieces.

Pot gummies can be two to 100 times more potent than traditional marijuana.

Del Curto says school officials called 911 and paramedics monitored all the students to make sure they were not having dangerous reactions.

[end]

3 US NM: New Mexico 5th Graders Accidentally Ate Marijuana Edibles AtThu, 18 Jan 2018
Source:State, The (SC) Author:Gilmour, Jared Area:New Mexico Lines:73 Added:01/18/2018

5th-graders thought they ate ordinary gummies. But then the room started spinning.

One student passed out.

Another fifth-grader said she couldn't see.

A third started to feel extremely dizzy.

"I felt like the room was going to flip to the side," a 9-year-old student at Albuquerque School of Excellence in New Mexico told KRQE.

It didn't take the 8- and 9-year-olds -- or the principal of the school, for that matter -- long to figure out why the students were reeling last

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4 US NM: Pot Enterprise Stuck In LimboFri, 02 Sep 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:76 Added:09/02/2016

Partners in Planned Medical Cannabis Chain Blame State Obstruction

Duke Rodriguez's plan to build a statewide chain of cannabis retail stores has hit a snag. Rodriguez, owner of Ultra Health LLC, contends that state regulators have slow-tracked his request to open at least 14 new stores, most in communities that now lack dispensaries.

"We're just caught in this limbo with no formal response," Rodriguez said this week. "We have met every single request that they have presented, including evidence that we were able to secure product."

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5 US NM: Column: Marijuana Prohibition Alive And WellSun, 14 Aug 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Terrell, Steve Area:New Mexico Lines:95 Added:08/15/2016

Marijuana is just one of many issues in which the government is so far behind the people, it's beyond funny.

The Drug Enforcement Administration proved this again just last week when it announced that after weeks of reviewing a petition to reclassify marijuana so it's no longer a Schedule 1 drug, along with heroin, Quaaludes and various psychedelics. Some who follow this issue were optimistic that the DEA might might actually reverse its long-held ironclad Reefer Madness policy. Perhaps the DEA would would reclassify marijuana as a Schedule 2 drug - along with cocaine and methamphetamine - or even lower.

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6 US NM: State Bar Cautions Lawyers In Pot BusinessFri, 12 Aug 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Oxford, Andrew Area:New Mexico Lines:133 Added:08/12/2016

Some Attorneys Given Pause by 'Gray Area' Between State, Federal Cannabis Policies

Nine years after the New Mexico Legislature legalized marijuana for medicinal purposes, the state's lawyers are feeling uneasy about clients involved in the cannabis industry.

The New Mexico State Bar Association, citing federal drug laws and rules of professional conduct prohibiting lawyers from assisting clients in committing a crime, is cautioning attorneys on representing medical cannabis growers and dispensaries.

An opinion from the association's Ethics Advisory Committee published this week comes as businesses and regulatory groups navigate the legal gray area surrounding the licensed growing and selling of a product the federal government still classifies as a Schedule I narcotic.

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7 US NM: PUB LTE: A War On Drugs Or Drug Addicts?Tue, 09 Aug 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Alesio, Joseph Area:New Mexico Lines:35 Added:08/09/2016

IT IS WITH bewilderment that I read the article in the July 28 paper ("Gov. backs shutting teen addict center") that Turquoise Lodge is closing its adolescent unit due to "lack of demand."

Couple that with the state handcuffing addiction counselors, it seems that the "war on drugs" is seen by our health officials as a "war on drug addicts." These are not evil people who freely choose to stay addicted - they are sick and need help, not the turning of our backs!

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8 US NM: OPED: NM Should Legalize Rec Use Of PotMon, 08 Aug 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Sullivan, Kathy Area:New Mexico Lines:96 Added:08/08/2016

Colorado experience shows it's a winner

Well, it's been long enough since Colorado became one of the first two states to approve recreational marijuana legalization in November 2012. The rumor was that New Mexico was taking a wait and see stance before embarking on it's own legalization.

But now the stats are everywhere: Colorado is ranked as one of the fastest growing economies in our nation.

The unemployment rate is at its lowest since 2008, well below the national average. Incarceration rates have dropped through the floor.

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9 US NM: Column: Scared Youths Can Pay Price In War On DrugsSat, 30 Jul 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Dimond, Diane Area:New Mexico Lines:99 Added:07/30/2016

This is the time of year parents start worrying about back-to-school stuff. For those with college-age kids who will soon go off to live by themselves, there's an extra bit of preparation to think about.

You may not realize it, but police departments across the country, especially those near colleges and universities, often "flip" students caught with even a tiny amount of marijuana and recruit them into the ranks of "confidential informant."

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10 US NM: Column: To Stop Violence, End War On DrugsTue, 12 Jul 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Allen, Danielle Area:New Mexico Lines:88 Added:07/12/2016

Without a doubt, we Americans are in a bad way. The senseless deaths last week in Baton Rouge, La., Falcon Heights, Minn., and now Dallas are devastating beyond comprehension for the victims and their families. Each shooting also is an act in a shared national tragedy. The problems go down to the very roots.

The question of whether, as a country, we are headed in the right or wrong direction can no longer be answered simply with reference to policy matters such as the economy, education or foreign relations. Instead, we face the fundamental question of whether we, the people, as a single people, are holding together and can hold together.

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11 US NM: Column: War on Drugs Forces Us into a War With OurselvesMon, 11 Jul 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Allen, Danielle Area:New Mexico Lines:97 Added:07/12/2016

Without a doubt, we Americans are in a bad way.

The senseless deaths this week in Baton Rouge, La., Falcon Heights, Minn., and now Dallas are devastating beyond comprehension for the victims and their families. Each shooting is also an act in a shared national tragedy.

The problems go down to the very roots.

The question of whether, as a country, we are headed in the right or wrong direction can no longer be answered simply with reference to policy matters such as the economy, education or foreign relations. Instead, we face the fundamental question of whether we, the people, as a single people, are holding together and can hold together.

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12 US NM: OPED: Open Doors of Marijuana Industry toThu, 07 Jul 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Aguilar, Orson Area:New Mexico Lines:81 Added:07/08/2016

Slowly but surely, marijuana prohibition is ending. Legalization can help undo the racist impact of the war on this widely used drug - but it could also help perpetuate injustice.

Four states and the District of Columbia have passed measures to legalize marijuana for adult recreational use, and many more allow use for medical purposes. Those numbers will almost certainly grow this year, with my home state of California likely leading the way.

But state governments, as well as the burgeoning legal marijuana industry, need to get this right.

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13 US NM: Ex-Lawman: Shouldn't Have to Give UP Gun for MedicalSun, 26 Jun 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Cole, Thomas J. Area:New Mexico Lines:187 Added:06/26/2016

Former Sheriff Who Uses Medical Cannabis Can't Legally Own a Firearm

Former Bernalillo County Sheriff Darren White says he is no longer a certified law enforcement officer, doesn't have a concealed handgun carry license but does own a firearm.

White has also publicly disclosed that he is a medical cannabis user and an investor in a new medical marijuana grower and dispensary in Albuquerque, as well as its chief administrator and security chief.

But medical marijuana use - regardless of whether it's permitted by state law - remains illegal under federal law, and federal law prohibits unlawful users of controlled substances, such as marijuana, from possessing firearms, according to the long-held position of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

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14 US NM: OPED: Legalize Marijuana to Adequately Finance MedicaidFri, 10 Jun 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Rodriguez, Duke Area:New Mexico Lines:94 Added:06/10/2016

New Mexico's Program Is a Model of Efficiency but Still Needs More Money to Function

New Mexico is experiencing vast budget shortages stemming from a historically limited private-sector economy and lower than expected oil and gas revenues. Rarely, if ever, have the state coffers been sufficient to fully fund the programmatic needs for improved education, a stronger justice system and expanded but needed health care.

Of the three largest budget demands, only one is both a true economic and social positive multiplier to the improved well-being of the state's individual residents and the overall statewide economy: Medicaid. New Mexico is in an envious position of being able to obtain $3 in a federal match for each $1 the state provides.

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15 US NM: Lighting Company Sees Bright FutureMon, 06 Jun 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Sinovic, Steve Area:New Mexico Lines:89 Added:06/06/2016

LED Developers Seeking to Become Go-to Source for Cannabis Industry

On New Mexico's economic Richter scale, Lifted LED, with a workforce of just five, barely registers.

But just wait, say those energetic employees, which includes brothers and business partners Jaxon and Geoff Patterson.

"It's all comes down to the right light," Jaxon Patterson said of Lifted LED's future potential, especially on the cannabis growing front.

They have ambitious plans for their lighting company, inspired by an increasing emphasis on energy conservation that's expected to be a major factor in determining which companies survive in the fast-evolving cannabis industry.

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16 US NM: Medical Cannabis A Growing BusinessMon, 06 Jun 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:160 Added:06/06/2016

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Rachael Speegle, 34, left a full-time job as a critical care nurse last year to work at an Albuquerque medical marijuana dispensary and growing operation started by her husband.

Speegle quickly discovered that people who came to the Verdes Foundation dispensary in Albuquerque had lots of questions that called for her nursing skills.

"Their questions were so simple," she said. For example: "How do I talk to my doctor about this? Why does my nausea feel better when I smoke it than when I eat it?"

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17 US NM: Column: Marijuana Dollars Are a Fact of Political LifeSun, 17 Apr 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Terrell, Steve Area:New Mexico Lines:83 Added:04/17/2016

One of the last singles by the late Merle Haggard was a fun little tune he sang with his old crony, Willie Nelson, and younger country star, Jamey Johnson, called "It's All Going to Pot." With obvious glee radiating from their weathered voices, Hag and his pals sang, "It's all going to pot / Whether we like it or not. ..."

Yep, it looks like they do smoke marijuana in Muskogee after all.

Willie's been a leading advocate for marijuana legalization for decades now, but some who heard that song (released on April 20, 2015 . 4-20, get it, get it?) were surprised to hear Merle singing it. After all, he first rose to national fame in the late '60s when "Okie from Muskogee" captured the hearts of President Richard Nixon's Silent Majority and was hailed as a troubadour of the right. Those who have actually followed his career realize that Haggard's stance on drugs softened not long after that hit and that his politics were all over the place (one of several reasons I loved him so much).

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18 US NM: Column: The Highs And Lows Of PotFri, 15 Apr 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Brown, Greta Area:New Mexico Lines:185 Added:04/15/2016

Miracle Medication or Dangerous Drug? to Many Using Marijuana, It Can Be Both

It is both a plant and a drug, a recreation and a medication, and it is a substance weighed with both pros and cons in our society: marijuana. Some states have decided to legalize it while others have not. Marijuana, also known as weed, ganja, pot, etc., remains one of the most common illicit drugs in the country.

In New Mexico alone, 28 percent of teens reported using marijuana in 2013, according to a statewide Youth Risk and Resiliency Survey. And New Mexico tops the list of states where teens said they started using marijuana before the age of 13 - at 17 percent.

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19 US NM: Attorneys General: Methadone Clinics Should ReportWed, 13 Apr 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:69 Added:04/13/2016

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Attorneys general for New Mexico and 32 other states have asked the federal government to require methadone clinics to report to prescription drug monitoring programs, which track patients who received prescriptions of controlled substances, including narcotic painkillers.

New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas said prescribers in the state need to know if people enrolled in methadone maintenance programs are trying to get prescriptions of opioid drugs from other sources.

"Patients should not be able to go to methadone clinics and then also doctor shop for other drugs," James Hallinan, a spokesman for Balderas, said in a written statement.

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20 US NM: Column: Gangs Will Diversify If Drugs Are LegalThu, 07 Apr 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:McArdle, Megan Area:New Mexico Lines:80 Added:04/07/2016

I've long supported drug legalization for many reasons, but like many other advocates, I consider the reduction of violent crime to be the main benefit. Deprived of the ability to enforce contracts through the relatively peaceful legal process used by other markets, black markets are accompanied by high levels of violence: Gangs fight for territory, enforce business agreements and try to defer defections.

The more profitable the black market is, the more incentive there is to use violence to protect your profits, which may be one reason that the introduction of crack cocaine was accompanied by such a huge increase in violent crime. Legalizing drugs cuts into the profits, and gives industry players legal means to settle their disputes, so in theory, this should reduce the prevalence, and the brutality, of violent gangs.

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21 US NM: PUB LTE: Up In SmokeFri, 01 Apr 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Neal, Tracy Area:New Mexico Lines:26 Added:04/02/2016

If our nearsighted legislators had approved the sale of marijuana, we would have tons of new revenue.

If they even had the brains to allow cultivation of hemp, that could create more income. And if our governor would raise taxes, that would help.

Of course, if the state had invested in clean energy years ago instead of relying so much on fossil fuel sales, we wouldn't be in such a pickle.

Tracy Neal

Santa Fe

[end]

22 US NM: Editorial: There's A New War On DrugsThu, 31 Mar 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM)          Area:New Mexico Lines:79 Added:03/31/2016

One step, one person at a time, participants in the Longest Walk 5 are bringing attention to the problems of substance abuse and domestic abuse in Native communities in the United States. An initiative of the American Indian Movement, walkers arrived in Santa Fe on Tuesday, taking a break in the 3,600-mile walk to share their mission. The 30-plus participants will be in the area through Friday, when AIM founder Dennis Banks will take part in a governors conference for the Eight Northern Pueblos Council. On Wednesday, Banks and other walkers met with students at the Institute of American Indian Arts.

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23 US NM: Message From Border: 'We Got Problems Here'Fri, 11 Mar 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Villagran, Lauren Area:New Mexico Lines:99 Added:03/11/2016

Ranchers Rally Over Security Problems

ANIMAS - Several hundred ranchers gathered at a small-town high school in the Bootheel on Thursday to rally against what they described as a broken border.

Also present were members and representatives of New Mexico's congressional delegation and officials from public security agencies, including the Border Patrol, Army, National Guard and sheriffs. More than 600 people showed up at a school auditorium in Animas, population 237.

Ranchers here have been steaming over the reported kidnapping of a ranch hand in December, when drug runners allegedly hijacked the man's vehicle, loaded it with narcotics and drove him to Arizona. He came home "roughed up," his employer Tricia Elbrock said, but he survived the ordeal.

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24 US NM: PUB LTE: Right On PotFri, 11 Mar 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:White, Stan Area:New Mexico Lines:28 Added:03/11/2016

Legalize cannabis (marijuana) - but not because there are a million people who can hardly wait to pay taxes on it ("Pot in N.M. will not move forward," Feb. 15) or because it will save government money or put more police out protecting citizens. Stop caging responsible adults who use the relatively safe, extremely popular God-given plant (as described on the very first page of the Bible) because it's the right thing to do and the majority of citizens want to end the crime of cannabis prohibition and discrimination.

A sane or moral argument to perpetuate cannabis prohibition doesn't exist.

Stan White

Dillon, Colo.

[end]

25 US NM: Editorial: Compassion Lost in Cloud of Medical Pot'sSun, 06 Mar 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM)          Area:New Mexico Lines:59 Added:03/07/2016

What if the lawmakers who advocated for the Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use Act back in 2007 had proposed providing medical marijuana for the vague diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder? And what if they had suggested allowing nonprofit producers to be fronts for for-profit growers? And what if they had contemplated partnerships that turn tribal lands into huge pot farms?

Well, somebody would probably have said they were high. But in the realm of unintended consequences, all of those money-driven expansions have happened or are in the works.

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26 US NM: Marijuana PartnershipWed, 02 Mar 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:71 Added:03/02/2016

NM Medical Pot Producer, Nev. Tribe to Build Growing Facility Near Vegas

A New Mexico medical cannabis producer this week announced a joint venture with the Las Vegas Paiute tribe to build a large growing facility and two dispensaries on tribal land in Nevada.

Duke Rodriguez, founder of Ultra Health LLC, said the $5 million project could serve as a model for a similar deal in coming months with a pueblo in New Mexico.

One of the two planned Nevada dispensaries will be located on a 31-acre parcel of Paiute land in downtown Las Vegas, where the tribe now operates a cigarette retail business and minimart, tribal and Ultra Health leaders said after a news conference in Las Vegas.

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27 US NM: Pot Dispensary Hot Spot For CookiesTue, 01 Mar 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM)          Area:New Mexico Lines:29 Added:03/01/2016

Two Albuquerque Girl Scouts have picked an unusual spot to sell Girl Scout cookies - a marijuana dispensary.

KRQE-TV in Albuquerque reported a Girl Scout Junior and a Brownie set up shop Saturday outside medical marijuana dispensary Ultra Health and sold more than 60 boxes.

Ultra Health manager James Gambling says he invited the scouts and offered to donate $1 for every box the girls sold. He says "the munchies" is a stereotype that comes with marijuana, so it was fitting to have the Girl Scouts outside.

Phil Temer, a dad of one of the girls, says he saw nothing wrong with the girls selling near the dispensary.

Girl Scouts of New Mexico Trails spokeswoman Carol Ann Short says selling outside medical marijuana dispensaries is against scout rules.

[end]

28 US NM: State Publicizes List Of Pot GrowersTue, 01 Mar 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:72 Added:03/01/2016

Department of Health Regulations Kept Names Confidential Since 2007

The names of New Mexico nonprofits licensed to grow and sell medical marijuana were posted Monday on the state Department of Health website.

The disclosure marks the first time the names of licensed nonprofit producers have been revealed publicly since lawmakers approved the medical cannabis program in 2007.

The website lists the names and addresses of 23 nonprofit producers licensed several years ago by the Department of Health. It also lists the names of 12 nonprofits approved for licensure last year, many of which do not yet operate dispensaries.

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29 US NM: Health Dept. to List Med-Pot Growers on Website TodayMon, 29 Feb 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:56 Added:02/29/2016

35 Licensed Nonprofits Will Be Made Public

The names of New Mexico nonprofits licensed to grow and sell medical marijuana will be identified publicly on the state Department of Health's website today for the first time since lawmakers approved the cannabis program in 2007.

The names of all 35 licensed nonprofit producers will be posted at nmhealth.org, together with addresses of those with active dispensaries, agency spokesman Kenny Vigil said.

The agency will also honor requests from the public to view records submitted by producers, including applications and other records, Vigil said.

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30 US NM: PUB LTE: Pot Of GoldTue, 23 Feb 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Hogle, Dick Area:New Mexico Lines:23 Added:02/23/2016

The state of Colorado is not having budget problems this year because of reduced income from fossil fuels. Marijuana has generated billions - - that's billions - of dollars in revenue for the state of Colorado. Industrial hemp also would increase revenues in New Mexico. Wake up and smell the roses, people. We don't have to be at the bottom of the financial list. Marijuana is not as insidious as some people believe.

Dick Hogle

Espanola

[end]

31 US NM: NM Adopts New Rules For Medical Pot ProducersTue, 23 Feb 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Bryan, Susan Montoya Area:New Mexico Lines:54 Added:02/23/2016

Names Will Become Public on Monday

The names of licensed nonprofit medical marijuana producers and those seeking licenses from the state will become public under new rules taking effect next week, the New Mexico Department of Health announced Monday.

The confidentiality surrounding producers was challenged last year in a lawsuit filed by freelance journalist Peter St. Cyr and the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government. They argued the Health Department was violating public records law by keeping producers' names secret.

The agency has been reworking the rules since July, when Gov. Susana Martinez ordered officials to make the information public in the interest of transparency.

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32 US NM: Pot In N.M. Will Not Move ForwardMon, 15 Feb 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Simonich, Milan Area:New Mexico Lines:84 Added:02/16/2016

All 18 Senate Republicans, 6 Dems Vote Against Proposed Constitutional Amendment

New Mexico won't follow the lead of Colorado and other Western states that have legalized marijuana as a recreational drug, at least not this year.

State senators on Sunday night voted 24-17 against a proposed constitutional amendment that would have allowed people 25 and older to buy and smoke marijuana. The measure also would have legalized industrial hemp, a cousin of the marijuana plant, that has myriad commercial uses.

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33 US NM: OPED: When Addiction Has A White FaceSun, 14 Feb 2016
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Yankah, Ekow N. Area:New Mexico Lines:110 Added:02/15/2016

When crack hit America in the mid1980s, for African-Americans, to borrow from Ta-Nehisi Coates, civilization fell. Crack embodied instant and fatal addiction; we saw endless images of thin, ravaged bodies, always black, as though from a famined land. And always those desperate, cracked lips. Our hearts broke learning the words "crack baby."

But mostly, crack meant shocking violence, terrifying gangs and hollowed-out inner cities. For those living in crack-plagued areas, the devastation was all too real. Children learned which ways home were safe and which gang to join to avoid beatings, or worse.

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34 US NM: A Budding OperationSun, 14 Feb 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:236 Added:02/14/2016

For-Profits Play Increasing Role

Eric Howard takes great pride in his "ladies," each of which can yield up to 16 ounces of medical cannabis in a 16-week life cycle.

"They get so heavy, they fall over right at the end," said Howard, master grower at an 11-acre growing facility in Bernalillo owned by Ultra Health LLC. A trellis system is needed to support the heavy flowering branches of the mature plants.

Howard urges a visitor to feel one of the dense flowers, which leaves a sticky resin on the fingers.

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35 US NM: OPED: U.S. Needs to Find Solution to Opioid EpidemicFri, 05 Feb 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Obama, Barack Area:New Mexico Lines:100 Added:02/05/2016

We Must Treat Addiction Like Any Other Disease and Aim to Prevent and Treat

Last fall, I listened as a mother named Cary Dixon told her family's story at a forum I convened in West Virginia. It was heartbreaking.

Cary's adult son has struggled with a substance use disorder for years, and she described the pain that families like hers have gone through.

"We dread the next phone call," she said. "We don't take vacations for fear of the next crisis. We come back from vacations because there's a crisis."

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36 US NM: Poll: 61% In State Want Pot LegalizedFri, 29 Jan 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Baker, Deborah Area:New Mexico Lines:103 Added:01/29/2016

Measures Again Pushed to Allow Sale, Possession in New Mexico

SANTA FE - Sixty-one percent of New Mexicans surveyed this month said they support legalizing marijuana, and doing that would bump up state revenues by tens of millions of dollars, legalization supporters said Thursday.

"If it can get on the ballot, it's going to pass," said Sen. Gerald Ortiz y Pino, D-Albuquerque, who once again is sponsoring a constitutional change to legalize marijuana possession, regulate its production and sale, and tax it.

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37 US NM: OPED: It's Counterintuitive, but War on Drugs Leads toFri, 22 Jan 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Hari, Johann Area:New Mexico Lines:102 Added:01/23/2016

Look Back to Alcohol Prohibition for Understanding of Why

Taboos about drugs are lying shattered across the U.S., like broken debris after a party. But even as some states have begun to decriminalize or legalize marijuana, there is an argument that is making some Americans hesitate.

They ask: Aren't many drugs, even pot, much more potent today than they were in the 1960s, when the boomers formed their views on drug use? Hasn't cannabis morphed into super skunk? Aren't people who used legal painkillers like OxyContin and Percocet sliding into heroin addiction - suggesting that legally accessible drugs are a slippery slope toward the abuse of harder drugs?

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38 US NM: Proposed Pot Rule Change DiscussedFri, 08 Jan 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM)          Area:New Mexico Lines:46 Added:01/09/2016

Medical marijuana producers told state health officials Wednesday that disclosing the locations of growing facilities would invite criminals to burglarize the sites, while open-records advocates countered that greater transparency will help ensure fair and effective management of the state's cannabis program.

"We have a product that criminals want," said Eric Briones, founder of the Minerva Canna Group of Los Ranchos, one of 23 nonprofits licensed by the state Department of Health to grow and sell medical pot. Minerva must conduct its business in cash because banks don't take deposits from cannabis growers, he said. "We have cannabis and we have cash."

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39 US NM: Med Pot Growers Seek ConfidentialityThu, 07 Jan 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:79 Added:01/07/2016

Producers: Rule Change Will Expose Us to Criminals

SANTA FE - Medical marijuana producers told state health officials Wednesday that disclosing the locations of growing facilities would invite criminals to burglarize the sites, while open-records advocates countered that greater transparency will help ensure fair and effective management of the state's cannabis program.

"We have a product that criminals want," said Eric Briones, founder of the Minerva Canna Group of Los Ranchos, one of 23 nonprofits licensed by the state Department of Health to grow and sell medical pot. Minerva must conduct its business in cash because banks don't take deposits from cannabis growers, he said. "We have cannabis and we have cash."

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40 US NM: AG: Disclose All Pot Growers' NamesTue, 05 Jan 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Uyttebrouck, Olivier Area:New Mexico Lines:90 Added:01/05/2016

Proposed Rules Would List Distributors but Not Those Who Produce Own Supply

In a strongly worded letter, New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas said Monday that a Department of Health proposal to disclose the identities of licensed nonprofit producers of medical cannabis doesn't go far enough to abide by the state's open records law.

Balderas contends that state law doesn't authorize the agency to withhold the names of more than 4,000 New Mexicans licensed to grow their own supply of medical pot.

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41 US NM: Column: Time to Rethink Consequences of New MarijuanaSun, 27 Dec 2015
Source:New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Author:Jacob, Richard Dean Area:New Mexico Lines:89 Added:12/27/2015

The classic 1936 anti-marijuana propaganda film Reefer Madness revolved around very melodramatic events where high school students, lured by pushers to try marijuana, descended into a sensational multitude of drug-induced depravities. In decades hence, this cautionary tale of a drug menace gone mad has been rightfully seen as an extremely exaggerated take on the use of marijuana.

Today the pendulum has swung to quite another extreme.

Recently a Gas & Grass (combination gas station and marijuana dispensary) has opened in Colorado Springs so customers can get a variety of errands done in the same place for their unprecedented convenience - including the purchase of lottery tickets, beverages and cigarettes. The March 2014 issue of Psychology Today published an article titled, "It's Time to Address the Marijuana Issue: To put it simply, What are we thinking?" In it, the author, Dr. Robert Berezin, writes that "the substance abuse epidemic is so incredibly destructive to the well-being of our society ... it's problematic enough to deal with the hard drugs and prescription pharmaceuticals." He furthers that marijuana is a psychoactive drug, and while not physically addictive, it is powerfully habituating. Dr. Berezin says that he has treated all the addictions and that marijuana usage has gotten a "pass" - a substance whose habitual use negatively affects the brain and can be distorting and destructive to the personality and optimum functioning in life.

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42 US NM: Medical Pot Grower Wants Confiscated Plants ReturnedWed, 09 Dec 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Garrison, Steve Area:New Mexico Lines:80 Added:12/09/2015

Man Says in Lawsuit They Were Unlawfully Seized

AZTEC - A local man is demanding the San Juan County Sheriff's Office reimburse him for dozens of marijuana plants seized from his property in a raid in May 2014.

Gilbert Oldfield claims in a lawsuit filed in District Court on Dec. 1 that a sheriff's deputy unlawfully seized 43 marijuana plants last year from his residence on County Road 3950.

The deputy, Nima Babadi, seized the marijuana plants, despite knowing Oldfield possessed a New Mexico marijuana grower's license, according to the complaint.

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43 US NM: Editorial: We're Securing Our Borders AgainstFri, 04 Dec 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM)          Area:New Mexico Lines:62 Added:12/04/2015

In theory, law enforcement should be implemented in a fair, across-the-board manner. In practice in southern New Mexico, it has made state-sanctioned medical marijuana patients legal victims of their geography.

Get your medical pot prescription filled in Albuquerque or Santa Fe and, unless you are a very bad and very unlucky driver, you won't encounter a police officer. And if you do, it's highly unlikely you would be charged with drug possession over your prescription bottle with the bud in it. Get it filled in Las Cruces and head home via Interstates 10 or 25 to your smaller city or town that lacks a dispensary and your route home likely takes you through a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint.

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44 US NM: Legislators Weigh Bill To Study Hemp ProductionThu, 03 Dec 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Contreras, Russell Area:New Mexico Lines:55 Added:12/03/2015

Governor Vetoed Prior Measure to Legalize Crop, Cited Federal Law

(AP) - A Democratic New Mexico senator wants the state Department of Agriculture to adopt rules for researching and growing an industrial version of marijuana's non-intoxicating cousin.

Sen. Cisco McSorley, D-Albuquerque, introduced legislation Wednesday that could create the opportunity for farmers to grow hemp after a state study.

McSorley last year sponsored a bill aimed at legalizing the selling of hemp and licensing of farmers to grow the crop. That proposal would have established fees and set up state regulations for the distribution of hemp.

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45 US NM: Suit: Ban Border-Area Medical Pot SeizuresWed, 02 Dec 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Villagran, Lauren Area:New Mexico Lines:83 Added:12/02/2015

Deming Man Says He Fears Federal Charges

LAS CRUCES - A Deming man is asking a federal court to bar the U.S. Border Patrol from seizing medical marijuana at highway checkpoints near the southern border.

Raymundo Marrufo, a 50-year-old medical marijuana patient, is seeking a permanent injunction against the Border Patrol in U.S. District Court in Las Cruces that would order border agents to "cease questioning U.S. citizens regarding medical cannabis in any states where the use of medical cannabis has been approved."

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46 US NM: Jail Officer Arrested For Drug SmugglingFri, 27 Nov 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM)          Area:New Mexico Lines:30 Added:11/27/2015

A Santa Fe County jail corrections officer was arrested for bringing drugs into the jail to sell to an inmate, and the drugs were allegedly provided by the inmate's wife.

Brandon Valdez, 19, was booked into the jail he worked at on Nov. 19 and charged with distributing a controlled substance and bringing contraband into a place of imprisonment after a routine search of four guards resulted in 20 suboxone strips, 10 Xanax pills, two unidentified pills and a small amount of marijuana found on Valdez.

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47 US NM: OPED: City Failing To Follow New Forfeiture LawMon, 23 Nov 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Torraco, Lisa Area:New Mexico Lines:97 Added:11/24/2015

Profit Motivates Albuquerque to Ignore New Legislation Passed in the 2015 Session

The city of Albuquerque is violating the law. Under state law, cities are prohibited from taking the property of its citizens unless the person has been convicted of a crime.

Yet, the city of Albuquerque continues to take cash, cars and other property from people who are innocent. What the city is doing is illegal.

That is why we have partnered with the Institute for Justice, a nonpartisan, public interest law firm, and filed a lawsuit to end Albuquerque's unjust civil forfeiture ordinance.

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48 US NM: Column: Mexico Inches Toward Legalizing MarijuanaMon, 23 Nov 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Pacheco, Jerry Area:New Mexico Lines:105 Added:11/24/2015

Latest Supreme Court Ruling Could Radically Reshape Nature of Illicit Drug Trade With U.S.

The United States has a very sensitive relationship with Mexico pertaining to illegal drugs.

It is constantly claiming that Mexico has been lax in assisting in the interdiction of illegal drugs that are produced or staged in Mexico and shipped to destinations within the U.S. American policymakers and would-be presidential candidates point to the corruption within the Mexican government that is fueled by the billions in revenues of illegal drugs that Mexico's cartels send to the U.S.

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49 US NM: Column: Difficult Choices When a Judge Faces AddictedFri, 20 Nov 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Ramczyk, Daniel E. Area:New Mexico Lines:121 Added:11/22/2015

If Substance Abuse Is Not Treated, the Criminal Behavior Will Continue

What is my responsibility as a judge when a criminal defendant is suffering from alcohol or drug addiction?

In April 2003, I swore to uphold the United States Constitution, and to enforce the constitution and laws of New Mexico. How and when does court-ordered treatment for addiction fit into my judicial duties?

Addiction and crime are related. The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence reports that, every day, 36 people die and approximately 700 are injured in motor vehicle crashes that involve an alcohol-impaired driver.

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50 US NM: Lawsuit: FBI Raid Imperiled ChildrenWed, 11 Nov 2015
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM) Author:Villagran, Lauren Area:New Mexico Lines:101 Added:11/11/2015

Stun Grenades Used in 2013 Drug Bust

A lawsuit filed in federal court this week alleges FBI agents used excessive force in a southern New Mexico drug raid two years ago when they tossed stun grenades into a trailer where three children slept.

The 9- and 10-year-old sons and 12-year-old daughter of Abel Romero Sr. - the target of a predawn sweep that would net 22 suspected dealers of drugs and guns in Anthony, N.M. - were sleeping with their father in the living room of a single-wide trailer when federal agents allegedly blew open the front door with a stun grenade that sent shrapnel and broken glass flying.

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