Creative Loafing Atlanta _GA_ 1/1/1997 - 31/12/2024
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1 US GA: Pot activist: Don't Get Fooled By Georgia's 'Medical Marijuana'Fri, 21 Feb 2014
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Cornwell, Paul Area:Georgia Lines:151 Added:02/24/2014

State lawmakers are currently debating an update to the state's long-dormant "medical marijuana" law to make cannabis oil available to children suffering from epilepsy and other conditions. But Paul Cornwell, a longtime marijuana activist and founder of the Great Atlanta Pot Festival, argues that what's happening under the Gold Dome doesn't involve "medical marijuana" at all - and could set back the actual movement to make the plant widely available. Cornwell is the national coordinator of the Coalition for the Abolition of Marijuana Prohibition, or CAMP.

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2 US GA: Putting Atlantans In Harm's WayThu, 24 Oct 2013
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Carmichael, Rodney Area:Georgia Lines:300 Added:10/29/2013

For the Atlanta Harm Reduction Coalition, the state's only syringe exchange program, funding is harder to come by than a needle in a haystack

Additional reporting by Thomas Wheatley and Jim Burress

Editor's note: Some of the last names of the subjects in this story have been withheld.

On an unforgiving block in the English Avenue neighborhood known as the Bluff, just spitting distance from the future site of the Atlanta Falcons' projected $1.2 billion stadium, heroin has turned the world on its axis. Young dealers on one side of the street hug the corner like wayward old souls, while aged addicts on the opposite side seem stuck in a prolonged adolescence.

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3 US GA: Doctors Wanted For Georgia's Medical Marijuana LawThu, 10 Jan 2013
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Cornwell, Paul Area:Georgia Lines:122 Added:01/10/2013

Doctors wanted for Georgia's medical marijuana law State's cannabis law has sat on the shelf too long

Today, more than 18 states across the country have passed legislation allowing the use of medical marijuana. Georgia, oddly enough, was among the first. Yet for the last 33 years, the state has done virtually nothing to enact the law that would give thousands of cancer and glaucoma patients legal access to the plant.

In 1980, the Georgia General Assembly followed the lead of at least 16 other states and passed legislation allowing for the limited use of medical marijuana by people diagnosed with glaucoma and cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and radiation. It was supported by then Lt. Gov. Zell Miller and signed into law by Gov. George Busbee.

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4 US GA: Busted ,DEA, Fulton DA Announce 'Unprecedented' Drug SeizureMon, 06 Aug 2012
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Davis, Joeff Area:Georgia Lines:72 Added:08/07/2012

Officials with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the Fulton County District Attorney's office held a press conference this morning to announce an "unprecedented" bust that resulted in the seizure of millions of dollars in drugs and cash and the dismantling of a Fulton County drug operation.

Standing in front of several tables lined with evidence bags, Harry S. Sommers, the DEA Atlanta office's special agent in charge, said officers seized nearly 90 pounds of heroin, more than 4 pounds of crystal meth, $2 million in cash, and guns, from a Gwinnett County stash house.

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5 US GA: Editorial: Drug Courts Should Be Only Part Of JusticeWed, 04 May 2011
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA)          Area:Georgia Lines:76 Added:05/06/2011

New Panel to Overhaul State'S Corrections Policy

Standing, symbolically, in the Hall County drug court his son operates, Gov. Nathan Deal signed into law late last month a bill that could change the face of criminal justice in Georgia. House Bill 265 -- which found overwhelming support on both sides of the aisle, and in both chambers -- creates a 13-member panel to study and propose improvements to the state's corrections system.

Composed of gubernatorial appointees, House members, and judges or their appointees, the Special Council on Criminal Justice has been tasked with a noble if overly ambitious mission: to find methods to shift the state's focus to rehabilitation rather than simply retribution, decrease the number of nonviolent offenders who are locked up each year -- repeat offenders, in particular -- and, in turn, curb the prison system's increasingly unsustainable financial burden on taxpayers.

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6 US GA: Legal Weed Coming To Georgia?Thu, 21 Apr 2011
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Henry, Scott Area:Georgia Lines:143 Added:04/22/2011

The State's Dormant Medical Marijuana Program Is Primed for Revival . or Maybe Not

Georgia's long, complicated relationship with medical marijuana took an interesting turn recently as the government board that oversees medical policy for the state quietly began enlisting doctors to help select patients for pot therapy.

Wait, you didn't know Georgia had a relationship with ganga? Well, old-timers should recall that, back in 1976, ex-Gov. Jimmy Carter campaigned for president with a pledge to decriminalize marijuana use. "Penalties against drug use should not be more damaging to an individual than the use of the drug itself," Carter told Congress after being elected. "Nowhere is this more clear than in the laws against the possession of marijuana in private for personal use."

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7 US GA: OPED: Profiled In My Front YardThu, 16 Dec 2010
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Morris, Phillip Area:Georgia Lines:78 Added:12/19/2010

All That Police Work For Such A Small Amount Of Weed

Earlier this year, I got arrested for a half gram of marijuana - not even a joint's worth. All I wanted was some McDonald's, but I never even made it to the car.

My friend and I were standing in my front yard on Moreland Avenue in East Atlanta. I was two steps away from my driveway. Before I even knew what was happening, my friend and I had a spotlight on us and were being ordered not to move. Two more units were on the way. My friend and I were both handcuffed and, by my estimation, illegally searched. (My friend told the officer that he couldn't search us without probable cause, but no luck.) I admit, I had some weed on me.

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8 US GA: Confessions Of A Corporate Pot SmokerWed, 14 Apr 2010
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Nouraee, Andisheh Area:Georgia Lines:106 Added:04/19/2010

Don't be suckered by stereotypes. Burrito rollers, bass guitarists and alt-weekly journalists aren't the only people who work stoned. We found a corporate accountant who says that smoking a bowl or two makes preparing financial forecasts a breeze - a thick, pungent breeze. For obvious reasons, she doesn't want us to use her real name, so let's call her Mary Jane.

Where do you work?

I work for a software developer. I don't want to say the name.

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9 US GA: Working GirlsWed, 14 Apr 2010
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Shalhoup, Mara Area:Georgia Lines:185 Added:04/15/2010

The Benefits Of Being A Female Pot Dealer

For Sally Davidson, the decision to sell weed boiled down to a simple question: How far was she willing to go to keep her other, legitimate business open?

Davidson had for years poured boundless creativity and long hours into her small, intown operation (sorry, we've got to keep it vague, just as we've changed the names of the subjects of this story) and out of which she pulled barely enough money to make the rent. She either would have to shutter her business or work two gigs.

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10 US GA: Pot Legalization In Georgia? Don't Hold Your BreathWed, 14 Apr 2010
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Henry, Scott Area:Georgia Lines:81 Added:04/15/2010

"We believe licensed physicians are competent to employ marijuana, and patients have a right to obtain marijuana legally, under medical supervision, from a regulated source."

The above quote, taken from a 1982 letter to the editor published in the Journal of the American Medical Association and written by then-freshman Congressman Newt Gingrich, is the closest Georgia has ever gotten to decriminalizing the doobie.

The fact that NORML, the nonprofit lobbying organization working to legalize marijuana, hadn't been active in Georgia for several years (before the state chapter was reopened last year) should tell you something about the futility of the cause.

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11 US GA: Column: Is Mexico's Drug War A Threat To US Security?Tue, 10 Mar 2009
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Nouraee, Andisheh Area:Georgia Lines:95 Added:03/10/2009

The El Paso, Texas/Juarez, Mexico metropolitan area has a long history of violence.

I should know. For it was out in the west Texas town of El Paso that I was gunned down by several cowboys. They were avenging my shooting of a dashing young stranger in nearby Rose's Cantina. Wild as the west Texas wind he was, he challenged me for the love of wicked Feleena, an evil Mexican maiden whose eyes were as black as night.

Prior to that, the area was a battleground for several competing civilizations. The Spanish took the place from Pueblo Native Americans. After Mexico became independent, an expansion-crazed United States swooped in. The U.S.-imposed Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo forced Mexico to surrender all land north of the Rio Grande River. For 160 years, the Rio Grande has been an international border dividing the El Paso/Juarez metroplex into two.

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12 US GA: Atlanta's Drug WarWed, 12 Dec 2007
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Sugg, John F. Area:Georgia Lines:371 Added:12/14/2007

Cops Say Gangs Are Driving The City's Crime Surge

The "International Robbing Crew" was the gang that shot straight -- or, at least, often.

Prosecutors on Nov. 2 charged nine young desperados from the gang, at least three of them from New Orleans, with seven murders. But cops say they may have killed as many as 30 people over the last two years in a brutal gambit to dominate the Atlanta crime scene.

Some of the murder victims apparently were random, among them an Iraq war vet who was gunned down on Spring Street in what prosecutors speculate was target practice by the gangsters.

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13 US GA: APD, City Council: Lateral MovesWed, 21 Mar 2007
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Henry, Scott Area:Georgia Lines:93 Added:03/23/2007

Police Say Legislation Doesn't Reach The Crux Of Problem

Atlanta City Council on Monday unanimously voted to repeal the controversial "DC-6" law that gave police broad powers to arrest people for disorderly conduct.

According to Atlanta police records, officers cited DC-6 more than 7,500 times last year – more than any other nontraffic offense. Under the law, police were free to arrest anyone who happened to walk through an area labeled as a known drug zone. That was problematic because there were no official drug areas. Police used it as a catch-all charge.

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14 US GA: PUB LTE: Legalize It!Wed, 21 Feb 2007
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Muse, Kirk Area:Georgia Lines:44 Added:02/23/2007

Major kudos to John Sugg for his outstanding column (Metropolis, "Kathryn Johnston's real killer," Feb. 15). Imagine if we had no "drug-related crime." Imagine if our overall crime rate was a small fraction of our current crime rate.

We once had such a situation here in the United States. Prior to the passage of the Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914, the term "drug-related crime" didn't exist. And drug lords, drug cartels or even drug dealers as we know them today didn't exist either.

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15 US GA: PUB LTE: Fight The PowerWed, 21 Feb 2007
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Novitch, Misty Area:Georgia Lines:46 Added:02/23/2007

Mr. Sugg is doing an amazing job of bringing back true journalism, especially with his last article, (Metropolis, "Kathryn Johnston's real killer," Feb. 15). He makes one of the best connections I've seen in print: the war on drugs and the war on terror.

Both of these "wars" accomplish nothing but INCREASING what the war is waged upon: drug dealing and terrorist activity.

The bulk of the "collateral damage" falls upon regular people, whether it's the weed dealers in jail or the 655,000 Iraqis killed on lies. I think basically every thinking person in this country -- the rest of the world found out a long time ago -- now knows that both of these wars are wasting time, money and especially lives. So why is Bush allowed to continue and expand them? Why are we still relying on the spineless politicians who supposedly represent us? Do we not want to hurt feelings?

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16 US GA: Kathryn Johnston's Real KillerWed, 14 Feb 2007
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Sugg, John F. Area:Georgia Lines:142 Added:02/14/2007

A Cop Pulled The Trigger, But The Perp Is The Money-Driven 'War On Drugs'

In the inflammatory ruckus about the Atlanta police killing of an elderly woman, Kathryn Johnston, what's overlooked is the backdrop to the tragedy. Cops fired the fatal bullets on Nov. 21 in Johnston's west Atlanta home, but the real culprit is the 36-year-old "war on drugs."

That war is just as much a disaster, just as ill-conceived, just as deadly to innocents and just as big a waste of tons of cash as George Bush's "war on terrorism."

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17 US GA: PUB LTE: Outlaw FoodWed, 26 Oct 2005
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Muse, Kirk Area:Georgia Lines:34 Added:10/29/2005

I'm writing about Thomas Bell's "Krispy Kreme contraband" (Arts, Shelf Space, Oct. 6).

According to http://www.drugwarfacts.org/causes.htm, each year there are 17,000 deaths from all illegal drug use combined, direct and indirect.

No doubt the 17,000 illegal drug deaths are tragic, but that pales in comparison to the 365,000 deaths from poor diets or physical inactivity.

Speaking of poor diets, notice that we have no illegal foods, even though many foods are unhealthy - especially if consumed in large portions over several years.

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18 US GA: Review: Krispy Kreme ContrabandWed, 05 Oct 2005
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Bell, Thomas Area:Georgia Lines:56 Added:10/05/2005

Shit! It's an FEA raid! Quick, flush the cotton candy down the toilet and stuff that Snickers bar up your butt! And cover that damn pimple with some Clearasil, man! They'll know you've been using! Oh, man ... NOBODY MOVE! Step away from the eclair and put your hands in the air, you junk food junkie!Someone's heading to the fat farm.

Like the film Traffic on sugar and triglycerides, Christopher Largen's novel Junk takes us on a tour of a near future "war" on junk food, complete with a food czar, a Food Enforcement Agency, and mandatory sentences for possession of hamburgers, doughnuts and milk shakes.

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19 US GA: Faces Of MethThu, 21 Jul 2005
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Abkowitz, Alyssa Area:Georgia Lines:691 Added:07/23/2005

How Three Men Are Fighting The Little White Powder

Editor's note: Paul is not the actual name of the man described in this story. Because he is facing criminal charges, his name has been changed to avoid jeopardizing his case. In addition, Britt's last name has not been published to protect his effort to reinstate his pharmacist's license.

Paul can't sit still. His hazel eyes dart back and forth behind purple-tinted shades. He fiddles with his fake Dolce & Gabbana belt buckle. He smokes a Marlboro Light, puts it out, lights another.He asks for liquor. Beer and wine only, the waitress says. He moans, then laughs. Customers turn and stare in the dimly lit Virginia-Highland tavern. The waitress gives him a weird look. He orders a PBR.

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20 US: The New CaffeineThu, 16 Sep 2004
Source:Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Author:Abkowitz, Alyssa Area:United States Lines:136 Added:09/17/2004

Prescription Drug Adderall Is All The Rage On College Campuses

Editor's note: To protect the identities of interviewees who used or sold Adderall illegally, only their first names have been printed.

Henry, an Emory University undergrad, couldn't stay awake. A quick learner, he always put off studying until the last minute. As tests loomed closer, he'd pull all-nighters. But copious cups of coffee didn't do the job to help him cram. His eyes eventually fluttered over his books, and he frequently nodded off.

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