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81 US CT: As Salvia Use Increases, So Do ConcernsSat, 04 Jul 2009
Source:Norwich Bulletin (CT) Author:Bowles, Adam Area:Connecticut Lines:99 Added:07/06/2009

Herb Can Cause Hallucinations

Norwich, Conn. — About a year ago, as the drug salvia divinorum grew in popularity in California and New York, customers began asking Marianne Thibeault if she sold it at her downtown store, The Other Side.

In response to the demand, Thibeault indeed began selling salvia. Now, a half-gram of the organic herb sells for $32.95 at her store. One company she buys from promotes it as a sacred herb that will “turn your brain on.”

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82 US CT: Editorial: Salvia Should Be BannedSat, 04 Jul 2009
Source:Norwich Bulletin (CT)          Area:Connecticut Lines:80 Added:07/06/2009

There is a new danger in our neighborhoods that few are aware of.

It's called salvia, a perennial herb in the mint family that can induce hallucinations or delusional episodes in those who ingest it - similar to the effects one might experience from taking LSD or Ecstasy. It has become a widely popular drug of choice among young people, thanks mainly to the Internet, where word of its "powers" has spread rapidly.

A search of the Internet site YouTube produced more than 5,000 hits of videos of young people taking the drug. Spend a few minutes watching those videos and the potential danger is clear. Those using the drug lose their physical coordination, appear in a dreamlike state or show signs of confusion or madness.

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83 US CT: PUB LTE: Once Upon A Time It Was OK To Grow PotWed, 24 Jun 2009
Source:News-Times, The (Danbury, CT) Author:Mellett, James S. Area:Connecticut Lines:48 Added:06/24/2009

There is a back story to the issue of the legalization of marijuana (The News-Times, June 14). Most people are unaware of how its use became illegal.

Let me start at the beginning. Full disclosure: I neither smoke nor grow the stuff. Cannabis sativa is the proper scientific name for this member of the hemp family, which produces tough fibers, as well as oily compounds with pharmacological properties.

In Colonial times, American farmers were required by law to grow hemp because of its importance as a source of yarn, rope, and paper. No ships could sail without hemp cordage on board to raise and lower sails as they floated.

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84 US CT: Locally GrownThu, 18 Jun 2009
Source:New Haven Advocate (CT) Author:Bromage, Andy Area:Connecticut Lines:58 Added:06/17/2009

Connecticut's Buzz Kill

Lawmakers called it "the blunt bill."

Connecticut landed at the center of the national debate on marijuana reform this year when two state senators from New Haven, Martin Looney and Toni Harp, proposed decriminalizing small amounts of pot possession.

Under the bill, anyone caught with less than an ounce of weed would have their mellow harshed with an infraction punishable by fines of $59 to $129 rather than a misdemeanor charge that could land you a year behind bars.

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85 US CT: The Marijuana QuestionTue, 16 Jun 2009
Source:Hartford Advocate (CT) Author:Miliard, Mike Area:Connecticut Lines:462 Added:06/17/2009

Is Now The Time To Legalize Pot?

The Obama administration, already overtaxed with two foreign campaigns, made headlines when it waved a white flag in a fight much closer to home. Gil Kerlikowske, the White House's newly minted director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy -- the so-called drug czar -- called for an end to the "War on Drugs."

Granted, Kerlikowske wasn't signaling an intention to lay down arms and pick up a pack of E-Z Widers. His was a semantic shift -- a pledge to abandon gung-ho fighting words and imprisonment in favor of treatment. But it was newsworthy nonetheless. As Bruce Mirken, communications director of the Marijuana Policy Project -- the biggest pot-policy-reform group in the country -- puts it: "Can you imagine [Bush administration czar] John Walters saying that? The Earth would open up!"

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86 US CT: Parents Get The Lowdown On A New Drug ThreatThu, 28 May 2009
Source:Day, The (New London,CT) Author:Goldenberg, Kira Area:Connecticut Lines:54 Added:06/02/2009

North Stonington - The man in the video took one long drag on a water pipe and, within moments, was writhing, oblivious to his friends and unable to stand up.

"It looks like he's having a seizure," said a woman wearing scrubs, watching the YouTube clip showing someone using Salvia on Tuesday evening.

About 40 parents crowded into the meeting in the Wheeler High School library to hear information about Salvia divinorum, a legal drug that causes a short but severe high and whose usage school administrators said has been spreading through the school, especially in recent weeks.

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87 US CT: Column: Smoking Salvia Is a Senselesss AdventureSat, 30 May 2009
Source:Day, The (New London,CT) Author:Potter, Chuck Area:Connecticut Lines:90 Added:05/30/2009

Salvia divinorum, a plant traditionally smoked for generations by Shamans and which a growing number of young people are smoking, was in the news this past week. Wheeler High School Principal Michael Susi and Assistant Principal Chris Sandford called what might be considered an emergency meeting of middle school and high school parents.

They told the parents that increasing numbers of Wheeler students appear to be using the plant. They said their biggest concerns were that people often don't remember what happens during a Salvia high. (Salvia users refer to them as trips, perhaps for their short duration). Susi and Sandford said since students are reportedly using it in groups, it could lead to injury or to some students taking advantage of others.

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88 US CT: Officer Writes Program to Replace DAREFri, 22 May 2009
Source:Newington Town Crier (CT) Author:Backus, Lisa Area:Connecticut Lines:85 Added:05/26/2009

Community Service Officer Michael Webster realized that he was offering elementary school students an outdated drug and alcohol awareness program that included topics they would discuss in later grades.

"We had outgrown the DARE curriculum," he admitted. "They hadn't changed the program since 2001 and we were dealing with things like the Leonard case where two 12-year-old girls in town became involved with a predator on the Internet. We had a huge Internet problem but we were teaching don't use cigarettes."

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89 US CT: Pot Group Drops Connecticut Chapter After ArrestTue, 12 May 2009
Source:Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus,GA)          Area:Connecticut Lines:30 Added:05/13/2009

DANBURY, Conn. (AP) -- A national marijuana advocacy group has dumped its Connecticut chapter after police say an officer threatened a state senator.

The action came as a legislative committee prepared to vote Tuesday on a proposal to decriminalize marijuana. The panel ran out of time and didn't act.

Allen St. Pierre, executive director of National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, says the chapter's affiliation was withdrawn after Dominic Vita's arrest.

Vita was charged Friday with disorderly conduct. He's accused of sending an e-mail saying he was "getting ready to go postal" and implied harm against Sen. Toni Boucher (boo-SHAY'), who opposes the bill.

Vita has apologized and says he accidentally sent it to a state address instead of a friend.

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90 US CT: Column: Arnold's Brave Call For A Pot Debate: InterviewMon, 11 May 2009
Source:Register Citizen (CT) Author:Steigerwald, Bill Area:Connecticut Lines:144 Added:05/11/2009

Arnold Schwarzenegger proved last week (May 5) he's not a girly-man when it comes to the debate over whether marijuana should be legalized and taxed in California.

Gov. Arnold called for a large-scale study of the consequences of legalizing pot for recreational use in California and suggested that the study might benefit from looking at the effects of drug legalization moves already made by European countries. It's true that Schwarzenegger is a lame duck and that his politically daring call was driven largely by his bankrupt state's search for new sources of tax revenue.

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91 US CT: OPED: We Tried A War Like This BeforeMon, 20 Apr 2009
Source:Journal-Inquirer (Manchester, CT) Author:Gray, Mike Area:Connecticut Lines:212 Added:04/23/2009

In 1932, Alphonse Capone, an influential businessman then living in Chicago, used to drive through the city in a caravan of armor-plated limos built to his specifications by General Motors. Submachine-gun-toting associates led the motorcade and brought up the rear. It is a measure of how thoroughly the mob mentality had permeated everyday life that this was considered normal.

Capone and his boys were agents of misguided policy. Ninety years ago, the United States tried to cure the national thirst for alcohol, and it led to an explosion of violence unlike anything we'd ever seen.

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92 US CT: Column: Race An Issue In Drug-Reform DebateSat, 18 Apr 2009
Source:Hartford Courant (CT) Author:Simpson, Stan Area:Connecticut Lines:93 Added:04/18/2009

I've been inundated.

Last week I innocently mentioned that I've evolved on this idea of legalizing marijuana. Apparently, I'm not moving fast enough for the drug-law reformers.

They want the full monty -- the legalization of pot, cocaine, heroin and the like.

I'd like to take a more measured approach, starting with more decriminalization of reefer and a better understanding of what the consequences are. For those of you who insist there'll be none and point to post-Prohibition reports, I am still not buying.

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93 US CT: Edu: State Legislature Could Legalize Pot PossessionTue, 14 Apr 2009
Source:Yale Daily News (CT Edu) Author:Miller, Zeke Area:Connecticut Lines:99 Added:04/14/2009

A bill currently under consideration in the Connecticut General Assembly could provide the most dramatic change to state narcotics law in recent history.

Late last month, the legislative body's Judiciary Committee approved a law to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana, greatly reducing the penalty for possession of less than one ounce. While it lowers the disincentives for possessing marijuana, the bill will also decrease the burden on Connecticut's criminal justice system and help ease the state's budget crisis.

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94 US CT: Column: Just Say 'I'm Willing To Think About It'Sat, 11 Apr 2009
Source:Hartford Courant (CT) Author:Simpson, Stan Area:Connecticut Lines:87 Added:04/11/2009

Jack Cole was driving from Norwich to Hamden with his latest convert in an emerging movement to legalize marijuana. Just so happens that the new recruit is a retired cop. No, he's not undercover.

Actually, it's no surprise that former Manchester Capt. Joseph Brooks signed up for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a Massachusetts-based advocacy group of which Cole is executive director. Most of the 12,000 members are law enforcement types who share at least one thing in common: They want to make marijuana legal.

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95 US CT: PUB LTE: Time Has Come To Update Drug LawsFri, 10 Apr 2009
Source:Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, CT) Author:Evans, Karen L. Area:Connecticut Lines:41 Added:04/10/2009

I understand that the initial knee-jerk reaction is negative to legislation before the General Assembly regarding the reduction of penalties for the possession of small amounts of marijuana. It stems from the smokescreen of misinformation we have been inundated with by the government and other interested parties who profit from the continuing war on drugs.

But we must see through this smokescreen to the truth. By now, most of us have either tried marijuana or know someone who has. We know from experience that it is not the evil, harmful drug that it is purported to be. In fact, it is significantly less harmful than many prescription drugs out there.

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96 US CT: PUB LTE: Time Has Come To Update Drug LawsFri, 10 Apr 2009
Source:Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, CT) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:Connecticut Lines:42 Added:04/10/2009

Thanks to the Connecticut Post for making the case for marijuana decriminalization in your April 3 editorial.

Marijuana prohibition has done little other than burden millions of otherwise law-abiding citizens with criminal records. The University of Michigan's "Monitoring the Future Study" reports that lifetime use of marijuana is higher in the United States than any European country, yet America is one of the few Western countries that use its criminal justice system to punish citizens who prefer marijuana to martinis. The short-term health effects of marijuana are inconsequential compared to the long-term effects of criminal records.

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97 US CT: PUB LTE: Time Has Come To Update Drug LawsFri, 10 Apr 2009
Source:Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, CT) Author:Cappiello, David B. Area:Connecticut Lines:81 Added:04/10/2009

While the cost of the Legislature is alarming in a fiscal depression such as we are now experiencing, some other expenses that aren't being cut are downright disturbing to the majority of Connecticut residents.

Gov. M. Jodi Rell is misguided in her attempts to trim the budget. While she was quoted in recent news articles as saying "Everyone has to think about giving back," she fails to take back marijuana prohibition and fails to view the Department of Correction budget as the real financial threat it is to our state.

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98 US CT: Editorial: Marijuana Bill Deserves PassageFri, 03 Apr 2009
Source:Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, CT)          Area:Connecticut Lines:67 Added:04/08/2009

Polls indicate that state residents are willing to take a closer look at harsh penalties for marijuana possession. It's time lawmakers followed suit.

The General Assembly's Judiciary Committee last week approved legislation that would end criminal penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana and create mail-in fines of $250. The change would not sanction or condone the use of drugs, but it would be a step toward eliminating a statute that can put a black mark on people's lives for generations.

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99 US CT: Maybe It's Time To End ProhibitionWed, 01 Apr 2009
Source:Hartford Courant (CT) Author:Pitts, Leonard Area:Connecticut Lines:81 Added:04/01/2009

Maybe we should legalize drugs.

I come neither eagerly nor easily to that maybe. Rather, I come by way of spiraling drug violence in Mexico that recently forced Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to acknowledge the role America's insatiable appetite for illegal drugs plays in the carnage. I come by way of watching Olympian Michael Phelps do the usual public relations song and dance after being outed smoking weed, and knowing the whole thing was a ritualized farce. Most of all, I come by way of personal antipathy: I don't like and have never used illegal drugs.

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100 US CT: Marijuana Bill Gets Committee OkTue, 31 Mar 2009
Source:Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, CT) Author:Dixon, Ken Area:Connecticut Lines:137 Added:04/01/2009

HARTFORD -- The legislative Judiciary Committee on Tuesday night approved legislation that would end criminal penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana and create mail-in fines of $250. The bill was approved 23-11 after a two-hour debate and next moves to the state Senate.

Rep. Michael P. Lawlor, D-East Haven, co-chairman of the committee, offered an amendment -- approved in a voice vote of the committee -- that would reduce the threshold amount from a proposed one ounce, down to half an ounce. He said the advantage of the bill would be to save up-front court costs -- where prosecutors would only have to pay minimal attention and public defenders wouldn't have to get involved - -- as well as stress on the probation system.

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