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Police and Prison Guard Groups Fight Marijuana Legalization in California

R

Robrites

Roughly half of the money raised to oppose a ballot measure to legalize recreational marijuana in California is coming from police and prison guard groups, terrified that they might lose the revenue streams to which they have become so deeply addicted.
Drug war money has become a notable source of funding for law enforcement interests. Huge government grants and asset-seizure windfalls benefit police departments, while the constant supply of prisoners keeps the prison business booming.
Opposition to the marijuana legalization initiative, slated to go before voters in November, has been organized by John Lovell, a longtime Sacramento lobbyist for police chiefs and prison guard supervisors. Lovell’s Coalition for Responsible Drug Policies, a committee he created to defeat the pot initiative, raised $60,000 during the first three months of the year, according to a disclosure filed earlier this month.
The funds came from groups representing law enforcement, including the California Police Chiefs Association, the Riverside Sheriffs’ Association, the Los Angeles Police Protective League’s Issues PAC, and the California Correctional Supervisor’s Organization. Other donors include the California Teamsters union and the California Hospital Association, as well as Sam Action, an anti-marijuana advocacy group co-founded by former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., and former George W. Bush speechwriter David Frum.
Law enforcement officials in Minnesota, Washington, and other states that have debated relaxing the laws surrounding marijuana have said that they stand to lose money from reform. Police receive federal grants from the Justice Department to help fund drug enforcement efforts, including specific funding to focus on marijuana.
Asset forfeiture is another way law enforcement agencies have come to rely on marijuana as a funding source. Police departments, through a process known as asset forfeiture, seize cash and property associated with drug busts, including raids relating to marijuana. The proceeds from the seizures are often distributed to law enforcement agencies. From 2002 to 2012, California agencies reaped $181.4 million from marijuana-related asset seizures. As the Wall Street Journal reported in 2014, pot legalization in Washington state led asset forfeiture proceeds to go up in smoke.
Law enforcement lobbyists in Sacramento, including Lovell, have steered Justice Department grants into marijuana eradication. Last year, Lovell successfully worked to defeat measures to reform asset forfeiture in California.
Prison guard unions have also played a part in defending lucrative drug war policies. In California, the prison guard union helped finance the “three strikes” ballot measure in 1994 that deeply increased the state prison population. In 2008, the California prison union provided funds to help defeat Proposition 5, a measure to create prison diversion programs for nonviolent offenders with drug problems.
For their part, the groups say they fear the dangers of legalized pot for non-selfish reasons.
“The membership of the CCSO opposes the full-blown legalization of marijuana,” Paul Curry, a lobbyist for the California Correctional Supervisor’s Association, told The Intercept. Curry said prison guard supervisors do not want to see a society that encourages pot use and said many of his members are grandparents who are concerned about their children. “If marijuana is not a dangerous drug, the federal government would have made a change, but the fact remains that it’s a federal crime,” he added.
California is only the latest state in which law enforcement unions have led the opposition to ending marijuana prohibition across the country in recent years. During the 2014 election, Florida law enforcement officials successfully campaigned against a medical marijuana ballot measure by arguing that the initiative would promote a range of problems, from teenage use of the drug to respiratory disease.


Read the rest at theintercept.com
 

Tudo

Troublemaker
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
They are among the lowest form of life on the planet for doing so.
 

jump /injack

Member
Veteran
Prison Guards, the legal profession, everyone in the chain of legal enslavement for doing weed are against making cannabis legal except the crooked politicians in Sacramento who will be getting 25% of right off the top for play money. This brand spanking law that the Democrats thought up will skim 25% in taxes right off the top. Without prisoners the guards union is Kaputt and the defense attorneys will be cleaning toilet bowls and with out tax money to blow Politicians will have to sell their Rolex's. Got to write a bill that will fuck this bunch and it can be done with a little thinking.
 
N

noyd666

it gets easier to know who the real scum bags are every day with articals like this to read.who would ever thought the cannabis plant that relieves so much pain in the world would have Goverments acting like terrorist to there own peoples.in jail for a weed.
picture.php
 

chomedome

Member
Wow! Stoners against legalization and the police have something in common. Voting no on AUMA because they are afraid of losing revenue.
 

mojave green

rockin in the free world
Veteran
i will not vote for anything that contains this provision:
"continues to let local governments ban medical marijuana cultivation"
kinda defeats the purpose.
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
I will be voting no too....yeehaw...law enforcement wont loose any money as the taxes brought in will far exceed any money gotten previously from any source by a far margin...but I will take the help anywhere I can get it...JUST SAY NO...if they come up with a reasonable law that don't restrict my home growing then I will say yes...I can already have an lb and 24 plants plus grower exemption and caregiver for a few folks...I wont be taking a step backwards if I can help it...current medicinal is better than the bullshit legalization being proposed....
 

rolandomota

Well-known member
Veteran
I got mad last time it didn't pass in California this time I don't give a fuck what happens it's legal in other states now so who cares.
 

corky1968

Active member
Veteran
This is proof positive that the police don't care about crime reduction.
They only care about $$$ and trying to live some fantasy dream.
Since they were never good enough to make the phucking DEA.
 

chomedome

Member
Stoned trout you say you can already have a pound under 215 but under AUMA there is no weight limits to what you can have on your property. Grow six 2 pound trees and you got 12 pounds........yeehawww buddy
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
I don't grow huge plants most are under 4 ft generally....yeehaw and 6 plants is bullshit I need way more just for moms ..hell I got 18 different moms now/6 strains ...yeehaw
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
shows how low of an iq cops and guards have tho....the taxes generated will be more cash then they know what to do with ..and a lot will go into enforcement like never before!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! as your stealing tax money from them now as an illegal grower..so in the end you still can go to jail just different charges ...go down like AL.....yeehaw
 
R

Robrites

Two Democratic state lawmakers with deep law enforcement ties announced their opposit

Two Democratic state lawmakers with deep law enforcement ties announced their opposit

Two Democratic state lawmakers with deep law enforcement ties announced their opposition on Tuesday to legalizing recreational marijuana use.

Assemblyman Jim Cooper, D-Elk Grove, a former Sacramento County sheriff’s official who regularly warns about the consequences of drug use, and Sen. Cathleen Galgiani, D-Stockton, the Democratic senator most aligned with law enforcement, warned in a statement about impaired drivers and exposing children to marijuana.
Cannabis plants under cultivation in the town of Desert Hot Springs, Calif. on Feb. 6, 2016. Andrew Seng [email protected]

Joining Cooper and Galgiani in opposition were Sen. Jim Nielsen, R-Gerber, and Sacramento County District Attorney Anne-Marie Schubert.

“This initiative will endanger the most vulnerable members of our community,” Schubert said in a statement.

Championed by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and funded by benefactors like billionaire tech entrepreneur Sean Parker, the highly professional and organized effort to authorize marijuana contrasts sharply with a failed 2010 effort.

Newsom and allies formally launched their campaign in earlier this month, announcing they had submitted enough signatures to qualify the legalization measure. The rollout swiftly drew a response from a coalition of opponents that includes the Police Chiefs Association, California Hospital Association, California Teamsters, California State Sheriffs’ Association and California Peace Officers Association.
http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article78126287.html
 
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