Canna-Weird News

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
Not a very compelling argument for Utah Mormons. With an answer like that they should just ban cigarettes and alcohol. At least cannabis is helpful to the body. I’m sure there are a lot of folks that could utilize cannabis for their health problems. Good luck Utah. Hopefully their legislature won’t inact some really stupid laws like Florida. Get out and vote come November.
 

steama

Well-Known Member
Utah group says medical marijuana ballot initiative violates Mormons’ religious freedom
An anti-marijuana group has filed a lawsuit arguing that a ballot initiative to legalize medical marijuana violates their freedom of religion.

To make their case, the group is citing the Supreme Court decision in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, which allowed a Colorado baker to refuse to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple due to a religious objection. This is the group’s second lawsuit to keep the proposal off the ballot this November.
This group has serious issues with many everyday things, so many it is hard to count them. They are so ridiculous they shouldn't be trying to make rules for anyone regarding anything.

My question is was it kind bud or mexi-brick?
 
Last edited by a moderator:

steama

Well-Known Member
Trump's help? Now that's canna-weird news!
He’s In Prison With Terrorists — For Medical Marijuana. Now He Wants Trump’s Help.

5b50b77c1900002b014fcc74.jpeg

Aaron Sandusky is caged in a federal prison as he serves a 10-year sentence for running a state-legal medical marijuana business.

The Florence Federal Correctional Complex, a federal penitentiary in Colorado, is a sprawling compound of prison facilities that includes the highest-security federal prison in the country. Dubbed the “Alcatraz of the Rockies,” it is home to Theodore Kaczynski, the so-called Unabomber; Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, one of the Boston Marathon bombers; and Zacarias Moussaoui, an al Qaeda operative who played a role in the 9/11 attacks.

The complex also houses Aaron Sandusky, a Southern California man currently serving a 10-year federal drug sentence for running a state-legal medical marijuana business.

Sandusky, 48, is held in a lower-security camp facility of the prison. He works inside the supermax part of the facility several days a week. It’s the third federal prison he’s been caged in over the course of the six years he’s spent behind bars so far. He’s about 1,000 miles from his home, friends and family in California.

Like numerous other detainees across the nation, he is serving a lengthy sentence for something that isn’t illegal in his own state. Sandusky was sentenced in 2013 for running three dispensaries in Southern California, even though medical marijuana was legal in California, on federal charges of conspiracy and possession with the intent to distribute marijuana. He has been fighting for freedom since his conviction, and he’s recently found new hope for release in a surprising figure ― President Donald Trump.

Trump has developed a deep interest in his clemency powers. Under previous presidents, generally, the office of the pardon attorney at the Department of Justice made recommendations for clemency relief to the president for prisoners who met an elaborate set of guidelines. But Trump hasn’t been rigidly sticking to those guidelines and instead has been bypassing the office and acting more impulsively with the relief he’s granted so far. The pardons have mostly involved cases that drew attention in conservative media or have come to his attention through celebrity intervention.

Trump has granted clemency to nine people since he’s taken office ― seven pardons and four commutations (with some overlap). Most recently, earlier this month, he pardoned and commuted the sentences of Dwight Lincoln Hammond Jr. and Steven Hammond, a father-son team convicted in 2012 on two counts of arson on federal land whose cause had been championed by right-wing militias and sparked an armed occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. In June, he commuted the life sentence of Alice Johnson, a 63-year-old in prison for a first-time, nonviolent drug offense whose three clemency petitions were rejected by the Obama administration.

Trump appears to be interested in considering more cases. In June, the administration asked advocacy groups across the country for a list of prospective candidates for clemency. The CAN-DO Foundation, a nonprofit group that advocates for clemency for prisoners convicted of drug offenses, put forward 60 names, including Sandusky’s. Twenty-two people on that list are currently serving time for marijuana offenses.

“There’s a rumbling going through the prison walls right now of Donald Trump possibly sparking a clemency wave,” Sandusky told HuffPost from a Florence prison phone last week.


“For the first time since my own clemency in 2000, we have a president who has signaled a willingness to circumvent the conventional clemency process, which has been broken for decades,” said CAN-DO founder Amy Povah, whom former President Bill Clinton granted clemency to in 2000 after she had served more than nine years of an original 24-year drug sentence. Ever since, she’s worked to raise awareness about cases like hers.

Trump’s stance on legal marijuana could be helpful to pot prisoners like Sandusky. Trump, who said repeatedly during his campaign he would respect states’ rights on the issue, has recently said he supports relaxing federal marijuana laws.

Sandusky was convicted as part of an aggressive federal crackdown on medical marijuana in the Obama years. Sandusky had not violated any of California’s medical marijuana laws. But the federal government has long considered marijuana an illegal drug under the Controlled Substances Act ― one with no ”currently accepted medical use.”

In federal court, where Sandusky’s case was tried, only federal laws are applied. As such, federal courts don’t allow any evidence that marijuana may have been used for medical purposes, even when medical marijuana is legal under a state’s law, as it is in California. Sandusky’s medical marijuana defense, therefore, was silenced by the court.

His attempts to appeal his conviction failed, and he first applied for clemency in 2016 under the Obama administration. But Obama didn’t approve the request for relief. Meanwhile, Sandusky languished in prison.

“Everything in here is geared to break you. It’s geared to bury you alive,” Sandusky said about life in prison.

Now, Sandusky hopes Trump might do what Obama wouldn’t.

“I wake up every day in here and ask myself, ‘How did this happen?’ There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t say, ‘Why am I here again?’” Sandusky said. “I’m surrounded by marijuana farms and I’m doing time for cultivation and distribution.”

Colorado, where the Florence correctional complex is located, is one of nine states that has now legalized recreational marijuana. A total of 30 states, and Washington, D.C., have legalized the drug for medical purposes.

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/prison-medical-marijuana-trump_us_5b50b630e4b0de86f48ac3e4

:hmm:
 

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
A felony? Fucking ridiculous.
If she's an adult, it may not be "a" felony, but multiple felonies. One for each distribution of a controlled substance to minors in a school. (PLUS, one for each brownie possessed that was for later distribution.) I think there were supposed to be a dozen brownies with 3 recovered.

The defense is the cheerleader might not be 18 and things are treated on the juvenile level. Another argument is it is only a distribution of "marihuana without remuneration" thus making each a misdemeanor rather than a felony. (As long as the people on the football team were within three years of the age of the cheerleader.) That's how you can tell the bias of the article you read. If "bribe" or "bribery" is in the headline, the paper is seeking the reader to think felony as the intent was for the remuneration of votes. (Although "remuneration" usually deals in money.) If simply "winning" or "tries to win" votes in the headline, the paper is seeking the reader to think misdemeanor.
 

florduh

Well-Known Member
If she's an adult, it may not be "a" felony, but multiple felonies. One for each distribution of a controlled substance to minors in a school. (PLUS, one for each brownie possessed that was for later distribution.) I think there were supposed to be a dozen brownies with 3 recovered.

The defense is the cheerleader might not be 18 and things are treated on the juvenile level. Another argument is it is only a distribution of "marihuana without remuneration" thus making each a misdemeanor rather than a felony. (As long as the people on the football team were within three years of the age of the cheerleader.) That's how you can tell the bias of the article you read. If "bribe" or "bribery" is in the headline, the paper is seeking the reader to think felony as the intent was for the remuneration of votes. (Although "remuneration" usually deals in money.) If simply "winning" or "tries to win" votes in the headline, the paper is seeking the reader to think misdemeanor.

This shows how fucked up our laws are. So far as I know, distributing alcohol to minors is a misdemeanor. Distributing an indisputably less harmful substance to minors shouldn't be a felony.
 
Last edited:

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
This shows how fucked up our laws are. So far as I know, distributing alcohol to minors is a misdemeanor. Distributing a indisputably less harmful substance to minors shouldn't be a felony.
1. I agree cannabis is less harmful and hope that is legally true in my lifetime.

2. But, don't really want kids bringing pot to school and distribute it to other kids. (At least they should bring enough for everyone. Isn't that the rule any more?)

Legalization is an attempt to have #1 be true. People who do #2 are going to be the most rational argument against #1.
 
Tranquility,
  • Like
Reactions: florduh

florduh

Well-Known Member
2. But, don't really want kids bringing pot to school and distribute it to other kids. (At least they should bring enough for everyone. Isn't that the rule any more?)

LOL. I agree. I think the cheerleader should face consequences. Maybe detention? But felony charges being considered is absurd.

I'm just wondering what would happen if she was distributing a far more harmful drug: Bud Lite.

Just this year two studies came out about alcohol. The WHO study concluded that 1 in 20 deaths worldwide are attributable to alcohol. Another paper (I think in JAMA) concluded that there is NO safe level of alcohol consumption. Any potential "benefit" to sipping a little red wine is outweighed by the increased cancer and heart disease risk.

Yet distributing alcohol to minors is treated less harshly by the Law than distributing weed? To rational people that seems insane.

People who do #2 are going to be the most rational argument against #1.

I disagree. I hear that argument from prohibitionists all the time. It's not a rational argument because:

1) Literally no one is pushing for legalizing cannabis consumption for children (except in specific medical situations).

2) The illegality of cannabis for adults hasn't kept weed out of high schools. It hasn't even kept weed out of prisons.
 
Last edited:

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
1) Literally no one is pushing for legalizing cannabis consumption for children (except in specific medical situations).

2) The illegality of cannabis for adults hasn't kept weed out of high schools. It hasn't even kept weed out of prisons.

1. But, some are making light of the fact a kid brought in weed to the school and distributed it.
2. It is not an all or nothing proposition. If illegality of cannabis for adults keep some weed out of high schools, many would support keeping it illegal. The issue is where parents will find the risk acceptable while knowing it will be somewhere between 0 and 100%.
 

florduh

Well-Known Member
1. But, some are making light of the fact a kid brought in weed to the school and distributed it.
2. It is not an all or nothing proposition. If illegality of cannabis for adults keep some weed out of high schools, many would support keeping it illegal. The issue is where parents will find the risk acceptable while knowing it will be somewhere between 0 and 100%.

I have no problem with people making light of the situation. She distributed weed, not heroin. Or alcohol. I do agree she should face consequences. Just not a felony charge.

And the illegality of cannabis hasn’t kept it out of schools. Or prisons for that matter. The “for the children” argument is one of the prohibitionists most intellectually bankrupt talking points.

The better solution is to encourage a thriving legal market. Drug dealers don’t card customers. Dispensaries do.
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
Take MedMen off the list of reasonable people. They are trying to get intellectual property protection for their super-keen invention branding. Guess what the idea is they have that no one has thought of before or put into the river of commerce...

A t-shirt.

With the word "cannabis" on it.

https://mjbizdaily.com/medmen-seeks-to-trademark-the-word-cannabis-for-t-shirts/

They apparently got a previous protection on a stylized leaf on clothing. I like for people to make a brand and everything, but I'd rather them build it by reputation rather than lawyer-ball. Trying to get this protection is enough to keep me away from them forever.
 

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
‘Grandma Stinky,' son sentenced in Indiana marijuana mail bust
http://www.fox19.com/2018/11/02/grandma-stinky-son-sentenced-indiana-marijuana-mail-bust/
LAWRENCEBURG, IN - An Aurora woman charged with numerous drug charges -- including receiving mail shipments of marijuana from her son in California -- has pleaded guilty.

The U.S. Postal Service assisted police with a controlled delivery of a package containing 720 grams of marijuana addressed to “Grandma Stinky" at her address in Aurora.
 
macbill,

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
Truly Disturbing....
Processing operation found after school reports 12-year-old student smells of marijuana


T
en Modesto children were taken into the custody of Child Protective Services after one of them showed up at school smelling of marijuana on Monday, authorities said. An administrator at an undisclosed school requested a security check at the 12-year-old girl’s home on Panama Drive in west Modesto, said Modesto Police Department spokeswoman Sharon Bear.

 

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
OFFICER BUSTED FOR ALLEGEDLY STEALING DRUGS FROM STATION AFTER FORGETTING TO TURN OFF BODYCAM
Missouri police officer was reportedly caught stealing prescription pills from a recent drug take-back scheme after he was recorded on his own body camera.

Part-time Platte Woods police officer Richard Langley was named as the suspect in court records obtained by news outlet KCTV5. Allegations surfaced after the officer allegedly requested that video recorded by his dash camera be deleted—which is against department policy.

Investigators allegedly found footage from the bodycam showing him stealing prescript
 

Morty

Well-Known Member
OFFICER BUSTED FOR ALLEGEDLY STEALING DRUGS FROM STATION AFTER FORGETTING TO TURN OFF BODYCAM
Missouri police officer was reportedly caught stealing prescription pills from a recent drug take-back scheme after he was recorded on his own body camera.

Part-time Platte Woods police officer Richard Langley was named as the suspect in court records obtained by news outlet KCTV5. Allegations surfaced after the officer allegedly requested that video recorded by his dash camera be deleted—which is against department policy.

Investigators allegedly found footage from the bodycam showing him stealing prescript
I used to live down the street & worked at a gas station right next door to this police station. It's a tiny little city of around 400 in the suburbs of KC (about 15 mins from the airport). Two words...not surprised. :lol: Glass dick anyone ? :puke:
 

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
Detroit police officers fight each other in undercover op gone wrong

It started when two special ops officers from the 12th Precinct were operating a "push off" on Andover near Seven Mile. That is when two undercover officers pretend to be dope dealers, waiting for eager customers to approach, and then arrest potential buyers and seize their vehicles.

But this time, instead of customers, special ops officers from the 11th Precinct showed up. Not realizing they were fellow officers, they ordered the other undercover officers to the ground.

==============================================================================

Mom gave teens marijuana for a ride to Taco Bell, where she paid with counterfeit $100

A southern Utah mother is facing several charges after police say she gave several juveniles marijuana in exchange for a ride to Taco Bell, where she paid with counterfeit cash.
 
Last edited:
Top Bottom