February 12, 2004 - The Drug Czar in California
(2 Stories)
Wed, 11 Feb 2003 - Los Angeles Times (CA)
Medical Pot Backers Picket Federal Drug Czar
About A Dozen Activists Protest As The Official Visits The
State Capital. He Says Such Demonstrations Are Part Of A Larger
Effort To Legalize Recreational Drugs.
By Eric Bailey, Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO - A visit Wednesday to the California capital
by President Bush's drug czar prompted a placard-waving protest
by medical marijuana supporters angry over the federal government's
opposition to use of the drug by the ill.
The demonstration by about a dozen activists came as John
Walters, director of the president's Office of National Drug
Control Policy, met in a downtown office building with members
of law enforcement and leaders of the drug treatment effort to
discuss the U.S. effort to stem abuse.
"The czar belongs in Russia, not in California,"
said state Sen. John Vasconcellos, a Santa Clara Democrat who
remains one of the Legislature's most vocal supporters of medical
marijuana.
Walters, who encountered similar pickets during appearances
in Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, said the protesters
were part of a broader movement to legalize recreational drugs.
"It's not the AMA. It's not a major medical group,"
Walters said. "These are the people who want to legalize
drugs."
At a news conference before the protest, Vasconcellos and
several patients who use cannabis as medicine criticized the
federal government's stance against medical cannabis, which in
recent years had included the arrests of prominent activists
and raids at some of the state's medical marijuana dispensaries.
Vasconcellos said "marauding" federal drug agents
are wasting taxpayer dollars. He said marijuana was not a gateway
drug but instead had been proven to be a worthy medicine for
a variety of afflictions.
"They're frightened by freedom," Vasconcellos said.
"They've got no science, no compassion."
"Without cannabis, I would be dead right now," said
Angel Raich, who in December prevailed in a pivotal federal court
case that allowed her to continue using marijuana for a brain
tumor and other illnesses. "Our federal government says
we're criminals and better off dead."
Assemblywoman Jackie Goldberg ( D-Los Angeles ) recounted
how her close friend, writer and actress Marlene Rasnick, turned
to medical marijuana after her weight had dropped precipitously
because of cancer. The drug helped restore her appetite and health,
Goldberg said.
Rasnick took a turn for the worse, Goldberg said, after federal
agents in October 2001 closed down the West Hollywood center
where she had obtained marijuana. She died three weeks later,
Goldberg said. "That made me understand this issue in a
very powerful way," she said.
After the protest, Walters said that marijuana had not been
shown to be a safe and effective medicine, and that marijuana
was continuing to be the single most prevalent cause of drug
treatment in the nation.
"Some people who use marijuana say it makes them feel
better," Walters said. "But feeling better is not the
standard of modern medicine."
He said that a small group of wealthy businessmen led by billionaire
financier George Soros, one of the most aggressive foes of President
Bush heading into the 2004 election, was using the medical marijuana
movement to promote efforts to legalize recreational drugs.
"They are using the sick and suffering as a prop for
political action," Walters said. "I think that is immoral
and improper. I think this con has gone on long enough."
Thu, 12 Feb 2004 - Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
U.S. Drug Czar Now A Backer Of Prevention
By Steve Wiegand, Sacramento Bee Staff Writer
The White House drug czar who once opposed federal support
of drug abuse prevention programs came to Sacramento and preached
a different kind of sermon Wednesday.
Flanked by local politicians, law enforcement and drug treatment
program officials at the federal courthouse, John P. Walters
said the U.S. government must become a more effective part of
local drug abuse prevention and treatment programs.
"If we stress prevention, if we can stop young people
before they start," Walters said, "we can change the
face of substance-abuse problems in the country for generations
to come."
Walters, whose official title is director of the Office of
National Drug Control Policy, was in Sacramento as part of a
25-city tour designed to tout the development of federal-local
drug-fighting programs that emphasize prevention and treatment
as well as arrests and prosecutions.
Although the tour has been dubbed a "drug-and-pony show"
by some critics, local officials welcomed the prospect of federal
aid in sponsoring local programs.
"The old days of law enforcement acting in a vacuum in
trying to address the drug problems in this nation are over,"
said McGregor Scott, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of
California, which includes the Sacramento area. "We are
now collectively and collaboratively working with prevention
professionals and treatment professionals to establish a tripartite
approach."
In his proposed budget for the 2005 fiscal year, President
Bush has asked for $200 million in additional funds for drug
treatment, as well as more money for confidential drug-testing
programs at schools.
Walters said that about 45 percent of all drug-related funds
in the budget are for treatment and prevention.
Among the efforts to be pushed locally are establishment of
a Juvenile Drug Court, where youths with drug-related offenses
would be diverted into treatment programs; development of a one-stop
center to connect those seeking treatment with all of the programs
available in the community; and better public anti-drug education
programs.
Walters served under the first drug czar, William Bennett,
and became the drug policy office's acting director after Bennett
left. Walters quit the office in 1993 and became a frequent critic
of the Clinton administration's emphasis on prevention and treatment
in combating drug abuse.
He questioned the need for direct federal involvement in anti-drug
education and expressed doubts about the efficacy of treatment
programs. His appointment to the drug czar's job was opposed
by some drug treatment supporters, including former first lady
Betty Ford.
But Walters said Wednesday his opposition had stemmed from
concerns that there were too many ties on federal money to local
and state treatment and education programs and too little evidence
about how effective some of the programs were.
Now, he said, he is convinced current programs are proving
effective.
Walters also reiterated his steadfast opposition to the use
of marijuana as medicine, despite voter approval of its medical
use in California and eight other states.
Since the 1996 approval of Proposition 215, federal law enforcement
officials have periodically arrested and charged sellers and
users of medical marijuana for violating federal laws against
sales and possession of the drug.
Walters said no scientifically valid study had determined
that marijuana was a safe or effective way to treat pain and
other effects of illness and injury.
To sanction its use, he said, sent the wrong message to children
that marijuana use was OK.
"Marijuana is not medicine," he said. "We in
the federal government will enforce the ( federal ) law. Not
in a punitive, arbitrary way, but because the law is based on
the safety and protection of one and all."
At a subsequent press conference in a Capitol hearing room,
however, medical marijuana users and two state legislators demanded
that federal law enforcement officials stop arresting and prosecuting
Californians using or selling marijuana as medicine.
"You all in Washington seem to have more than enough
wars to wage all over the world," said state Sen. John Vasconcellos,
D-San Jose. "Cease and desist your immature, wasteful campaign"
of medical marijuana prosecutions.
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