USA: M.A.C. – Press Event to Expose Cannabis Commercialization Carnage

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Contact: Justin Luke Riley
720-401-5500 or [email protected]

Marijuana Accountability Coalition Holds Open
Press Event to Release New Data on the Harms of
Marijuana Commercialization in Colorado

(February 22, 2018 – Denver, CO) –  The  Marijuana Accountability Coalition (MAC), along with Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM), launched a new report today examining marijuana legalization in Colorado , joining Colorado Christian University and the Centennial Institute in an open press event. SAM honorary advisor, former Congressman Patrick Kennedy, also delivered the report to Colorado House Speaker Crisanta Duran earlier today. MAC is an affiliate of SAM Action, SAM\’s 501 c-4 organization, started by former Obama and Bush Administration advisors.

\”We will continue to investigate, expose, challenge, and hold the marijuana industry accountable,\” said Justin Luke Riley, founder of MAC. \”We will not remain silent anymore as we see our state overtaken by special marijuana interests.\”

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\"\" Today in downtown Denver, Colorado Speaker of the House Crisanta Duran (left), receives MAC\’s Colorado Data Report from Former U.S. Represenative Patrick J. Kennedy (right)
The report also comes with a two-page report card synopsis giving Colorado an \”F\” on many key public health and safety indicators.
Future MAC initiatives include an effort to expose politicians taking marijuana industry money, and exposing the harms of 4/20 celebrations.
\”I am increasingly concerned that legalized marijuana is wrecking our state. Communities across Colorado are suffering because of it, and it is absolutely necessary to continue to give voice to the people, families and communities being harmed. I\’m glad MAC has stepped up to be that voice,\”  said Frank McNulty, former Speaker of the House of Representatives in the U.S. State of Colorado.
The new report card discussed the following impacts in the state:
  • Colorado currently holds the top ranking for first-time marijuana use among youth, representing a 65% increase in the years since legalization (NSDUH, 2006-2016).  Young adult use (youth aged 18-25) in Colorado is rapidly increasing (NSDUH, 2006-2016).
  • Colorado toxicology reports show the percentage of adolescent suicide victims testing positive for marijuana has increased (Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment [CDPHE], 2017).
  • Colorado marijuana arrests for young African-American and Hispanic youth have increased since legalization ( Colorado Department of Public Safety[CDPS], 2016).
  • The gallons of alcohol consumed in Colorado since marijuana legalization has increased by 8% ( Colorado Department of Revenue [CDR], Colorado Liquor Excise Tax, 2017).
  • In Colorado, calls to poison control centers have risen 210% between the four-year averages before and after recreational legalization (Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center [RMPCD], 2017 and Wang, et al., 2017).
\”As a university we are entrusted to help shape and guide the minds of younger generations. Marijuana has been proven to be harmful to the developing brains of young people. We should not live in a state where marijuana companies have a financial interest in hooking as many people as they can on this dangerous drug,\” said Jeff Hunt, Vice President of Public Policy, Colorado Christian University
Director, Centennial Institute.
\”The promotion of marijuana use may be part of the driving force behind the negative societal effects Colorado has been seeing for the past several years which annually continues to worsen and include increased prevalence in overall and teen suicides,\” said Dr. Kenneth Finn, a  physician Board Certified in Pain Medicine, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Pain Management   in Colorado.
\”Isn\’t it sad to think about how we are more concerned with how many plants we are legally entitled to grow, rather than how this drug is devastating the growth and potential of MY generation, and generations to come? We are growing plants, yet stunting growth. And I\’m sick of it. I am craving cultural redemption and a redefined identity,\” said Courtney Reiner, Student at Colorado Christian University.
\”My family, my community, and my state have not benefited from the legalization of marijuana. The costs and harms outweigh any tax revenue. Our state has developed a deep drug bias where the negative effects of marijuana are minimized,\” said Aubree Adams, who is also part of a group of mothers called Moms Strong.
Other data highlighted in the report include:
  • In Colorado, the annual rate of marijuana-related emergency room visits increased 35% between the years 2011 and 2015 (CDPHE, 2017).
  • Narcotics officers in Colorado have been busy responding to the 50% increase in illegal grow operations across rural areas in the state (Stewart, 2017).
    • In 2016 alone, Colorado law enforcement confiscated 7,116 pounds of marijuana, carried out 252 felony arrests, and made 346 highway interdictions of marijuana headed to 36 different U.S. states (RMHIDTA, 2017).
  • The U.S. mail system has also been affected by the black market, seeing an 844% increase in marijuana seizures (RMHIDTA, 2017).
  • The crime rate in Colorado has increased 11 times faster than the rest of the nation since legalization (Mitchell, 2017), with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation reporting an 8.3% increase in property crimes and an 18.6% increase in violent crimes (Colorado Bureau of Investigation [CBI], 2017).
    • The Boulder Police Department reported a 54% increase in public consumption of marijuana citations since legalization (Boulder Police Department [BPD], 2017).
  • Marijuana urine test results in Colorado are now double the national average (Quest Diagnostics, 2016).
  • Insurance claims have become a growing concern among companies in legalized states (Hlavac & Easterly, 2016).
  • The number of drivers in Colorado intoxicated with marijuana and involved in fatal traffic crashes increased 88% from 2013 to 2015 (Migoya, 2017). Marijuana-related traffic deaths increased 66% between the four-year averages before and after legalization (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration [NHTSA], 2017).
    • Driving under the influence of drugs (DUIDs) have also risen in Colorado, with 76% of statewide DUIDs involving marijuana (Colorado State Patrol [CSP], 2017).
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Colorado Speaker of the House Crisanta Duran (left), Founder & President of MAC Justin Luke Riley (right)

 

USA: Louisiana Agencies Going After Opiate Manufacturers!

More government agencies in Louisiana file suit against opioid companies

This Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2017 photo shows an arrangement of pills of the opioid oxycodone-acetaminophen in New York. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison) Patrick Sison

The Orleans Parish sheriff is preparing to file a lawsuit against drug makers as more government agencies across Louisiana join a growing national effort to win big damages over the costs that taxpayers have allegedly incurred as a result of the opioid crisis.

James M. Williams, an attorney with Chehardy Sherman Williams in Metairie, said he expected to file the lawsuit this month on behalf of Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin Gusman.

Meanwhile, a major Metairie-based treatment center, Addiction Recovery Resources, filed suit on Tuesday in Orleans Parish Civil District Court.

The suit by the treatment center, which also has an office in New Orleans, “specifically targets the distributors of prescription opioids in Louisiana for knowingly exploiting chronic pain patients and their doctors with deceptive marketing schemes about the long-term use of opioid medications,” said Lawrence Centola, an attorney with Martzell, Bickford and Centola.

Not previously reported, Bossier Parish was the first parish to file suit in Louisiana, on Dec. 29.

More are likely to follow. “Every parish is going through the deliberative process of attorney selection and comparing information on totaling up the damages,” said Patrick Jackson, the parish attorney in Bossier Parish.

For more http://www.theadvocate.com/new_orleans/news/article_5fcd0a64-0c55-11e8-8620-dff84411d33b.html

 

USA: San Francisco – Taube Philanthropies give Millions to Youth Addiction

Taubes Give $14.5 Million to Address Youth Addiction, Concussions

FEBRUARY 5, 2018

San Francisco-based Taube Philanthropies has announced gifts totaling $14.5 million from Tad and Dianne Taube to the Stanford University School of Medicineand Lucile Packard Children\’s Hospital Stanford in support of child and adolescent health.

A gift of $9.5 million will launch the Tad and Dianne Taube Youth Addiction Initiative, which will focus on understanding the causes and advancing the treatment and prevention of addiction during adolescence. The funds will endow the program\’s directorship; a postdoctoral fellowship for an early-career researcher or clinician in child and adolescent mental health (with a focus on youth addiction); and faculty scholar awards in the areas of clinical care, research, and community engagement. As part of ongoing efforts at Stanford Medicine and Packard Children\’s to address mental health among young people between the ages of 12 and 25, the initiative will seek to fully address addiction starting at its earliest exposure in adolescence

For complete story https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/taubes-give-14.5-million-to-address-youth-addiction-concussions

 

HOLLAND: Sue Tobacco Industry for Harms – Unleash Cannabis for \’health\’??

ADDICTION TREATMENT PROVIDERS JOIN DUTCH HOSPITALS\’ LAWSUIT AGAINST TOBACCO INDUSTRY

By Janene Pieters on February 6, 2018

The Dutch Network for Addiction Care, an umbrella organization for various organizations dealing with addiction, is joining a major lawsuit against the tobacco industry. \”The cigarette is a criminal product and all \’dealers\’ must be dealt with. This product is so harmful. It\’s unbelievable that it is just in the supermarket\”, spokesperson Robert van de Graaf of the network said to AD.

Lawyer Benedicte Ficq is handling this lawsuit, which is now supported by the Antoni van Leeuwenhoek hospital in Amsterdam, the University Medical Center in Groningen, a number of lung cancer patients, cancer association KWF and various civil society organizations.

The parties involved in the lawsuit are accusing the four large tobacco producers in the Netherlands of aggravated assault with death as result. It is now up to the Public Prosecution Service to decide whether or not the tobacco companies can be prosecuted. Last week Marieke van der Molen of the Public Prosecution Service could not tell AD when the decision will be made. \”This is legally a very complex case.\”

Annually around 20 thousand people in the Netherlands die as a result of smoking, according to NU.nl.

For complete article https://nltimes.nl/2018/02/06/addiction-treatment-providers-join-dutch-hospitals-lawsuit-tobacco-industry

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Sooooo wait on, you did all catch that right?  No sure what I’m talking about? Ok, once more into the realm of cognitive/policy dissonance… \”The cigarette is a criminal product and all \’dealers\’ must be dealt with. This product is so harmful. It\’s unbelievable that it is just in the supermarket”… This is coming out of the same country that gave us ‘pot shops/cannabis cafes’?

Right now, Big Marijuana (Big Tobacco 2.0) is going to foist an even worse public health crisis on our societies when it gets its way!  Stopping it before it goes any further would be best practice… but hey, we only seem to consider ‘best practice’ after the catastrophe of ‘permission’ unleashes the damage, and the burden of disease outstrips the ‘revenues’ from the product!

Who are the well-paid clowns who are overseeing drug and health policy chaos and ultimate crisis???

One thing is for certain, job security for allied health care is one ‘postivie’ outcome of bad drug policy management…. Ah, but who will fund these well-paid health positions in the financial ‘black hole’ that is ‘health care’?   I know! We’ll sue the growers and manufacturers of the life, health, and family destroying product!

And around we go again!!!!

Let’s get smarter now  https://learnaboutsam.org/faq/

 

UK: Social Media – Key to Addicting our Kids!

A QUARTER of children have now tried drugs with youngsters able to access illegal substances on social networks

  • Social media is being blamed for a boom in drug use among children
  • A quarter of school pupils now claim to have taken illegal substances
  • Number of 11 to 15-year-olds who had admitted to trying drugs had shot up
  • Has risen from 15 to 24 per cent in just two years, official report indicates

Social media is being blamed for a boom in drug use among children, as a quarter of school pupils now claim to have taken illegal substances.

Charities last night warned that children have never been more exposed to drugs.

An official report released yesterday said the number of 11 to 15-year-olds who had admitted to trying drugs had shot up from 15 to 24 per cent in just two years.

Experts said dangerous substances, from cannabis to cocaine, were more available than ever, with youngsters able to access them on social networks such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat.

Social media is being blamed for a boom in drug use among children, as a quarter of school pupils now claim to have taken illegal substances. Charities last night warned that children have never been more exposed to drugs (stock image)  +1

Social media is being blamed for a boom in drug use among children, as a quarter of school pupils now claim to have taken illegal substances. Charities last night warned that children have never been more exposed to drugs (stock image)

The warning comes weeks after a Daily Mail investigation exposed how drug dealers were openly using the platforms to target children.

Almost a fifth of pupils said they had taken drugs within the past year, with girls just as likely as boys to have used them.

More than one in ten 11-year-olds said they had tried drugs, rising to 37 per cent by the age of 15, according to the data compiled by NHS Digital. Nick Hickmott, from charity Addaction, said: ‘The exposure is greater year upon year for young people, especially around substances like cannabis.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-5365491/Quarter-children-tried-drugs.html#ixzz56qCBisLi

UK Drug Use Statistics 2018

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/statistics-on-drug-misuse-england-2018

 

 

 

USA: Synthetic Opioids the big killers!

Synthetic opioids are driving an overdose crisis

From PBS.org

\”Fifty times more powerful than heroin, Fentanyl is driving a surge in overdose deaths and ratcheting up the stakes in the opioid crisis. Where does the synthetic drug come from, and how can it be managed? William Brangham reports from Massachusetts as part of our series, “America Addicted.”

For complete article http://overdosewatch.org/

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DEA: Press Release – Dutch continue assault on \’dark web dope deals\’

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: DEA Public Affairs

(202) 307-7977

DEA, Dutch law enforcement continue attack on dark web drug sales

International day of action includes knock and talks with suspected dark web drug buyers; Information produced from Hansa takedown

THE HAGUE — The United States Drug Enforcement Administration and Dutch law enforcement officials today announced sustained action against drug trafficking on the dark web, following last summer’s significant market takedowns of AlphaBay and takeover and subsequent takedown of the Hansa market. DEA continued to partner with the National Police of the Netherlands following the July takedown in an ongoing effort to identify individuals who purchase drugs on the dark web and to further disrupt dangerous drug trafficking. Further examination of the Hansa Market data revealed illicit drug purchase information identifying U.S. and Dutch individuals, resulting in numerous face-to-face doorstep visits by police (so-called “knock and talks”) to suspected opioid buyers throughout the U.S. and the Netherlands. Future enforcement action such as search warrants, arrests, and seizures could come as a result of intelligence gathered from the knock and talks.

“These law enforcement actions should serve notice that no drug criminal is safe or anonymous on the dark web,” said DEA European Regional Director Kevin Scully.  “The opioid crisis in the United States requires many different approaches, including identifying and going after those who purchase dangerous, deadly drugs on the dark web.  Too many deaths have come from facilitators of drug addiction and abuse who utilize the dark web to sell these poisons in our neighborhoods across the United States. We are aggressively going after these criminals and their various global networks.”

In coordination with the U.S. knock and talks (Operation Decrypt), Dutch authorities have carried out similar actions in the Netherlands (Operation Mirum). With law enforcement’s ability to pool resources and share information and intelligence between countries, individuals should think twice before engaging in criminal activity on the dark web. As a result of the Hansa takedown, law enforcement identified buyers, vendors, moderators, administrators, and other facilitators throughout the world.  DEA and the NPN, as well as other law enforcement agencies, have proven they have the tools and expertise to stay on top of this criminal activity, as evidenced by these actions.

In addition to the U.S. knock and talks, DEA Special Agents took to local communities and neighborhoods nearby to distribute literature and talk with residents to educate them about the dangers of the dark web and of opioid trafficking and abuse. These actions support the DEA 360 strategy against opioids by providing leadership in targeting all levels of drug trafficking, while supporting community outreach.

DEA’s Special Operations Division coordinated the US portion of the international action while FBI, HSI, CBP, IRS, and USPIS also assisted. According to Europol in July 2017, the coordinated law enforcement action in Europe and the U.S. to dismantle these marketplaces ranks as one of the most sophisticated takedown operations ever seen in the fight against criminal activities. The intended message for continued international cooperation and collaboration on dark web investigations is this: criminal anonymity on the dark web fades away as more governments pool their resources and capabilities to disrupt and dismantle nefarious behavior.

AlphaBay/Hansa July 2017 Enforcement:

AlphaBay operated as a hidden service on the “Tor” network, and utilized cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Monero and Ethereum in order to hide the locations of its underlying servers and the identities of its administrators, moderators, and users. Based on law enforcement’s investigation of AlphaBay, authorities believe the site was also used to launder hundreds of millions of dollars deriving from illegal transactions on the website. This operation to seize the AlphaBay site coincides with efforts by Dutch law enforcement to investigate and take down the Hansa Market, another prominent dark web market. Like AlphaBay, Hansa Market was used to facilitate the sale of illegal drugs, toxic chemicals, malware, counterfeit identification documents, and illegal services. The administrators of Hansa Market, along with its thousands of vendors and users, also attempted to mask their identities to avoid prosecution through the use of Tor and digital currency.

According to publicly available information on AlphaBay prior to its takedown, one AlphaBay staff member claimed that it serviced more than 200,000 users and 40,000 vendors. Around the time of takedown, there were more than 250,000 listings for illegal drugs and toxic chemicals on AlphaBay and more than 100,000 listings for stolen and fraudulent identification documents and access devices, counterfeit goods, malware and other computer hacking tools, firearms and fraudulent services. Comparatively, the Silk Road dark web marketplace, which was seized by law enforcement in November 2013, had reportedly approximately 14,000 listings for illicit goods and services at the time of seizure and was the largest dark web marketplace at the time.

The investigation into AlphaBay revealed that numerous vendors sold fentanyl and heroin, and there have been multiple overdose deaths across the country attributed to purchases on the site.

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USA: Parents Opposed to Pot Track Child Casualties of Cannabis!

The PopPot Report on Child Deaths Directly Linked to Marijuana Use.

Use of pot creates victims, including children who die from neglect or violence when parents, mothers’ boyfriends or caregivers use pot. We have been tracking news reports of child abuse and neglect linked to marijuana since November 2012. The columns show official causes of death related to the caregivers’ marijuana use. We found news reports of 105 such deaths in 30 states; actual number could be much higher. Violent neglect includes marijuana DUI (9), guns (4) and pit bulls. The last column includes infants (9) who died shortly after birth.

For List http://www.stoppot.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/020518-Child-dangers-fact-sheet-FINAL_updated.pdf

 

USA: Reefer Madness? Nooo, mental illness + Reefer =???

Prosecutors: Man stabs mother after smoking pot, believing someone was going to rape him

KATIE DELONG AND BEN HANDELMAN,  Feb 7th 2018

RACINE (WITI) — A Racine man is accused of stabbing his own mother multiple times in their home, and prosecutors say he admitted he did it after smoking marijuana and becoming paranoid, believing someone was about to rape him.

Terrell Banks, 23, of Racine faces one count of attempted first-degree intentional homicide, domestic abuse assessments, and one count of mayhem, domestic abuse assessments. Mayhem in Wisconsin courts refers to when a suspect intends to disfigure an area of the head.

According to a criminal complaint, police on Friday afternoon, Feb. 2 were called out to the Dollar Tree on Erie St. near 3 Mile Rd. for a report of a woman who had recently been stabbed by her son inside their home on Green St. — nearby. Police learned the woman had wandered into the store — bloodied and looking for help. It was determined the woman had been stabbed multiple times, and she identified her son as the suspect.

Her son, Terrell Banks, was located wandering near Lasalle St. and Wolff St. — where he was arrested.

The complaint says at the hospital, it was determined the victim suffered at least nine stab wounds — six to her head and eyes and three to her arm and side.

For more https://www.aol.com/article/news/2018/02/07/prosecutors-man-stabs-mother-after-smoking-pot-believing-someone-was-going-to-rape-him/23355387/

 

 

 

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