Pubdate: Tue, 10 Oct 2000 Source: Deseret News (UT) Copyright: 2000 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Author: Sam Howe Verhovek, New York Times News Service WILL POT 'GET LEGAL' IN ALASKA? ANCHORAGE, Alaska — "Vote Yes Prop 5," proclaims the large yellow mural painted on the side of a building here, complete with a large cannabis leaf. A poster on the window offers a quote from Ronald Reagan, though he has certainly not endorsed this particular measure: "Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves." And just inside the door here at the headquarters of Free Hemp in Alaska are more than a dozen versions of pamphlets offering reasons for Alaskans to support the broadest marijuana legalization initiative ever to appear on a state ballot. One pamphlet proclaims that marijuana is a far safer drug than alcohol; another says that passage of the measure would "free police resources to fight real crime." And a third, "Marijuana and the Bible," has drawings of Jesus Christ and observes: "Nowhere in the Bible does it forbid people to grow, use or smoke cannabis hemp." Here in a state that many Alaskans like to describe as the most libertarian in the nation, voters are being asked in the Nov. 7 election to say "yes" to marijuana in a single, sweeping vote that would not only legalize consumption of the drug for anyone age 18 and over but also create automatic amnesty for anyone convicted of marijuana-related charges and even require the state to consider restitution for such people. Supporters of Proposition 5 are visible all over Anchorage, holding up roadside banners, handing out the leaflets, displaying stickers on their car bumpers. They gathered signatures from more than 41,000 registered voters to get the measure on the ballot, more than twice the needed number and a figure that represents nearly 10 percent of all voters in the state. And if marijuana users are derided by drug critics as laid-back and apathetic, the frenetic energy that many are bringing to the cause belies that image. "It's a travesty that we lock people up and make criminals of them for personal use of marijuana," said James Garhart, a 51-year-old messenger who says he has used marijuana on a "semi-daily" basis for years and is now spending almost all of his free time working for the Yes-on-5 campaign. Some opponents of the measure fear that it will pass because, they say, supporters are running a campaign that appeals to Alaskans' libertarian, leave-me-alone instincts and that often refrains from using the word "marijuana." The leading organizations for the measure have names like "Free Hemp in Alaska" and "Hemp 2000." Hemp is a different variety of the plant species Cannibis sativa that has many industrial uses and a tiny fraction of the psychoactive properties of marijuana. "I'm concerned that the word is not getting out about what this measure would do," said Wev Shea, the U.S. attorney here during the Bush administration and now a lawyer in private practice, who is a leading critic of the measure. The measure has plenty of prominent critics, including Gov. Tony Knowles, a Democrat who calls it "foolish and dangerous," and Chief Duane Udland of the Anchorage police, who has warned that the measure could create a "drug culture" that would attract wayward elements from all over the world. Of 518 residents surveyed in the last 10 days of September, 42 percent said they were "strongly against" the measure and 19 percent "generally against," while 35 percent indicated they were supporting it. Alaskans voted two years ago to legalize the medicinal use of marijuana, and Dittman said there might be strong support for decriminalizing the drug in some fashion because the state electorate did indeed have libertarian tendencies. "There's certainly an element of that in the Alaskan mentality, but it does not extend to amnesty, to restitution, to the idea that marijuana would all of a sudden be legal for teenagers," Dittman said. "I think that's where they went too far." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck