Pubdate: Sat, 29 Dec 2001
Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL)
Copyright: 2001 Orlando Sentinel
Contact:  http://www.orlandosentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325
Author: Rich McKay
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular)

DAYTONA TRIES TO QUASH SALES OF 'TOBACCO' PIPES

DAYTONA BEACH -- Danny Black of Shoreham, N.Y., pressed his nose to 
the glass window of Sportwear USA, ogling the colorful array of glass 
pipes -- some 2 feet tall -- billed for tobacco only. But few are 
fooled.

"It's for marijuana, man," he said. "Getting high. I don't do cigarettes."

Black is uncommonly candid about his intentions. The 19-year-old 
college sophomore on Christmas break said he wants to inhale, get 
high and then get the munchies.

Black wanted to get an exotic tobacco pipe fast. Daytona Beach City 
Commission recently took a hard line on the pipes. They have banned 
the display and sale of them, and they threaten fines that could run 
from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.

It's part of the commission's effort to clean up the city's image of 
a party-till-you-puke town.

"These things are drug paraphernalia, and there's no question about 
that," said Mayor Bud Asher. "We're taking a stand to do our best to 
keep our young people drug-free."

A similar tactic is being used on the city's adult strip clubs and 
video stores, with many thousands of dollars in potential fines 
accumulating. But the effectiveness remains to be seen, as the 
business owners are fighting the city in court.

Asher said the new ordinance relies on an existing Florida statute 
that bans drug paraphernalia.

The statute specifically bans: "Objects used, intended for use, or 
designed for use in ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise introducing 
cannabis (*marijuana) into the human body."

"Bongs" -- slang for any container used to smoke marijuana, filtering 
the smoke through water -- are outlawed in the same state law.

Not so fast. There's a loophole.

If you use only tobacco in the items, or even use them as 
paperweights, they're perfectly legal, said Sgt. Al Tolley of the 
Daytona Beach Police Department.

It's what goes in there, or your intent, that's at issue.

All the stores the Sentinel found selling the pipes have signs 
specifically stating that the objects are for use with tobacco.

You walk into the stores and you'll see big signs that declare the 
items are for use in tobacco only.

But undercutting that declaration is the fact that many of the pipes 
are individually marked with the numbers "4:20"-- slang for getting 
high.

Other communities across the nation are taking similar hard lines. 
Earlier this month, the city of Chicago banned the sale of flavored 
cigarette paper that could be used to hide the smell of marijuana.

This summer the state of Michigan along with the city of Chicago 
banned the sale of 4-inch glass pipes that can be used as crack pipes 
- -- deeming them drug paraphernalia.

In Milwaukee -- while not banning the items -- district attorney 
asked merchants to sign good-faith agreements not to sell the items, 
saying proving intent would be too difficult.

Asher said his city is ready to fight -- and fight hard.

"I'm no goodie-two-shoes, but this is something we don't need or want 
in Daytona Beach."
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