Pubdate: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 Source: DrugWar (US Web) Copyright: 2002 Kalyx com Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2410 Website: http://www.drugwar.com/ Author: Daniel Forbes, Special to Drugwar com Links: The dozens of internal links to this web posted investigative report are best viewed by clicking on them at the webpage above. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/forbes.htm (Forbes, Daniel) WHITE HOUSE AND DEA WORK TO DEFEAT MICHIGAN DRUG INITIATIVE ONDCP'S NEW POT ADS PLAY A ROLE Drug initiative backers with the contumacy to flank a laggard government by appealing directly to the people are met yet again with a covert, multi-state gathering of government officials planning partisan electioneering on the public dime. And, given the presentation by the Bush Administration's drug policy second-in-command - a job senior enough to require Senate confirmation - the White House-backed effort will apparently include government propaganda to sway the vote of those who pay for it. That's the unmistakable conclusion drawn from Office of National Drug Control Policy Deputy Director Mary Ann Solberg's disquisition on the government's new anti-drug ads. She spoke last Monday (8/26/02) at a forum at Detroit's Drug Enforcement Administration office to some fifty-odd sheriffs, judges, prosecutors, DEA agents, state cops, the drug czar of Michigan and private drug policy professionals, the group as a whole representing Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Georgia, Washington, D.C. and perhaps even Nevada. November's election looming, Solberg's discourse came as the Midwest's political struggle over ballot initiatives mandating treatment rather than jail for low-level drug possession offenders heats up. The enormously wealthy trio of Peter Lewis, John Sperling and George Soros - who've backed reform initiatives throughout the country, primarily medical marijuana measures out west - has now brought treatment rather than jail initiatives to the eastern half of the country. Based loosely on California's Proposition 36, which passed overwhelmingly in 2000, their effort in Florida has been postponed, stymied by a balky Florida Supreme Court. Ohioans will vote on their version, the Ohio Drug Treatment Initiative, come November. And Michigan backers and opponents sweat out this three-day weekend awaiting Tuesday's (9/3/02) procedural ruling by the state Board of Canvassers as to whether Michigan's rather different initiative, the Michigan Drug Reform Initiative, qualifies for the ballot. (Watch this space for my Labor Day analysis of the Michigan Board of Canvassers' decision, including my interview with board member Stephen Borrello detailing what he's looking for in arguments from both sides on Tuesday as he decides his vote.) Doubtless dozens of high-powered state control types, men with overwhelming jobs - heck, men with guns, some of them, who face down, or prosecute or judge criminals - didn't travel to Detroit last Monday to hear, among other topics, some abstract treatise from Solberg for the heck of it. This gathering was proactive in the extreme. But her topic makes sense if you meld Solberg's discussion of the White House's soon-aborning marijuana-scare ads with the DEA meeting's stated goal that attendees "share their ideas and strategies and possibly combine resouces in combating drug legalization [sic] proposals." Given Solberg's talk at "a forum . to discuss the drug legalization [sic] efforts that are being proposed throughout the United States, specifically in Michigan", it seems clear that this senior White House official feels the new ads will contribute to the government's anti-initiative effort. Otherwise, why waste these topflight folks' time discussing the ads at meeting geared to "provide insight on successful strategies to combat legalization," a meeting that promised to "provide presentations on how the DEA can assist state leaders in this battle." The passages quoted above come from a formal invitation printed on DEA/U.S. Department of Justice letterhead. Date-stamped 8/2/02 and signed by DEA Special Agent in Charge Michael A. Braun - who runs federal drug enforcement in Michigan, Ohio and Kentucky - it was sent to a prominent Michigan initiative opponent, James Halushka, an Oakland County, Michigan Deputy Prosecutor. Referring to the ads, meeting participant Judge Brian W. MacKenzie, District Judge in Michigan's 52nd District, said that a fellow-attendee asked Solberg about the possibility of the new ad campaign targeting or emphasizing Michigan and Ohio, but she replied that wasn't possible. The two states will instead have to settle for their standard share of the White House ad buy, including the spots that air nationally in every state. Judge MacKenzie said Solberg "talked of the federal government's new initiative with regard to marijuana." He added that she described it as a new nationwide ad campaign geared to educate the public about pot's dangers, including the controversial - many would say, discounted - notion that it serves as a gateway drug to abuse of more pernicious substances. The ad campaign was pretty much her entire focus, according to MacKenzie. Goodness knows the paroxysms that will grace the ads that should debut in a week or two. Solberg's boss, Drug Czar John P. Walters has been preparing the ground with his release last Thursday in Miami of a federal study purporting to show that youthful marijuana use is associated with adult hard drug use. According to the Associated Press, Walters said, "Marijuana is not the soft drug." And just yesterday, in the San Francisco Chronicle, Walters railed against pot -- which he declared is up to 30-times more powerful than that of "the Woodstock era" -- as producing, at high doses, "paranoia or even violence." As to medical marijuana, that is: "smoking an intoxicating weed," he said the very notion is "medieval. It is, in fact, absurd." By selective quotation, he baldly misrepresents the Institute of Medicine report that Barry McCaffrey commissioned then ignored. He also cites sky-rocketing adolescent marijuana treatment admissions without mentioning the percentage of kids admitted against their will, either at the hands of the criminal justice system or their guardians. There's much more -- fire-and-brimstone sulfur of the highest order. Though she's one of the nation's top experts on anti-drug coalitions, it's curious that Solberg apparently failed to address such topics as coalition building or drug courts or the need for those present to have their opposition heard. In fact, her presentation presents the intriguing conundrum of why the upcoming marijuana ads were considered on-topic at a meeting strategizing on "combating drug legalization proposals" - i.e., treatment in lieu of incarceration ballot initiatives. In the absence of any ONDCP response to numerous phone calls, it's useful to note the White House media campaign's political genesis and intent. As disclosed in Salon (7/27/00) in, Fighting "Cheech & Chong" Medicine -- the phrase is Clinton Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey's -- the initial five-year, White House media campaign was engendered at a meeting McCaffrey convened in Washington nine days after medical marijuana initiatives passed in Arizona and California in 1996. Minutes of the meeting reveal that some forty officials and private sector executives met to discuss the need for taxpayer-funded messages to thwart any potential medical marijuana initiatives in the other 48 states and perhaps even roll back the two that had just passed. They included two policy advisors from the Clinton White House, the head of the DEA, representatives of the FBI, Departments of Justice, Health and Human Services, Treasury and Education, along with state law enforcement personnel. One private participant was quoted in the meeting's minutes as saying, "We'll work with Arizona and California to undo it and stop the spread of legalization to [the] other 48 states." Initiative Backers' Line in the Sand Hubris or not, Dave Fratello, Legal Affairs Director for the national Campaign for New Drug Policies which launched the Michigan initiative, declared CNDP ready to keep the ads from running: "If we have reason to believe that the government is running PSAs [public service announcements] designed to thwart the campaign, we'll stop them by telling station managers that the ads are of a political nature - not a public service - and are an in-kind contribution to the anti-initiative political campaign." He warned broadcasters of myriad and expensive legal entanglements attending such in-kind, political contributions. Pondering the anti-marijuana ad campaign's likely effect on Michigan voters should the ballot measure qualify, Kevin Zeese, president of Common Sense for Drug Policy, said, "No doubt these sorts of ads lay a foundation of fear that can be used by the initiative's opponents. Ads that seek to create fear about marijuana lead to the sort of fear and ignorance that drive the drug laws and work against reform, work for just sending people to jail." The ONDCP anti-marijuana ads Solberg touted are part of a second, five-year ad campaign that July, 2002 press reports indicate Congress has refunded for $762 million over the next five years. This despite the fact that, according to a 7/3/02 AP story, Drug Czar John Walters, "has repeatedly criticized the ad campaign, saying teenagers were ignoring the ads. In May, he said the office would cancel the campaign if it was not effective." The AP cited a survey released in May that "found no evidence the ads were discouraging drug use." According to USA Today, (7/8/02) of the $762-million that federal taxpayers will pony up over the next five years, some $130-million annually - or approximately $650-million total - will go to purchase advertising, along with a very small amount for media planning. ($112-million over five years is a heck of a chunk for expenses, ancillary or otherwise, but no matter.) Should the next five years mirror the campaign's first five, then, by design, half the ad budget will go to ad buys targeting adults - that is voters. And, if past remains prologue, that $650 million is only the half of it since Congress requires the media to sell its ad time and space to ONDCP for half-price. That is, broadcasters and publishers, etc. cough up two ad slots for the price of one. So, (minus those relatively tiny media planning fees) approximately $1.3 billion over the next five years will be available for anti-drug advertising. Half will be directed at adult voters, and all of it will tend - however indirectly - to poison the drug-reform well. Along with maintaining the drug-war status quo, the ads also work to support blanket drug tests at school and work, massive law enforcement expenditures, the shredding of the Bill of Rights - the whole delightful interdict-and-incarceration noose around the country's neck. Alarmist? Well - citizens, attend: Drug Use = Terrorism! as the only new ads yet released under Walters/Bush, the ones that engendered such ridicule and disgust, would have voters believe. Rather implausibly, President Clinton's then deputy press secretary Jake Siewert, informed me back in 2000 that, "The ONDCP is prohibited from involving itself in political causes in its advertising." Talk is cheap. Parsing Clues on Participants Though the DEA raised the moat, it is possible to glean some notion of the meeting's participants. Braun's invitation promised "state leaders from Michigan, Kentucky and Ohio at this forum." Oakland County Deputy Prosecutor James Halushka confirmed his participation along with that of various law enforcement personnel, the DEA's public affairs and congressional liaison director, Christopher Battle, and by "some CADCA people too, a couple of representatives from Lansing and Battle Creek who continue to spread the word." CADCA refers to the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America, whose board Solberg graced prior to joining ONDCP. (In December, 2001, Bush announced re-authorization of a Department of Justice program that will distribute $450-million over the next five years to community anti-drug groups. Approximately one-fifth of that money is available for what is termed voter education.) MacKenzie, who attended only part of the morning session of what he termed a 9-to-3 meeting, was particularly interested in the presentation by Judge Harvey Hoffman, the president of a Michigan drug court advocacy group, the Michigan Association of Drug Court Professionals. He said Hoffman discussed the impact of California's Prop. 36. MacKenzie also noted the presence of Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard, a co-chair of the Committee to Protect Our Kids, a "registered ballot question committee formed to oppose" the treatment initiative, according to an 8/9/02 letter sent to Christopher Thomas, director of the Michigan state Bureau of Elections, by the committee's counsel, the powerhouse Michigan law firm of Dykema Gossett. (This letter, according to Board of Canvassers member Stephen Borrello, contributed greatly to the board postponing for a week its decision regarding the initiative. See my Drugwar.com article tomorrow in this space on the postponement, including the influence wielded by Dykema Gossett partner and head of its Government Policy & Practice Group, Richard McLellan. A hand-in-glove ally of rabid initiative foe, Michigan Gov. John Engler - in 1990 he served as director of the governor-elect's transition team - McLellan has also chaired a committee helping Engler and President George W. Bush pick federal appeals court judges. He's served as Michigan's drug czar and as an advisor to President Gerald Ford. According to a filing with the Michigan secretary of state, the committee's treasurer is Richard M. Gabrys, an executive with the accounting and consulting firm, Deloitte & Touche. He and McLellan both refused comment.) Referring to this committee and to initiative opponents in general, Halushka said they hope to mount a "massive public education campaign . to expose [proponents'] myths in a sound-bite world." Though decrying the impossibility of matching the rich backers' potential ad budget, he added, "We are raising money, going [nationally] to big-name donors." Additional meeting participants, said MacKenzie, included members of the state police; one or more representatives of Detroit anti-drug coalitions; both a "police commander" and a prosecutor from Ohio; as well as someone from Kentucky. Altogether, he estimated there were "fifty or sixty people in a big conference room." Additional clues regarding attendance come from the fact that prior to the meeting, the office of Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), ranking minority member of the House Judiciary Committee, obtained a copy of Braun's invitation, according to Deanna Maher, a special projects coordinator on Conyers' staff. Wearing two hats, Maher works part-time for Conyers and part-time for the initiative's sponsor, the Michigan Campaign for New Drug Policies, CNDP's state affiliate. CNDP's Fratello stated that Maher segregates her time religiously - a common practice, he said, of congressional staffers with outside political pursuits. The letter at hand, the week before the meeting Maher called both Braun and DEA Special Agent Rich Isaacson (whose name and number were also on the invite) to inquire whether the lack of an invitation to Conyers' office was inadvertent. After all, a Conyers staffer's participation would be fueled by propinquity, the two offices across the street from each other in downtown Detroit. The DEA agent responsible for demand reduction throughout Michigan, Ohio and Kentucky (or so he told me last winter), Isaacson extended an invitation, which Maher declined. While doing so, he told her that Craig Yaldoo, the Director of Michigan's Office of Drug Control Policy, four judges, representatives from the anti-initiative Committee to Protect Our Kids and "regional" officials would be among those assembling the following Monday. Taxpayers Bought Rusche's Flight? A main speaker was Sue Rusche, executive director of Atlanta-based National Families in Action, who fired up the troops with visions of the perfidy they face. Describing her as "a nationally recognized expert on the history of the drug legalization effort in the United States," Braun promised Rusche's "insight[s] on successful strategies to combat legalization." Rusche's website is indeed a comprehensive distillation of reformers' either stark truth-telling or public faux pas - depending on your point of view. It's worth noting that, according to Philanthropic Research, Inc., Rusche's organization had total 1999 revenues of $487,376; of this, a whopping $429,503 was from the government. Figures for the prior two years are similar: 1998 total revenue, $542,762, of which $490,913 was from the government. In 1997, the total was $507,291; the government's portion, $451,123. Describing Rusche as the "keynote" speaker, Halushka said, "She basically talked of the arguments that needed to be made, talked of the myths and the [proponents'] true agenda. She proved it with a statistic-filled" presentation. (The portion of Rushche's talk on opponents' successful strategies, at least regarding CNDP, might have been brief. Thirteen of its 14 campaigns have passed, not including the postponed effort stymied by a recalcitrant Florida Supreme Court. In Massachusetts, CNDP reached for the moon and crashed on the launching pad.) Braun also promised potential attendees that, "DEA's Demand Reduction and Congressional and Public Affairs Sections will provide presentations on how the DEA can assist state leaders in this battle." Braun's last reference was presumably to Christopher Battle, who runs the DEA's PR and congressional affairs out of Washington. Halushka said Battle attended and "talked of the need for a grassroots [effort], of working with community groups." Thus, according to Halushka, this top agency official sent the gathering forth to proselytize to the public. He also said the meeting focused, in part, "in terms of getting the word out." (To that end, Halushka said that he, Judge MacKenzie and a county sheriff recently visited the editorial board of a local paper to voice their opposition. He's also given "some speeches during the day to community coalitions and prevention groups." But, he said, "That's part of my job: public education regarding public safety." It seems voters may be endangered should they flip the wrong lever come November.) Finally, to finish this discussion of the roster of attendees, a single source not mentioned elsewhere in this article stated his or her belief that the following individuals or groups attended: Yaldoo (as Isaacson told Maher) and various Michigan state police and Michigan sheriffs and prosecutors. Sheriff Bouchard and Deputy Prosecutor Halushka confirmed their attendance, and Judge MacKenzie confirmed the state police's presence. Therefore, this source's knowledge of the attendees listed in the previous paragraph was corroborated. Consider then his or her following two claims in that light. This individual asserted that Charles List, a coordinator for the Committee to Protect Our Kids, also attended. Prior to my hearing this, List spoke to me briefly, but directed all inquiries to Sheriff Bouchard and to Saginaw County Prosecuting Attorney Michael Thomas, who List declared the committee's co-chairs. Thomas refused to be interviewed. Bouchard attended the meeting briefly and spoke to me only in general terms. Most tellingly, this individual also asserted that an anti-initiative representative from the state of Nevada attended. The presence of a fellow-strategizer from Nevada has not been confirmed at press time as at least half-a-dozen calls to Braun and DEA public affairs chief Battle were not returned. Of course, an adult-use, marijuana legalization initiative recently qualified for the Nevada ballot; current polls indicate a tight race. Initiative opponents there may well feel the need to, as Braun's invite encouraged, share ideas, strategies and perhaps resources to combat initiatives. If someone from Nevada was indeed present, his or her anti-initiative colleagues back home would welcome his or her summary of the "presentations on how the DEA can assist state leaders in this battle." Everyone gathered knowing they face an uphill climb should the Michigan Board of Canvassers not toss the initiative tomorrow, Tuesday. The Wall Street Journal has cited an April, 2001 Pew Research Center for People and the Press study that "found that a 52%-to-35% majority of adults believe drug use should be treated as a `disease,' not a crime." And Dave Fratello points to an August, 2001 Buckeye State poll indicating that 74% of Ohioans favored treatment rather than prison for low-level offenders. He's told me previously that that exceeds California's approval rating at a comparable time in its Prop. 36 campaign, indicating, he felt, that "voter attitudes on drugs are massively in flux." DEA a Slice; IPS Report the Whole Pie I myself was lucky enough to dissect the overall scheme being propagated by senior federal, state and local officials to covertly usurp the voters' franchise in a report published this May by the venerable D.C. think tank, the Institute for Policy Studies. Entitled, The Governor's Sub-rosa Plot to Subvert an Election in Ohio, it can be found at www.ips-dc.org/projects/drugpolicy/ohio.htm. This DEA meeting is but the latest manifestation to surface of a multi-state effort that dates to July, 2001. The product of five-months' work, the IPS report focuses on the anti-initiative efforts of Gov. Bob Taft (R-OH), his wife, Hope Taft, and the highest reaches of his administration. Their close allies include Solberg; Yaldoo; James McDonough, the drug czar of Florida; Betty Sembler, the wife of the former finance chair of the Republican National Committee and current US Ambassador to Italy; a senior U.S. Senate staffer (who hosted an anti-initiative strategy session in the U.S. Capitol itself - yes, the one with the dome) and the supposedly apolitical Partnership for a Drug-Free America. Detroit's own Rep. John Conyers was responsible for disseminating news of last week's DEA confab. Obtaining Braun's invitation the week before the strategy session, Conyers followed with a letter 8/22/02 to DEA Director Asa Hutchinson demanding an investigation and a press release on Friday, 8/23/02. Conyers' letter and subsequent release call on Hutchinson to investigate the DEA's "possible misuse of federal funds without proper authorization by Congress and in contravention of existing law." Conyers stated: "It appears that the DEA has been actively engaged across the country in collaboration with groups who are opposed to ballot proposals involving reform of our drug laws." Referring to political campaigning "on federal property and on government time," Conyers charged that the meeting undoubtedly violates a 2001 federal law "which clearly states that no part of any appropriation for DEA can be used for `publicity or propaganda purposes' not authorized by Congress." He wondered whether the upcoming meeting would run "afoul of federal laws prohibiting unauthorized lobbying activities by federal agencies." Government Integrity Besmirched, Conyers Charges Conyers castigated the judges who participated in violation of their Canon of Ethics and implied that the DEA's activities have compromised "the integrity of our national government." Referencing Braun's "invitation to a forum `to discuss drug legalization efforts,' " Conyers concluded, "I am concerned that this meeting, with its specific purpose of devising a lobbying and public campaign against Michigan drug reform proposals, is . an unauthorized use of funds." One question Conyers will want answered is who paid for all these people to make their way to Detroit? Someone from Kentucky was there, along with at least two from Ohio, according to Judge MacKenzie. Private citizen Sue Rusche came up from Georgia. Having voiced nothing but her intention to hang up, she did so as I blurted a question on whether the DEA had paid for her trip. Then there's the question, as Conyers pointed out, of all these government officials taking this time while on the clock, ostensibly serving the public in non-partisan fashion. It's a stretch beyond tearing to think they all took personal days and traveled at their own expense. As discussed below, the DEA's Rich Isaacson said his overnight lodging was paid for by the taxpayers of Ohio, his time and travel by federal taxpayers when he attended a similar anti-initiative meeting at the Governor of Ohio's mansion last October. MacKenzie said that one notable Detroit participant was a DEA lawyer who discussed Conyers' advance criticism of the meeting. He said the lawyer discussed at some length how "it was not a violation." Pointing to the Solberg-initiated efforts of his boss, David Gorcyca, himself and Solberg herself in Oakland County, Halushka also spoke of getting "Craig [Yaldoo] organized to get the state organized." He added, "Craig is working more on a statewide level." Aiding that effort, Gorcyca enlisted the Prosecuting Attorneys Association of Michigan to get all 83 counties involved. One wonders if Yaldoo and Gorcyca's outreach to their professional colleagues occurs entirely during off-hours. Curiously, the same day Conyers publicly blasted the DEA (8/23/02), its response was to send Detroit-area Democratic Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick an anti-initiative ten-point talking-point memo that Halushka told me he helped write. While the memo does artfully and often disingenuously critique the initiative, it's hard to see it absolving or even addressing the issues raised by partisan electioneering by dozens of officials at a federal office in Detroit. According to Conyers' staffer, Deanna Maher, Rep. Kilpatrick received a call the Friday before the Monday meeting from Asa Hutchinson denouncing the initiative. He then faxed her Halushka's effort: "10 Reasons that `The Michigan Drug Reform Initiative' is BAD FOR MICHIGAN." [Upper case and bold in original.] (The memo's second point stands out as particularly misguided: "It effectively legalizes use of all dangerous drugs, including cocaine, ecstasy and heroin, for anyone who merely states that they seek treatment, regardless of whether they even attend treatment sessions.") Maher adds that Kilpatrick herself dropped by Conyers' Detroit office the day of the meeting to question whether Halushka's memo accurately represents the initiative. Said Maher, "Rep. Kilpatrick expressed her concern regarding the DEA's activities and her support for Rep. Conyers' inquiry." Hutchinson himself has not shrunk from the fray. A DEA release noted his address last October to an Ohio drug court graduation ceremony. He thanked the defendants for their success and "for the example you've set." And he warned of "a growing challenge to drug courts" - in this case, the Ohio ballot initiative. The measure lacks accountability, Hutchinson asserted, and was thus "a program that is doomed to failure." Then in May, 2002, Hutchinson blasted the Ohio initiative in an op-ed published by The Columbus Dispatch. Solberg the Master Aside from her dangling the promise of new anti-marijuana advertising, there's more to be said of ONDCP Deputy Director Mary Ann Solberg. Asked the genesis of the Committee To Protect our Kids, Halushka said, "The godmother is Mary Ann Solberg." Replying to a question, he added, "The spark came from Mary Ann - no question." That spark flared months after President Bush publicly nominated her in July, 2001. Halushka noted that Solberg enlisted prosecutors in Detroit, Oakland and McComb counties to fight the threat in 2000 of a stillborn medical marijuana initiative. Then, in November and December of 2001- months after her nomination- Halushka said Solberg "alerted" him and "wanted to galvanize people" regarding the threat of the new treatment initiative. Consequently, he examined its "frightening" language and "brought it to my boss," David Gorcyca, Oakland County Prosecuting Attorney. Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard then signed on, said Halushka, and Halushka's own January address to the Troy coalition Solberg had run "started the ball rolling." Halushka added, "We've been proactive in Oakland County.. David Gorcyca, myself and Solberg have worked in Oakland." Though it's certainly more racially integrated than it once was, Oakland can perhaps be fairly described as the white-flight county north of Detroit. As to Solberg's current involvement, Halushka said, "She has continued to be of help - she has continued to help with connections to people and data. She does come to town. She was in town Monday [8/26/02] at DEA headquarters in Detroit." Speaking of the initiative in general, he reiterated: "She was responsible for alerting us." Informed of Solberg's participation in the meeting (initially disclosed here, I believe), initiative campaigner Dave Fratello stated: "I always knew Mary Ann Solberg would take the White House too far. She's a zealot, hired to be on the far right on the drug-abuse issue. She's not cautious and she's not being restrained. I always thought her zeal would get the better of her, and now she's taken the White House over a cliff." Asked how, Fratello said, "The voters of Michigan will not take kindly to the White House telling them how to vote. Barry McCaffrey learned that lesson in California in1996 when there was a palpable backlash against his heavy-handed intervention against medical marijuana." Referring to the initiatives' active opponents sprinkled throughout the highest levels of Michigan and Ohio officialdom, reformer Kevin Zeese added, "They fear these millionaires and activists who are getting their message out. What's more, despite hundreds of millions of dollars worth of government-paid ads, they can't figure out how to get their own message out." If Zeese is correct, that failure certainly cannot be laid at Solberg's feet. As discussed in my Institute for Policy Studies report, upon her July, 2001 nomination Solberg received a congratulatory e-mail from Ohio First Lady Hope Taft. Referring to the Ohio and Michigan initiatives, Taft wrote, "We are interested in sharing info and ideas with both states and wondered who in Michigan will be in charge. Could you let me know what you know or think?" Taft assumed as a matter of course that someone in Michigan would be in charge of opposing the ballot measure. Solberg to Ohio's First Lady: TV Is Key In her reply, Solberg immediately referred - not to some private individual more suited to run a political campaign - but to Michigan's new drug czar, Craig Yaldoo. She wrote: "I met with Craig last week, and he is very interested in taking up the fight and appears to be on top of the Soros people and their movements in Michigan. I suggested he form a partnership with you to fight the prop[osition]. Quite telling in a quite brief e-mail, Solberg then told Taft: "It would be very effective if we could pool resources to produce TV spots. I have some funding commitments, and I believe we could raise even more as a team. I would love to meet with an Ohio/Michigan team before I leave Troy [MI] to begin planning." Solberg was not referring at that point to the combined $1.3-billion worth of ads over the next five years that, between them, taxpayers will buy and the media be bludgeoned into giving. Nonetheless, note her immediate emphasis on TV ads and the money to air them in what she told Taft would be "a very hard fight." My IPS report also detailed a skull session similar to the DEA meeting, a "Multi-State Drug Policy Forum" held at the Tafts' official residence in Columbus, 10/12/01. Solberg, Isaacson, Yaldoo and Florida drug czar James McDonough all attended. The state of Ohio offered to pay for meals and lodging for out-of-state attendees and did in fact pay $2,000 to a local "meeting facilitator." As mentioned, Isaacson's lodging was paid for by the taxpayers of Ohio, his time and travel by federal taxpayers. Writing the IPS report many months ago, I questioned DEA spokesperson Thomas Hinojosa about the potential impropriety of Isaacson's government-paid trip. Back when the DEA actually responded to press inquiries, Hinojosa told me, "[Isaacson's] job is drug investigations and stopping the flow of narcotics." Asked how attending a strategy session on defeating initiatives fit that brief, Hinojosa said, "That initiative deals with illegal drugs, which come under the Controlled Substances Act. So there's nothing wrong with that." Last winter, Isaacson told me the Ohio meeting in October was "merely to determine what is happening in these states regarding possible legalization efforts." Evaluate his statement in light of the numerous political tactics participants agreed were necessary in a five-page "Outcomes" memo summarizing the day's conclusions. It features such overt exhortations as: "Have a seamless, collaborative effort of organizations involved, mobilized and working hard to oppose the Initiative." To quote a second, one of many outcomes: "Beat the Initiative back in the entire country, not just in each state." At meeting's end, the Ohio, Michigan and Florida officials present that day in October, 2001 pledged to work together and stay in touch through e-mail, conference calls and possible future meetings. Despite all that - and this is the sketchiest of summaries of the IPS material - Isaacson told me months ago that this Governor's mansion meeting was for informational purposes. Public Billions Fuel Private Juggernaut, Yet Voters Sneer Solberg's activities in Michigan prior to her April, 2002 Senate confirmation shed light on the state and federally funded private apparatus that defends the drug-war status quo, as my IPS report makes clear. Her base was the Troy Community Coalition for the Prevention of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, which, according to the U.S. Department of Justice, was formed with federal money in 1991. (Philanthropic Research, Inc. notes that for the FY ending in June, 1999, the Troy coalition had total revenues of $254,000, with government grants providing $163,000.) The next calendar year, in September, 2000, it received a $100,000 Dept. of Justice grant, the money to be spent in part for the group to act, according to the DOJ, "as a catalyst for collaboration among all segments of the community, thereby building . awareness that will lead to an increase in the perception of the health risks involved [with drugs] and growing social disapproval within the community." [Emphasis added.] Not incidentally, the DOJ requires that grantees include "at least one" media representative. The year before, the Coalition of Healthy Communities (CHC), an umbrella group for seven community coalitions located north of Detroit that Solberg also directed, received $99,209 in DOJ money. According to the DOJ website, CHC used some of the $99,209 to "implement a public awareness campaign." Referring to this social marketing, Mary Louise Embrey of the DOJ Office of Congressional and Public Affairs told me last winter, "The way they were going about it is multi-faceted: They've hooked in with the Ad Council and the national ONDCP anti-drug media campaign - they use print materials from ONDCP. And they used the local media to make connections. They have people [appear] on the local news or they feed them different stories." My work in Salon proved that the White House used taxpayer funds to reward broadcasters and publishers who inserted government-approved anti-drug content. But according to Embrey of the DOJ, public funds were also used to help local coalitions propagandize citizens through local media north of Detroit. (See the IPS report for full proof of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America's manifest willingness to create ads to try to influence the Ohio election. The partnership inaugurated its effort by sending its four top executives to that July, 2001 planning session hosted by a U.S. Senate staffer and held in the U.S. Capitol - what one of them termed a "counter-legalization brainstorm session.") As to the Ad Council's role, according to a 8/12/02 ONDCP release, it will team with the Ad Council to "launch new ads next month to promote awareness of - and involvement with - community drug-prevention coalitions.." This new campaign - separate from the ONDCP anti-marijuana ads - will feature, says the White House, a Web site and toll-free number and "TV, radio, print, outdoor and Web banner ads" designed to help people "get involved with or start a coalition and locate a coalition in their community." From 2000-to-2001, this "campaign has received more than $120-million in donated [sic] media support through the Ad Council's media outreach and ONDCP's" fifty-cents-on-the-dollar deals with the media. Prior to her ONDCP deputy directorship, Solberg helped advise the Ad Council's Community Anti-Drug Campaign. Local anti-drug coalitions receive government funding nationwide. One Dept. of Justice program, authorized at $144-million for its first five years, was reauthorized this past December for another five years for a staggering $450-million. (Approximately two-thirds of the first $144-million's 464 total grants went to CADCA member coalitions; the rest went to other local groups.) Since ONDCP ultimately decides where these Justice Dept. grants end up, depending on John Walters' degree of micro-management, Solberg may have more say than anyone in the country as to this $450-million's ultimate destination and purpose. Twenty Percent for Voter 'Education' But what possible objection could there be to using this money for community-based prevention and treatment? Consider that this past January, CADCA spokeswoman Betsy Glick told The Detroit Free Press, "Under federal law, the nonprofit coalitions generally can spend up to 20 percent of their budgets `to educate voters.' " According to the article: "Solberg said she is determined to see more coalitions spawned and strengthened. And . she is expected to help them play a key role in opposing any easing of drug laws" - i.e., any initiatives. The paper added, quoting one of Solberg's Michigan coalition colleagues: "Behind the scenes, Solberg is `spearheading the campaign against this initiative.' " With last December's huge reauthorization, 20% of $450 million - that is, up to $90-million - will be available over the next five years for publicly funded voter education to try to influence elections, whether on a state initiative, or just a contest for county sheriff between a hard-liner and a reformer. As to any `spawning,' on September 9th, Solberg will address the annual Michigan Substance Abuse Conference, speaking on "Successful Strategies for Coalition Building." Sponsored by state and federal health agencies, the sold-out, two-day seminar offers professional continuing education credits, and attendees' expenses are tax-deductible. Solberg's a self-acknowledged pro at publicly funded electioneering. In 2000, after that medical marijuana measure failed to gain the Michigan ballot as she ran numerous coalitions north of Detroit, Solberg told the Detroit News, "A good offense is the best defense." The article noted that in May that year, as part of that offense, one of her coalitions had "hosted a two-day conference in Lansing about the perils of pot." It added that the seminar was controversial since the coalition receives state, county and federal grants. Both Michigan's drug czar and the head of its state police participated, as did, for some reason, Northwest Airlines. According to DRCNet, the conference was entitled, "Training the Trainers: Putting the Brakes on the Drug Legalization Movement." DRCNet cited Greg Schmid's charge that Michigan promised state criminal justice training funds to facilitate police attendance at the meeting. A main backer of the Personal Responsibility Amendment (as it was known), Schmid told DRCNet, "It looks like a public fund is being used for electioneering training of law enforcement personnel." A Saginaw lone-wolf at Schmid Law Office, he told me his formal complaint to the State Bureau of Elections was referred to the state Attorney General, who dismissed it. So, no doubt the poll-beleaguered local officials in Detroit welcomed the presence of the ex-school teacher who's now found her way to the White House. Keith Stroup, head of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said, "Her presence gives enormous empowerment to the local partisans - to know that the federal government, the White House in particular, is supporting their efforts. Sitting in Detroit, when the White House shows up, it may not be illegal, but it sure as hell is improper." Numerous phone calls to ONDCP and the DEA, including to ONDCP PR chief Tom Reilly and to DEA Special Agents Battle and Braun were not returned. Reaching Solberg's personal voice-mail, I outlined my understanding of her Detroit discourse on the new ads, hoping to prompt a response. Without much of a leg to stand on, the White House and the DEA refused to teeter on the precipice of actually discussing their active opposition to state ballot measures - Bush administration rhetoric about devolution of power to the states be blowed. ======================================================================= Daniel Forbes writes on social policy. His recent report on state and federal political malfeasance geared to defeat treatment rather than incarceration ballot initiatives was published by the Institute for Policy Studies. Much of his work, including his series in Salon that led to his testimony before both the Senate and the House, is archived at www.mapinc.org. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake