Pubdate: Sat, 25 Nov 2006 Source: Florida Keys Keynoter, The (FL) Copyright: 2006 Keynoter Publishing Company Inc. Contact: http://www.keynoter.com/forms/letters.php Website: http://www.keynoter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/156 Author: Christine Braden Cited: National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws http://www.norml.org Referenced: 2006 NORML Key West Legal Seminar http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=5341 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/NORML Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Keith+Stroup NORML TAKES KEYS RETREAT Group Embraces Decriminalizing Marijuana Laws The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws is not your typical organization and its legal tutorials are not part of your typical seminar. But then again, Key West is not your typical city. NORML, a lobbying organization that advocates legalizing the responsible use of marijuana, is holding its 24th annual legal seminar at the Pier House Resort and Caribbean Spa in Key West next week. "Key West has been enjoyed as a place that values personal freedom," Keith Stroup said. Stroup founded the organization in 1970 and currently acts as legal counsel for the group. "Key West embraces different lifestyles, and we thought it was a pretty good fit for NORML," he said. It is a fairly accurate statement, considering the history Key West has with marijuana. Smuggling the illegal drug was a sizeable industry in the Keys from the 1960s and throughout the 1980s until the smugglers apparently came to the realization the dangers outweighed the rewards. Since that time, Key West has seen numerous ventures involving the sale and consumption of marijuana. Throughout the 1990s, several people ran medical-marijuana distribution centers within the city, though many of the quietly run clubs found themselves shut down by federal agents for their still-illegal operations. According to the NORML news archive, one such Key West closure occurred when a medical-marijuana club founder Zvi Baranoff faced felony drug charges in 1997. Prosecutors dropped the charges after then-Circuit Court Judge Richard Payne acknowledged that marijuana sales could be called a "medical necessity," and legal analysts claimed the find was groundbreaking. By holding conferences to examine the latest legal efforts toward marijuana reform laws like the upcoming one in Key West, NORML hopes to see more such victories. "We want to decriminalize marijuana use so long as you're using it in a responsible manner," Stroup said. "There should be a way to establish a legal market that is safe and secure. There are lots of problems that result from an underground or black market" for marijuana. According to Stroup, there are around 781,000 arrests on a marijuana charges every year, 88 percent of which for simple possession. NORML's Key West legal seminar brings down close to 130 lawyers, most of whom have expertise in criminal defense, from across the country. Those who attend earn continuing-education credits, required by most states. "By coming to NORML's seminar in Key West, they will get the same number of credits as they would for going to a bar-association conference, but it's also a vacation," Stroup said. Those attending will hear lectures on important cases over the past year, suppressing evidence, defending against malicious prosecution and wrongful imprisonment. The seminar takes place from Thursday to Dec. 2. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake