Pubdate: Fri, 02 Mar 2007
Source: Telegraph, The (Nashua, NH)
Copyright: 2007 Telegraph Publishing Company
Contact:  http://www.nashuatelegraph.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885
Author: Albert McKeon, Telegraph Staff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

UNLIKELY ALLIES PUSH STATE TO DECRIMINALIZE MARIJUANA

If the statewide movement to decriminalize marijuana is ever made 
into a movie, a Hollywood producer would probably ask Sean Penn to 
reprise his celebrated role as the unmotivated stoner Jeff Spicoli.

But that would be the sort of typecasting that misses the point of 
New Hampshire Coalition for Common Sense Marijuana Policy, its members say.

Among those pushing for decriminalization are a soccer mom, selectman 
and two doctorate students.

Perhaps more telling of how coalition members don't fit the 
pot-smoking stereotype, they say, is that four of them don't use the 
drug, while two others say they need it for medicinal purposes.

"I don't smoke, and I don't drink. But I'm a really strong believer 
in decriminalization of marijuana," said Campton resident Jan 
Stearns, the soccer mom of the bunch.

"I'm a 48-year-old mother of two teens," she said. "I listen to 
people say marijuana corrupts our youth . . . but that's a bunch of 
baloney. There's no science behind it. We're living with a myth. 
Prohibition is not working."

To Stearns and other coalition members, the effort to decriminalize 
marijuana is less about getting high and more about personal freedom. 
The coalition acknowledges that marijuana can be harmful, but it 
believes the criminalization of private, recreational use is more 
damaging to society in wasted tax dollars and unjustified criminal records.

The newly-formed group's first act is to back a House bill that would 
legalize the use of marijuana and aim to regulate its sale.

But with just a few lawmakers and one former New Hampshire police 
officer in their corner, coalition members concede they have a big 
hill to climb.

They contend the American public has fallen for a dubious law 
enforcement argument that marijuana leads to the usage of harder 
drugs. And they realize if the bill becomes law, it probably won't 
offer complete legalization of marijuana.

"The biggest challenge is getting people over their fears," said Matt 
Simon, an Amherst resident and spokesman for the coalition.

Unafraid Of A Stigma

James McGarr, a 42-year-old Campton selectman, doesn't care what his 
constituents will say about his activism for marijuana decriminalization.

"I learned if I'm going to fight a war, I have to be prepared to lose 
everything," McGarr said. "I know enough that I am ready to do my 
part to make this right."

McGarr didn't directly answer if he uses marijuana, but he said that 
with three children, he doesn't want to risk getting arrested for 
possession. Like other coalition members, he makes the argument that 
many straight-laced and otherwise law-abiding citizens use marijuana.

Stearns, one of his constituents, told her employer that her name 
would be attached to a cause that "may be a problem." But her boss 
was accepting of her fight, and she's ready to stand out even if it 
means other soccer moms cast aspersions.

Moreover, Stearns believes her view on marijuana won't encourage her 
18-year-old son and 15-year-old daughter to try it, but will rather 
help children who do use it.

"I'm confident that my kids aren't smoking pot," Stearns said. "It 
should be treated like alcohol and cigarettes: Kids shouldn't be 
doing it. But kids are pushed into the criminal system if they're 
caught with it. And kids on all other medicines are punishing their 
bodies worse than with pot."

Stephanie Murphy, a 22-year-old Dartmouth College medical student, 
has already told her parents and friends she's publicly supporting 
marijuana decriminalization efforts.

Murphy says she doesn't use the drug. But after studying the health 
effects of marijuana - "not completely good, but it is certainly 
safer than cigarettes and alcohol" - she decided to support the coalition.

"The arguments speak for themselves," Murphy said. "People can think 
what they want about me, but I'm not going to kowtow to prevailing 
opinion. I'm not going to compromise my principles because it's not a 
popular opinion."

Murphy herself hasn't studied marijuana in a lab, but she points to 
research conducted by the National Organization for the Reform of 
Marijuana Laws on the drug's health effects.

"There's a lot of good data," Murphy said. "It can help people with 
autoimmune disease, MS, glaucoma, nausea from AIDS medication. It's 
not just something that can be enjoyed. One day I hope I can 
prescribe it to patients."

Although he's also unafraid to publicly endorse marijuana use, 
25-year-old Ian Taschner says he feels stigmatized after two arrests 
for possession. "It stinks. I've got kind of a bad rap now, like I'm 
some rebel," he said. "I don't shoot people. I don't do other drugs at all."

Taschner, a University of New Hampshire graduate student who aspires 
to be a synthetic organic chemist, says he uses marijuana for 
medicinal reasons. If his finances allow, Taschner said he usually 
melts down cannabis to a liquid form, buttering his toast with 
marijuana to help alleviate an anxiety disorder. If he's pressed for 
time, he'll smoke it.

In California, where Taschner was born, recreational and medicinal 
use of marijuana is accepted by citizens and even tolerated by law 
enforcement, he said. "Until you move to New Hampshire, then they 
think you're the devil," he said.

Blazing for change Eleven states allow medicinal marijuana use, and 
13 states treat possession of small amounts of the drug as a penalty 
and not a felony offense. But no state has blanket legalization of 
sales or usage.

The New Hampshire House bill seeks to strike down all criminalization 
of marijuana. The bill, currently in committee, could ultimately 
reach some sort of middle ground, Simon said. The coalition would 
accept a law that makes possession of an ounce or less a civil 
offense and not a crime, he said.

"The bill is a radical statement," Simon said. "It takes marijuana 
out of the criminal code. We know that's not going to happen."

Nonetheless, the coalition will still promote the benefits of 
marijuana decriminalization and the social and economic harm in 
criminalizing its use, Simon and other members said.

Public tax dollars are wasted as law enforcement arrests people for 
possessing small amounts of marijuana, labeling them with a criminal 
record that's similar to someone using or selling harder drugs, 
coalition members said. Prosecution for marijuana can lead to other 
social problems, such as preclusion from obtaining a student loan, they said.

Most police officers and prosecutors take a different stance. At a 
hearing to review the House bill, state police Maj. David Kelly 
testified that marijuana starts a user down a path to harder drugs. 
Senior Assistant Attorney General Simon Brown said marijuana use is 
connected to violent crimes.

Coalition members refute both claims. Taschner and Phil Greazzo, who 
both say they use marijuana for medical reasons, say they don't feel 
tempted to try other drugs. And they contend that marijuana relaxes 
them. Many violent criminals have used alcohol or other drugs but not 
solely marijuana, they said.

The coalition gained satisfaction when a former police officer broke 
ranks at the House hearing. Brad Jardis, a former Epping and Plaistow 
patrolman, testified that decriminalizing marijuana would help the 
addicted get treatment, and regulated sales would make it harder for 
kids to obtain it.

"I can tell you the current system we have is allowing our kids to 
easily get it," Jardis said.

Greazzo and Simon say the criminalization of marijuana is similar to 
alcohol prohibition in the 1920s. Black-market prices for the drug 
soar, while crime expands as dealers protect their turf, members 
said. Users of any age can find these dealers, they said.

"If you look at it now, there are criminal elements to marijuana 
sales," said Greazzo, a Manchester resident. "Dealers get violent in 
the streets. It's the same element as Al Capone."

Greazzo, 36, said he uses marijuana to relieve back pain from a 
career in hard labor. He now works for his brother's line striping 
and seal coating business and dabbles in real estate on the side.

"I have no health insurance and no doctor," Greazzo said. "I use 
something that's relatively safe. I feel comfortable with the green 
gift of God."

Simon, 30, said he doesn't use marijuana. He grades essays for 
standardized tests companies and feels his and others' efforts bust 
the label of lazy, inattentive pot smokers.

"It's the old principle that people should be able to do what they 
want to do as long as they don't hurt anybody else," Simon said.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman