Pubdate: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 Source: Barnstable Patriot, The (MA) Copyright: 2008 OTTAWAY NEWSPAPERS, INC. Contact: http://www.barnstablepatriot.com/ Author: Michael O'Keefe VOTE NO ON QUESTION 2 On Nov. 4 Massachusetts voters will be asked to choose whether they want our state, our communities and our families to be the testing ground for what The Economist magazine has called the most radical marijuana ballot initiative in the country. Voters will choose between our current laws or the radical agenda of national marijuana proponents whose end goal is legalization of the drug. Voters will choose between a steadily declining rate of marijuana use among teenagers in Massachusetts or sending the message to our young people that drug use is safe and acceptable. Passage of Question 2 will decriminalize marijuana use and turn possession of an ounce or less of marijuana into a fine similar to one you'd get for a traffic violation. And for kids under the age of 21, the penalties for marijuana possession will be reduced well below current penalties for alcohol possession. Drug use and abuse will increase among children and adults. And Massachusetts communities and families - not the well-heeled, out-of-state proponents of Question 2 - - will be left to deal with the consequences. Despite the best efforts of Question 2 backers to paint marijuana as harmless, the facts are clear. Kids who smoke marijuana are more likely to do poorly in school, more likely to require counseling, more likely to engage in violence and - perhaps most importantly - are more likely to get behind the wheel of a car high on marijuana. According to MADD, 41 percent of teens are not concerned about driving high on marijuana - a shocking number considering drivers who've smoked pot are 10 times more likely to be injured, or to injure others, in automobile crashes. Marijuana is more carcinogenic than tobacco and is a major factor in juvenile hospital admissions. To use marijuana, children have to buy it - putting themselves at enormous risk. Call Question 2 the drug dealer protection act. Why? Question 2 will enable and embolden drug dealers and allow them to carry up to an ounce of marijuana without the threat of criminal prosecution. Despite the best efforts of proponents to paint an ounce of marijuana as something too small to be worth the attention of the police and courts, the fact is that one ounce of marijuana is worth from $400 to $600 and represents about 60 individual sales. And where does that ounce come from? It comes from the pounds of marijuana that traffickers will bring here and cut up in our neighborhoods once there is no downside to retailing the drug. Question 2's supporters argue that existing laws unfairly and harshly punish those who have been caught with an ounce or less of marijuana. But it simply isn't true. In Suffolk and Middlesex counties last year not one person went to jail for a first-time marijuana offense alone. Of the 371 marijuana convictions in Suffolk County last year 18 of those ended with a jail sentence. And those sentences weren't handed down for marijuana possession - they were handed down for the crimes that so often accompany marijuana on the streets of our cities: Armed robbery, assault, rape or burglary. Statewide, according to the Massachusetts District Attorneys Association, the numbers are similar: of the 174 people sent to jail in 2006 for marijuana there was not one case where that possession charge was a first offense. Instead, those sentenced to prison were guilty of prior convictions, had violated parole or probation or were convicted in tandem of another, more serious crime. As for simple possession: Carrying an ounce or less of marijuana in Massachusetts means probation for six months. If you don't get arrested again during that period, the criminal record is wiped clean and the CORI record is sealed and inactive. Those are the facts. What about claims that our current drug laws are unfairly limiting access to student loans for first-time offenders? Again, not true. Only a conviction leads to a temporary one-year suspension of federal loans. And in Massachusetts judges and prosecutors are required to place first-time offenders on probation and wipe their records clean after six months. Passage of Question 2 will come at an incredible social and economic cost to all of us. Drug use will cost America $258 billion just this year. Here in Massachusetts, we can count on increased health costs, traffic injuries and fatalities, increased law enforcement costs, lost productivity, lowered workplace safety, and the heavy toll of addiction on communities and families. Please join me in voting no on Question 2. Michael O'Keefe District Attorney Cape & Islands District Barnstable - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin