Pubdate: Wed, 08 Jun 2016 Source: East Bay Express (CA) Column: Legalization Nation Copyright: 2016 East Bay Express Contact: http://posting.eastbayexpress.com/ebx/SubmitLetter/Page Website: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1131 Author: David Downs MARIJUANA AND EQUITY Personal pot possession in California was reduced from an arrest to an infraction in 2010, but systemic racism around pot enforcement continues, a new study finds. The American Civil Liberties Union of California, in conjunction with the Drug Policy Alliance, published a groundbreaking, heavily reported piece of research Monday that concludes that the Black community in California faces ticketing for pot at a rate four times as high as whites. Latinos have about double the rate of pot tickets as whites. Titled "Marijuana Enforcement Disparities in California: A Racial Injustice", the ACLU-DPA report is the culmination of more than a year's work by a group of four Stanford law school students. California arrests for pot have dropped 86 percent from highs of nearly 100,000 to about 20,000 in 2014. What remains unknown is how many pot tickets are being written and to whom. The research group had to threaten to sue cities and counties to divulge pot infraction statistics - which are poorly tracked, and often hand-written, with no electronic records in existence. An analysis of infraction data from Los Angeles and Fresno found disparities in Black and Latino citations compared to whites. Researchers also found a form of predatory policing where police placed the highest burden of tickets on the backs of young men and boys, particularly ones of color. "Racial disparities in marijuana enforcement are widespread and longstanding. Los Angeles and Fresno are very different places; yet they reveal similar disparities. It's likely that young black and Latino Californians experience these disparities statewide," stated Margaret Dooley-Sammuli, Criminal Justice and Drug Policy director for the ACLU of California. "A $100 citation can easily become several times that, after all the fees are added. This presents a significant burden for young people and low-income families." "It is disappointing to see that even at the level of infractions, California law enforcement are incapable of applying the law equally across racial lines," stated Alice Huffman, president of the CA-Hawaii NAACP. "I am hopeful that full legalization as proposed in the Adult Use of Marijuana Act will drastically reduce the numbers of young people of color being funneled into the criminal justice system for minor drug offenses." With infraction data hidden from officials themselves, police cannot speak accurately on levels of pot enforcement or allegations of racial bias, said Amanda Reiman, Marijuana Policy Manager for the Drug Policy Alliance. Law enforcement assumptions based on personal experience don't often match the statistics. For example, Oakland's pot crime is concentrated in just two police beats, she said. "If you're a cop covering Montclair in Oakland, yeah, there are no marijuana arrests.'" She said weed crime statistics are caught in a "weird area" where they are underreported compared to the scale of pot activity. Pot crime is measured more like crack cocaine crime, which is rare, instead of alcohol-related crime, which is very common. "We have this weird situation with cannabis where we have a great deal of use but we have no one with reporting systems, measuring outcomes." Now, millions of dollars in legal pot taxes have begun paying for some of the first statistical reporting on cannabis crime - as in Colorado and Washington. California's continued targeting of blacks even as pot laws changed mirrors new findings from Colorado, where pot cases dropped 86 percent, yet black teens actually got arrested more. The ACLU's groundbreaking study will add to calls for more racial equity in legalized cannabis markets. Recently, Oakland earmarked priority pot permits for cannabis offenders and residents of certain police beats. Bogus Pot Research Redux Critics are calling "reefer madness" on a new study from Australia claiming smoking pot will give your kids cancer. Cannabis has been shown in cell, animal and limited human trials to prevent, halt or kill cancer, researchers note. Australia is getting world-famous for their reefer-madness research, this time for equating pot to the notorious birth defect-causing chemical thalidomide. click to enlarge Mutation Research On Tuesday, Associate Professor Stuart Reece and Professor Gary Hulse at The University of Western Australia released a paper called "Chromothripsis and epigenomics complete causality criteria for cannabis- and addiction-connected carcinogenicity, congenital toxicity and heritable genotoxicity", published July 2016 in the journal "Mutation Research". A press release from the university paper ran the chilling conclusion that pot smokers were damaging their DNA, and effectively giving their kids cancer. "The worst cancers are reported in the first few years of life in children exposed in utero to cannabis effects," one researcher said. But the paper's authors did no actual tests. Rather, they reviewed studies to "close the logical loop" that pot causes gene replication damage that is passed on to kids. So the Express contacted Ethan Russo, founding editor of Journal of Cannabis Therapeutics, widely considered to be one of the leading cannabinoid researchers on the planet who actually studies cannabinoids and he sent us this reply. He stated: "This report is based on a foundation of falsehoods. Cannabis is not mutagenic (productive of mutations in DNA), nor is it teratogenic (productive of birth defects) or carcinogenic (causative of cancer). Countless animal studies and human epidemiological studies support its relative safety in this regard." The paper's abstract makes no mention of how the research reviewed was controlled for byproducts of smoking or other drugs, which are carcinogenic. Russo states: "Additionally, there is a world of difference between drug abuse, and the judicious use of low doses of cannabinoids for therapeutic application in serious diseases." The paper's abstract lacks basic information as to how much cannabis' relative carcinogenicity, congenital toxicity and heritable genotoxicity could be a problem. It's unclear if we should be singling out cannabis relative to other vectors. Even the research authors note other drugs damage DNA and cause the "acceleration of the aging process ... including alcohol, tobacco, ... stimulants and opioids." Other sources of epigenetic damage include life stressors like prohibition-related violence and incarceration. Sunburns and oxygen also damage DNA. "Exposure to pharmaceutical and toxic chemicals, diet, stress, exercise, and other environmental factors are capable of eliciting positive or negative epigenetic modifications with lasting effects on development, metabolism and health. These can impact the body so profoundly as to permanently alter the epigenetic profile of an individual," other reviews have noted. Russo concludes: "It is high time to move beyond reefer madness and acknowledge the utility and safety of cannabis-based for the advancement of the public health." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom