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151 UK: Cheap Cocaine Spreading Throughout British Society, SaysFri, 13 Mar 2015
Source:Guardian, The (UK) Author:McVeigh, Karen Area:United Kingdom Lines:116 Added:03/15/2015

Almost One in Ten Adults Admits to Using the Drug Scientists Warn of Deadly Potential Side-Effects

Cocaine use, once the preserve of celebrities and the wealthy, has spread throughout British society, drug advisers say.

A report by the government's Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) found that although consumption of the drug had fallen slightly from a peak in 2008-09, its use has permeated a wide social demographic that includes the middle classes and those on lower incomes. This has been driven by the emergence of a "two-tier" market; one selling very low purity, cheaper cocaine alongside a smaller trade in a more expensive, purer version.

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152 UK: PUB LTE: Cannabis Shown To Save LivesWed, 11 Mar 2015
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:United Kingdom Lines:35 Added:03/13/2015

Further to Janet Street-Porter's column on pain-killer abuse (7 March), new research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association shows that US states with open medical marijuana access have a 25 per cent lower opioid overdose death rate than cannabis prohibition states.

The protective effect grows stronger with time. States with established cannabis access showed a 33 per cent reduction in deaths. This finding has huge implications.

The substitution effect was documented by California physicians long before the JAMA research. Legal cannabis access is correlated with a reduction in opioid and alcohol abuse. The cannabis plant is incapable of causing an overdose death. Not even aspirin can make the same claim, much less alcohol or painkillers.

The phrase "if it saves one life" has been used to justify all manner of drug war abuses. Legal cannabis has the potential to save thousands of lives.

Robert Sharpe Policy Analyst Common Sense for Drug Policy Washington, DC

[end]

153 UK: Column: What Has Idiotic Mr Clegg Been Smoking?Sat, 07 Mar 2015
Source:Daily Mail (UK) Author:Platell, Amanda Area:United Kingdom Lines:65 Added:03/08/2015

FACING a wipeout at the General Election, Nick Clegg is busy finding ever more desperate ways of appealing to the young voters who have abandoned his party in droves. Having betrayed them over his manifesto pledge to abolish tuition fees, his latest wheeze is to target the druggie vote by reaching out to students who smoke cannabis.

The Lib Dems have pledged that personal possession and the use of drugs - not just marijuana, but even heroin - would no longer be a criminal offence. Even by Clegg's standards, this is a proposal of such reckless imbecility that it makes you wonder what he's been smoking.

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154 UK: Column: The 'War on Drugs' Consistently Ignores ItsSat, 07 Mar 2015
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Street-Porter, Janet Area:United Kingdom Lines:150 Added:03/07/2015

Isn't it about time we acknowledged that 99 per cent of us take drugs? It's just that some are legal and therefore "acceptable". But if all drugs were defined by the harm they can cause, then the current rankings and legal penalties would be pointless.

Dealing with the long-term effects of alcohol and tobacco costs the NHS far more than dealing with those addicted to class-A drugs. Apart from liver disease and heart failure, alcohol abuse causes death on the road, domestic violence, murders and absenteeism from work. Not to mention the damage to family life and relationships. Can we put on a price on all of this and be sure it's less than the cost of illegal drug use?

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155 UK: Why I Think the Terminally Ill Should Take LSDSat, 07 Mar 2015
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Cooper, Charlie Area:United Kingdom Lines:155 Added:03/07/2015

Charlie Cooper Takes a Trip to Meet Professor David Nutt - and Finds Out Why the Former Government Czar Believes That Mind-Altering Drugs Have a Place on the Prescription Pad

Professor David Nutt has been no stranger to controversy over the years. So the psychiatrist and former Government drugs tsar, will not have been fazed when he raised eyebrows recently by drawing a parallel between the repression of research into the effects of psychedelic drugs like LSD with the censorship of Galileo and the banning of the telescope.

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156 UK: Branson and Clegg Join in Backing Decriminalisation ofWed, 04 Mar 2015
Source:Guardian, The (UK) Author:Wintour, Patrick Area:United Kingdom Lines:71 Added:03/04/2015

Sir Richard Branson and Nick Clegg are urging the UK to begin decriminalising the use and possession of almost all drugs, following the example of Portugal.

The Virgin founder and deputy prime minister are to address a conference on fighting drug addiction today, and in an article on the Guardian website they write: "As an investment, the war on drugs has failed to deliver any returns. If it were a business, it would have been shut down a long time ago. This is not what success looks like.

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157 UK: Expert Wants Scots Cannabis CafesMon, 02 Mar 2015
Source:Scotsman (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:26 Added:03/03/2015

A FORMER UK Government adviser has said Scots should go Dutch and open cannabis cafes.

Professor David Nutt, who has advised the Department of Health, said it could be "very good" for the economy. Prof Nutt sacked by the UK Government in 2009 for saying horse riding was more dangerous than ecstasy also blasted plans to ban legal highs.

Speaking ahead of a talk in Edinburgh, Prof Nutt said: "If Scotland had a sensible medical cannabis policy you'd get a lot of health tourists and that would be very good for your economy. People could have a cuppa in cafes in Edinburgh and Glasgow and have a spliff as they do in Amsterdam."

[end]

158 UK: Police Will Be On High Alert At 'Cannabis Celebration'Sat, 28 Feb 2015
Source:Evening Times (UK) Author:Swindon, Peter Area:United Kingdom Lines:85 Added:03/01/2015

George Square Event Criticised by Politicians

DRUG users are planning to stage a "cannabis celebration" in Glasgow's George Square.

The annual '420 event' sees campaigners gather in a public place on April 20 to call for the legalisation of the Class B drug.

Last year Glasgow Cannabis Social Club held a gathering of 150 people at Glasgow Green and five were reported to the procurator fiscal for flouting the law by lighting up in full view of police.

The maximum penalty for possession of cannabis is five years in prison.

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159 UK: Column: The Real Mind-Blowing Terror Threat in Our Midst:Sun, 22 Feb 2015
Source:Mail on Sunday, The (UK) Author:Hitchens, Peter Area:United Kingdom Lines:91 Added:02/23/2015

CAN you put two and two together? Have a try. The authorities, and most of the media, cannot. Did you know that the Copenhagen killer, Omar El-Hussein, had twice been arrested (and twice let off) for cannabis possession? Probably not.

It was reported in Denmark but not prominently mentioned amid the usual swirling speculation about 'links' between El-Hussein and 'Islamic State', for which there is no evidence at all.

El-Hussein, a promising school student, mysteriously became so violent and ill-tempered that his own gang of petty criminals, The Brothers, actually expelled him.

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160 UK: Clever Teenagers Most At Risk Of 'Skunk' PsychosisSun, 22 Feb 2015
Source:Mail on Sunday, The (UK) Author:Adams, Stephen Area:United Kingdom Lines:106 Added:02/23/2015

BRITAIN'S brightest teenagers are among those most at risk of mental illness caused by smoking a potent form of cannabis, a leading expert has warned.

Professor Sir Robin Murray said it tended to be 'clever and sociable' youngsters who were damaged by using the super-strong strain of the drug, known as skunk.

Sir Robin, the foremost authority in Britain on the effects of smoking cannabis, led a landmark study with colleagues at the Institute of Psychiatry which found that regularly smoking skunk triples the risk of psychosis, as revealed last week by The Mail on Sunday.

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161UK: Study Links Some Pot To PsychosisThu, 19 Feb 2015
Source:Denver Post (CO) Author:Ingraham, Christopher Area:United Kingdom Lines:Excerpt Added:02/20/2015

Frequent use of high-potency weed might be linked to an increased risk of having a psychotic episode. But milder strains of marijuana, even when used heavily, don't appear to carry an increased risk of psychosis.

Researchers got data from 410 London patients sent to the hospital for a first-episode psychotic incident and compared those numbers with data from370 control individuals living in the same area.

Compared with someone who had never smoked, a weekly user of high- potency weed, defined as having greater than 15 percent THC content, was three times as likely to be diagnosed with a psychotic disorder. The researchers found no link between frequent use of low-potency weed and psychotic disorder.

The findings were published Tuesday in the journal Lancet Psychiatry.

[end]

162 UK: Column: The Menace From Legal Highs Is Just a Click AwayMon, 16 Feb 2015
Source:Daily Telegraph (UK) Author:Pemberton, Max Area:United Kingdom Lines:90 Added:02/17/2015

As far as futile activities go, the fight against legal highs is a textbook example. According to figures released last week, police incidents involving legal highs substances sold in high street shops and on the internet, including products for the home such as "plant food", but which contain psychoactive elements that mimic the effects of cannabis, amphetamine and heroin have more than doubled in a year,

The web enables ever quicker and easier access to these substances. Their cheapness and the veneer of respectability because they are nominally "legal" means that more people are eschewing illicit drugs in favour of taking the alternative.

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163 UK: Cannabis Causing A Quarter Of PsychosisMon, 16 Feb 2015
Source:Daily Telegraph (UK) Author:Bingham, John Area:United Kingdom Lines:127 Added:02/16/2015

Study Finds 60,000 Britons Are Living With Mental Illness Because of Super-Strong Drug

ONE in four new cases of psychotic conditions such as schizophrenia could be the direct result of smoking extra-strong varieties of cannabis, a major new study concludes.

The finding suggests that about 60,000 people in Britain are currently living with conditions involving hallucinations and paranoid episodes brought on by abuse of high-potency cannabis, known as skunk, and more than 300,000 people who have smoked skunk will experience such problems in their lifetime.

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164 UK: Prof: Give Scripts For EcstasyMon, 16 Feb 2015
Source:Daily Record (UK) Author:Jolly, Lynn Area:United Kingdom Lines:37 Added:02/16/2015

A FORMER Government drugs tsar says cannabis and ecstasy should be used to treat patients battling cancer and depression.

Professor David Nutt claimed that banning certain drugs is depriving patients and doctors of "extremely useful" therapies for chronic pain and illnesses.

Nutt, who was fired by the Government in 2009 for claiming horse-riding is more dangerous than ecstasy, also said there may be therapeutic benefits in legal highs.

The psychiatrist added: "Let the doctors decide which drugs are harmful, not the politician."

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165 UK: Skunk Users Experience High Levels Of PsychosisMon, 16 Feb 2015
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Moore, Matthew Area:United Kingdom Lines:44 Added:02/16/2015

Nearly a quarter of new cases of psychosis are linked to highpotency "skunk like" cannabis, new research shows.

People who smoke superstrength cannabis are three times more likely to develop psychosis than people who have never tried the drug and five times more likely if they smoke it every day.

The study, by researchers at King's College London, will fuel calls for politicians and public health officials to take a stronger stance against high potency cannabis, at a time when many campaigners are arguing for marijuana to be legalised. The researchers say there is an "urgent need" to inform young people about the risks of strong cannabis.

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166 UK: Psychosis LinkTue, 17 Feb 2015
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:31 Added:02/16/2015

Nearly a quarter of new cases of psychosis are linked to high-potency "skunk like" cannabis, new British research shows.

People who smoke super-strength cannabis are three times more likely to develop psychosis than people who have never tried the drug - and five times more likely if they smoke it every day. The study, by researchers at King's College London, will fuel calls for politicians and public health officials to take a stronger stance against high potency cannabis, at a time when many campaigners are arguing for marijuana to be legalised.

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167 UK: Skunk Cannabis 'Can Triple Risk' Of PsychosisMon, 16 Feb 2015
Source:Guardian, The (UK) Author:Devlin, Hannah Area:United Kingdom Lines:48 Added:02/16/2015

Smoking powerful "skunk" cannabis triples the risk of suffering a serious psychotic episode, scientists have found.

The drug is linked to one quarter of all new cases of psychosis, the study revealed.

The findings add to a compelling body of evidence that smoking strong cannabis "tilts the odds" towards a person developing psychosis, which leads to schizophrenia in about half of cases.

The study found that people who smoked skunk every day had five times the normal risk of experiencing extended episodes in which they heard voices, suffered delusions or demonstrated erratic behaviour.

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168 UK: PUB LTE: Bring In Box For Used SharpsWed, 11 Feb 2015
Source:Argus, The (UK) Author:Bergstrom, Jay Area:United Kingdom Lines:23 Added:02/14/2015

Concerning the high-rise residents at Warwick Mount (The Argus, February 7).

Has Warwick Mount no lost and found box? A box could be placed discreetly with a sharps disposal box in a corner with no cameras.

Think health, people. Of course people are using drugs. Don't make it more dangerous for all, make it safer.

Jay Bergstrom, Forest Ranch, California

[end]

169 UK: High-Rise Residents Claim Council Has 'Given Up' in BattleSun, 08 Feb 2015
Source:Argus, The (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:66 Added:02/10/2015

Fearful residents at a council-owned block of flats found a used crack pipe at the bottom of their stairwell.

The homemade pipe was found at Warwick Mount in Montague Street, Brighton, last week.

The discovery is one of a number of incidents at the building that has left locals feeling concerned for their safety.

They include the death of a man who was stabbed in the heart on Christmas morning.

Last month a man jumped from the eleventh floor of the block to his death.

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170 UK: Online Cannabis Culture 'A Concern'Sun, 25 Jan 2015
Source:Express & Star (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:78 Added:01/27/2015

Experts have raised concerns about a thriving Twitter cannabis culture.

During a single month, researchers identified more than seven million tweets referring to marijuana, with "pro-pot" messages outnumbering those opposed to the drug by 15 to one.

Most of those sending and receiving "pot tweets" were under the age of 25, and many in their teens, said the team.

US psychiatrist and lead author Dr Patricia Cavazos-Rehg, from the Washington University Institute for Public Health, said: "It's a concern because frequent marijuana use can affect brain structures and interfere with cognitive function, emotional development and academic performance.

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171 UK: Drug Drivers LickedFri, 16 Jan 2015
Source:Daily Telegraph (UK) Author:Barrett, David Area:United Kingdom Lines:37 Added:01/17/2015

On-The-Spot Saliva Test for Cannabis and Cocaine Use Approved for Use by Police

Police will be able to test drivers for drugs on the roadside after the first mobile checking device was approved.

The "Drugwipe" can trace cocaine and cannabis in a saliva sample within three minutes. Drivers will be tested on the spot, rather than at a police station, meaning convictions are likely to soar as the device is increasingly adopted by forces. Mike Penning, the police minister, said chief constables would now be able to roll out the Securetec DrugWipe 3S after the technology was rubber-stamped by Home Office scientists. "Drug drivers are a deadly menace and must be stopped," said Mr Penning. "Those who get behind the wheel while under the influence of drugs not only put their own lives at risk, but also those of innocent pedestrians, motorists and their passengers." The test can detect cocaine and cannabis, the substances most commonly used by drug drivers. The manufacturers also produce a test for other drugs including heroin, amphetamine and Ecstasy, but this version has not yet won Home Office backing. A positive test will show red lines, similar to a pregnancy test.

In March a new drug driving law comes into force with penalties of up to six months' jail and UKP5000 fines.

[end]

172 UK: Almost 30,000 Prison Inmates Were Given Heroin SubstituteSun, 11 Jan 2015
Source:Daily Mail (UK) Author:Carter, Claire Area:United Kingdom Lines:54 Added:01/11/2015

Almost 30,000 prisoners addicted to drugs were given a heroin substitute last year to feed their dependence, figures show.

The drugs were paid for by the taxpayer and given to inmates in a bid to help them kick the habit.

However inmates who are in prison for less than three months do not have time to complete the drug treatment programme, but are supplied with methadone or buprenorphine.

The figures were revealed in a request by Andrew Griffiths MP to the Secretary of State.

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173 UK: Column: Going to Pot: Colorado Leads The WaySun, 04 Jan 2015
Source:Independent on Sunday (UK) Author:Walker, Tim Area:United Kingdom Lines:114 Added:01/05/2015

While Federal Law Says Possession and Sale Is Still Illegal, You Can Now Buy Recreational Marijuana in Four US States

Last year, on New Year's Day, I spent two hours queuing in the bone- chilling cold of a Denver January to be one of the first few people in the world legally to buy recreational cannabis over the counter. The drug has traditionally been tolerated in the Netherlands, but never truly legal. Portugal decriminalised it more than a decade ago. California legalised medical marijuana in 1996, and has since been followed by 22 other US states and Washington, DC.

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174 UK: Editorial: Society's ScourgeMon, 22 Dec 2014
Source:Yorkshire Post (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:38 Added:12/22/2014

Drugs the Common Denominator

THE NHS is not the only organisation facing difficult decisions on funding. The same applies to the police with Sheffield-born Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan Police's commissioner, warning that public safety will be at risk unless radical measures are taken to deal with cuts.

Yet the challenges facing the NHS and the police are linked by one common denominator drugs. Misuse remains one of the biggest drains on the public purse and this scourge on society diverts vital resources away from treating the elderly, or making sure that vulnerable senior citizens remain safe in their home.

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175 UK: High HopesFri, 19 Dec 2014
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Hilpern, Kate Area:United Kingdom Lines:139 Added:12/20/2014

Could Cannabis Oil Reverse the Effects of Cancer? As a Film Following Six Patients Receiving the Controversial Treatment Is Released, Kate Hilpern Uncovers a Very Slippery Issue

In the summer of 2012, George Wilkins, a documentary filmmaker,was in his friend's health food shop when a customer walked in, looking exceptionally ill. "He walked up to the counter and asked for hemp oil to help treat his lung cancer," explains the 29-year-old from Hull.

"When I quizzed him, it turned out he was muddling hemp oil with cannabis oil. Still, I thought, why would he want that? So when I got home, I started researching it and found some quite compelling scientific evidence about the huge benefits of cannabis oil for cancer patients. Meanwhile, the health of the guy who came into the shop improved significantly within just a month of taking it."

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176 France: An Effort to Ban the 'E-Joint'Wed, 17 Dec 2014
Source:Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA)          Area:France Lines:26 Added:12/19/2014

(AP) - France's health minister has said she wants to ban a cannabis-extract electronic cigarette that has been launched in France.

Marisol Touraine told French radio she was opposed to the self-styled "e-joint," that was launched online Tuesday. She said it will encourage cannabis use and she will approach the courts to ban the product.

Though cannabis is illegal in France, the French-Czech company KanaVape says its hemp vaporizer product is legal and does not contain the mind-altering THC substance found in marijuana.

The company extracts the less potent molecule Cannabidiol from hemp, a variety of cannabis grown for fiber and seeds. "It will not make you 'high' but will help you relax," the company says.

[end]

177 UK: Scots To Trial Cannabis As An Epilepsy TreatmentWed, 17 Dec 2014
Source:Scotsman (UK) Author:Edwards, Rhiannon Area:United Kingdom Lines:36 Added:12/18/2014

CHILDREN with severe epilepsy could be helped by a new treatment derived from the cannabis plant which is to be trialled in Scotland.

Doctors in the UK have been given the go-ahead to test the medicine, which does not contain the ingredient that produces the high associated with recreational cannabis use.

The treatment, called Epidiolex, is based on one of the nonpsychoactive components of the cannabis plant, called CBD.

Early studies in the US have shown treatment may reduce the frequency and severity of seizures in children with severe forms of epilepsy.

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178 UK: The 'Big Buddha' Flooding UK With Cannabis Seeds ... SoldSun, 07 Dec 2014
Source:Mail on Sunday, The (UK) Author:Murphy, Simon Area:United Kingdom Lines:203 Added:12/07/2014

How 'Headshop' Dealers Make Millions and a Mockery of Drug Laws by Passing Off Hallucinogenic Skunk Starter Kits As 'Souvenirs'

FLASHING a smug grin as he poses proudly in a field of flourishing cannabis plants, this is the businessman responsible for allegedly flooding Britain with high-strength cannabis, fuelling a multi-millionpound market in home-grown illegal drugs.

Milo Yung, who calls himself 'the Big Buddha', claims to be the founder of Britain's 'number one' brand of cannabis, which is sold around the country in colourful packets boasting of the product's 'unique high' and 'old skool taste'.

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179 UK: Huge Rise In Skunk-Triggered IllnessSun, 07 Dec 2014
Source:Mail on Sunday, The (UK) Author:Petre, Jonathan Area:United Kingdom Lines:61 Added:12/07/2014

YOUNG people are being treated in record numbers for mental health problems which have been caused by cannabis.

Official figures show more than 5,000 under-25s were treated for addiction and psychiatric problems with the drug over the past year.

Experts believe the rise has been caused by new strains of cannabis - known as skunk - which are more potent than those grown in the past.

And they say the alarming figures might have been even worse were it not for the overall numbers of cannabis users falling.

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180 UK: Lung Disease On Rise Over UK Cannabis Habits, AlertFri, 05 Dec 2014
Source:Western Mail (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:55 Added:12/06/2014

BRITAIN is on the verge of a steep rise in young adults getting a severe form of lung disease due to regular cannabis and tobacco smoking, Welsh scientists have warned.

Lung specialists have given the warning at the winter meeting of the British Thoracic Society.

A study at Bangor analysed patients attending A&E with a severe and accelerated form of emphysema linked to their high use of cannabis and tobacco.

Some patients were in their 30s and the whole sample had smoked five joints a day - or more for at least a decade.

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181 UK: OPED: Drug Addicts Need To Be Deterred, Not Egged On By The State...Mon, 01 Dec 2014
Source:Manchester Evening News (UK) Author:Woolfe, Steven Area:United Kingdom Lines:43 Added:12/03/2014

When I stood as the Ukip Police and Crime Commissioner candidate in 2012 for Greater Manchester, I was a strong voice against the decriminalisation of drugs then and my view, driven by evidence, has not changed since.

The reality is that decriminalising drugs would result in drug houses becoming a familiar sight in our towns, in which users would be able to indulge in poisoning there bodies LEGALLY.

Drug addicts need deterrence, not encouragement from the state.

The most effective deterrent must come from our judicial system.

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182 UK: Column: The Lessons Of Alex Norton's Heroin AdmissionMon, 01 Dec 2014
Source:Herald, The (Glasgow, UK) Author:Craven, Shona Area:United Kingdom Lines:98 Added:12/03/2014

Drug-use confessions by those in the public eye have a lot of power to shape perceptions, writes SHONA CRAVEN

While most of us are well aware of how addictions shatter families and blight communities, the addict - particularly the heroin addict - remains an unfathomable "other".

And while great efforts have been made in recent years to change public perceptions, that label retains an unmistakable moral, rather than medical, dimension.

Any pity for a drug user with a wretched life is paired with a confidence that such a life is the product of choices we ourselves would never make.

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183 UK: Police Raids Hit Swindon Drug Dealers Where It HurtsMon, 01 Dec 2014
Source:Swindon Advertiser (UK) Author:Gilbert, Dominic Area:United Kingdom Lines:138 Added:12/03/2014

"WE have hit their criminality hard by hitting them in their pockets as well."

Those were the words of Detective Inspector Paul Fisher after a series of raids over the course of four hours on Saturday morning saw drug networks in Swindon lose out on around ?70,000 in cash and product, with eight suspects given a new bed behind bars and a number of weapons taken off the streets.

Around 50 officers carried out eight warrants around the town from 9am as part of a countywide operation which saw similar raids executed in Melksham and Amesbury.

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184 UK: Sir Peter: We Need A More Medical Approach...Mon, 01 Dec 2014
Source:Manchester Evening News (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:39 Added:12/02/2014

Sir Peter Fahy said he was in favour of a 'more medical approach' to dealing with drug offenders.

The GMP chief constable added that 'everyone' involved in drugs policy had 'concerns' about the current approach.

A Home Office report revealed there was 'no obvious' link between tough laws and drug use.

It sparked a debate of decriminalisation of some or all drugs - with the report pointing to the example of Portugal, where there has been a 'considerable' improvement in the health of users since the country made possession a health issue rather than a criminal one in 2001.

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185 UK: 99 Pupils Found With Drugs at School - but Only Six ChargedMon, 01 Dec 2014
Source:Manchester Evening News (UK) Author:Thompson, Dan Area:United Kingdom Lines:68 Added:12/02/2014

Chief Constable Says Force Has Policy of Not Criminalising Children With Small Amounts of Illegal Substances

ALMOST 100 pupils have been found with illegal drugs in Greater Manchester's schools over the last three years - but charges were only brought in six cases.

Dozens of pupils have been caught with cannabis

The vast majority of the pupils caught had cannabis, but some were discovered with class A drugs - including heroin and ecstasy.

Most of the incidents related to secondary schools, although police were called to two primary schools after pupils inadvertenly brought suspicous or illegal substances in from home. Figures, obtained by the M.E.N. using Freedom of Information laws, show that Greater Manchester Police dealt with 99 drug crimes involving students at schools between January 2012 and September this year.

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186 UK: OPED: History Shows Us Prohibition of Drugs Doesn't Work...Mon, 01 Dec 2014
Source:Manchester Evening News (UK) Author:Buckley, Nick Area:United Kingdom Lines:49 Added:12/02/2014

ILLEGAL drug use has become a social norm now.

You can walk through Manchester city centre any day of the week and within minutes you will smell cannabis. And that's in the city centre, never mind the estates, where people are smoking it like they would drink a cup of tea. I see kids walking to school at 8am smoking spliffs.

It's pretty clear that the war on drugs has been a failure. History teaches us that prohibition doesn't work.

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187 UK: PUB LTE: Planting PotSat, 22 Nov 2014
Source:Economist, The (UK) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:United Kingdom Lines:23 Added:11/22/2014

SIR - The United States has almost twice the rate of marijuana use as the Netherlands, where the drug has been legally available for decades. The criminalisation of people who prefer marijuana to martinis has no basis in science. The war on cannabis is a failed cultural inquisition, not an evidence-based public-health campaign. It is time to stop the pointless arrests and instead legalise cannabis and tax it.

Robert Sharpe Policy analyst Common Sense for Drug Policy Washington, DC

[end]

188 UK: PUB LTE: Planting PotSat, 22 Nov 2014
Source:Economist, The (UK) Author:IV, W. J. Tate Area:United Kingdom Lines:27 Added:11/21/2014

SIR - Like others you write about the legalisation of the growing cannabis "industry" ("Marijuana milestone", November 8th). But the last thing this industry needs is to become like Big Tobacco. Cannabis is not an easy plant to cultivate. It requires a lot of attention and this is reflected in the price. Because sales and investment between states in America is banned it remains a local industry that maintains a high quality. There are dozens of examples of mass-produced cannabis products that are bland, tasteless reflections of what was once crafted or cultivated with care.

Ewing, New Jersey

[end]

189 UK: Death of an Unlikely Rebel Who Became Something of a CauseThu, 13 Nov 2014
Source:Evening Chronicle (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:65 Added:11/14/2014

CANNABIS gran Pat Tabram, who used to cook drug-laced casseroles for her neighbours, was ahead of her times, a friend has said after her death.

Ms Tabram hit the headlines when her house was repeatedly raided by police after they were tipped off about the savoury smells and activities coming from her bungalow near Hexham, Northumberland.

In her kitchen she would cook up home-made herbal cookies, casseroles and soups, all with the special ingredient for her friends, who she said she was medicating.

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190 UK: LTE: Britain Needs Tougher Drugs LawsSun, 09 Nov 2014
Source:Daily Telegraph (UK) Author:McMillan, George K Area:United Kingdom Lines:35 Added:11/09/2014

SIR The Deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg, claims that our "tough" drugs control policy is failing and advocates a "smarter" approach, abolishing prison sentences for drug addicts and concentrating on treatment.

These and other policies dealing with offenders are not working as well as they should because of the dithering of our political leaders with regards to punishment, treatment and rehabilitation.

Drug addicts and abusers should not be left out in society to fend for themselves. Some kind of custodial remedy must apply, whether it be in prison or a secure hospital. If they go back to drugs when they are released, they should be returned to custody.

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191 UK: Editorial: Marijuana MilestoneSat, 08 Nov 2014
Source:Economist, The (UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:91 Added:11/07/2014

Almost Half of American States Have Taken Steps to Legalise Cannabis. the Federal Government Should Follow

BESIDES choosing lawmakers, on November 4th voters in three American states and the District of Columbia considered measures to liberalise the cannabis trade.

Alaska and Oregon, where it is legal to provide "medical marijuana" to registered patients, voted to go further and let the drug be sold and taken for recreational purposes, as Colorado and Washington state already allow.

In DC, a measure to legalise the possession of small amounts for personal use was passed.

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192 UK: Column: The Marlboro Of MarijuanaSat, 08 Nov 2014
Source:Economist, The (UK) Author:Schumpeter, Area:United Kingdom Lines:139 Added:11/07/2014

The Legal Cannabis Industry Is Run by Minnows. As Liberalisation Spreads, That May Not Last

"FRESH and fruity, right?" says a bright-eyed young man behind the counter, wafting an open jar of something called "AK-47" under Schumpeter's nose. "Whereas with this one",-unscrewing another jar, fanning the scent up to his nostrils and closing his eyes in concentration-"I'm getting notes of dill."

Drug dealers aren't what they used to be. In Colorado, which in January became the first place in the world fully to legalise cannabis, buying a joint feels more like visiting a trendy craft-brewery than a drug den. Dispensaries along Denver's "green mile" are packed with young, bearded men earnestly discussing the merits of strains with names like "Bio-Jesus" and "Death Star". Some varieties claim to be inspirational, while others say they promote relaxation, or "couch-lock", as the tokers call it.

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193 UK: Crime Or Health Issue?Wed, 05 Nov 2014
Source:Courier, The (Dundee, UK) Author:Ritchie, Gayle Area:United Kingdom Lines:128 Added:11/06/2014

As the Decriminalisation of Drugs Comes Back on the Political Agenda, We Polled Courier Readers on Their Views. Gayle Ritchie Explores the Results

VISIT MOST Sheriff Courts in Scotland on any day of the week and the chances are they will be inundated with people charged with drug offences.

Many, but not all, of these people are repeat offenders, flouting the law time and time again, and wasting taxpayers' money in the process.

Some might argue the laws prohibiting drug use are largely disregarded; the vast majority of drug users shrug their shoulders at the law.

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194 UK: 'I've Always Tried To Do The Unexpected'Tue, 04 Nov 2014
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Morris, Nigel Area:United Kingdom Lines:118 Added:11/05/2014

A Failure to Act on the Evidence of a Drug Policy Report Spurred Baker's Decision to Resign, He Tells Nigel Morris

When Norman Baker closed a landmark Commons debate on drugs last week his final remark - "the genie is out of the bottle and it is not going back in" - had a secret personal significance.

They were to be his final words from the Commons dispatch box.

He had privately told Nick Clegg two months earlier that he wanted to step down from the Government after more than four years, including 12 months trying to get the Liberal Democrat voice heard in the Home Office.

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195 UK: PUB LTE: Electorate Should Be Given Choice on Drugs PolicySat, 01 Nov 2014
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Allen, Simon Area:United Kingdom Lines:20 Added:11/03/2014

Following the long-expected outcome of the Home Office report into drugs and punishment, can Professor David Nutt expect apologies from then Home Secretary Alan Johnson for sacking him?

Simon Allen

London N2

[end]

196 UK: PUB LTE: Electorate Should Be Given Choice on Drugs PolicySat, 01 Nov 2014
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Humble, Richard Area:United Kingdom Lines:28 Added:11/03/2014

OK, Clegg, posturing over now get practical. Decriminalise cannabis. Sell licences for every postal address which wants one to grow up to six plants. Then get together with the cigarette manufacturers to produce a decent packeted joint say UKP8 per 20 and sell that as a state monopoly.

Play your cards right and you'll double the annual UKP11bn tax yield already contributed by tobacco smokers, put street dealers progressively out of business and reduce a lot of petty crime. And on the health and safety pitch, cannabis users will at last know what they're buying. (Not one myself - doesn't do a damn thing for me.)

Richard Humble

Exeter

[end]

197 UK: PUB LTE: Electorate Should Be Given Choice on Drugs PolicySat, 01 Nov 2014
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Prentis, Simon Area:United Kingdom Lines:40 Added:11/03/2014

As always, what is missing from the current debate about drugs is any discussion about why we take them in the first place. We are rightly concerned that everyone, especially our children, should be educated about the potential ill-effects of drugs and the possible health dangers. But unless we acknowledge that there are legitimate and positive reasons why a person might seek to get high, the "war against drugs" will not make much progress.

Humans have been using "recreational" drugs for millennia, and for most people it is generally a positive experience. There are dangers of course - but these are mainly associated with excess use and poor quality.

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198 UK: PUB LTE: Should The Government Relax Drug Laws? YesMon, 03 Nov 2014
Source:Daily Express (UK) Author:May, Jennifer Area:United Kingdom Lines:29 Added:11/03/2014

IT is time Britain started to treat drug addiction as an illness rather than a criminal offence ("Cameron slaps down Clegg over calls to relax the drug laws", October 31).

Putting people in jail for an illness instead of giving them the proper medical treatment they need isn't just counterproductive, it is also many times more expensive.

Not only that, custodial sentences do nothing to help the addict's problems and only make matters worse.

You wouldn't put an alcoholic in prison so why jail a drug addict?

Jennifer May,

Sunderland

[end]

199 UK: LTE: Should The Government Relax Drug Laws? NoMon, 03 Nov 2014
Source:Daily Express (UK) Author:Clark, James Area:United Kingdom Lines:30 Added:11/03/2014

THE war on drugs hasn't succeeded and we need fresh ideas on how to tackle the problem.

But that's not to say we should legalise drugs such as cannabis, cocaine and heroin. That would be foolish and dangerous.

David Cameron is right to say that decriminalising recreational drugs would send out the wrong message to our children.

Drugs leave a trail of misery wherever they are found.

If anything, there should be stiffer penalties for convicted drug dealers and users. Nick Clegg is naive to call for laws to be relaxed.

James Clark,

Bristol

[end]

200 UK: PUB LTE: Electorate Should Be Given Choice on Drugs PolicySat, 01 Nov 2014
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Howard, Malcolm Area:United Kingdom Lines:43 Added:11/03/2014

Brian Dalton (letter, 30 October) is right to believe that we are sleepwalking into Ukip having a say in the next government. We are likely to get to this position on a very low turnout because, as Conservatives and Labour have identical policies, and we don't want to vote for minor party, there is nothing we can vote for.

The first question on last night's Question Time demonstrated the dilemma we face. The Home Office has produced a report suggesting the hard line on drugs is ineffective. Many believe (myself included) that while drug dealers should get stiff prison sentences those merely possessing and taking drugs should be treated as victims rather than criminals, in the same way that the police should treat abused 13-year-old girls as victims and not prostitutes.

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