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121US LA: Crime Punishment: Breaking The Cycle Of AddictionSun, 28 Oct 2007
Source:Advertiser, The (Lafayette, LA) Author:Brown, Jason Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:10/29/2007

Local Legal Experts Say Belief Systems Must Be Changed

More than three out of every four inmates entering the state's prisons likely have problems with addiction and yet just one-third of them receive treatment for it.

"Substance abuse, in my opinion, is our No. 1 enemy," said Jimmie LeBlanc, who is heading up the Louisiana Department of Corrections while Secretary Richard Stalder is out on medical leave.

Yet the state, largely because of the public's belief that treatment is expensive, ineffective or unnecessary, has been hesitant to fully fund efforts aimed at addressing addiction, be it inside or outside of prisons. As a result, untreated addictions are helping to fuel a vicious cycle that puts addicts in jail and then returns them to the streets where they in turn commit more crimes - often to fuel or as a direct result of those addictions.

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122 US LA: LTE: Column On Marijuana Should Be A Wake-Up CallSun, 28 Oct 2007
Source:Advertiser, The (Lafayette, LA) Author:Anderson, Arden A. Area:Louisiana Lines:41 Added:10/29/2007

The Oct. 22 column by Bill Steigerwald regarding the legalization of marijuana has got to be in the top 10 of all-time stupid columns. He cites reports by Jon Gettleman and Ethan Nadlemann who both decry our laws prohibiting the legalization of marijuana. The title of Steigerwald's column is, "Cost of marijuana enforcement and lost taxpayer revenues is $41.8 billion."

Of the $41.8 billion, he cites the prospective taxes on marijuana as being $31.1 billion, inferring that our present cost of enforcement is $10.7 billion.

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123US LA: School Board Revises Drug-Testing PolicyFri, 12 Oct 2007
Source:Advocate, The (Baton Rouge, LA) Author:Minton, James Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:10/14/2007

ZACHARY - The Zachary Community School Board revised its drug-testing policy for high school student-athletes Thursday and said it will begin random testing immediately.

Board member Hubie Owen said the board has had a drug testing policy since the district's inception, "but we just haven't been enforcing it."

The policy change names Lane Regional Medical Center as the initial testing agency. Lane officials will use a computer to select the seven athletes to be tested by urinalysis each month.

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124 US LA: Column: Jena 6: What Next to Erase This National Disgrace?Mon, 17 Sep 2007
Source:Louisiana Weekly, The (New Orleans, LA) Author:Walters, Ron Area:Louisiana Lines:93 Added:09/18/2007

Unless you have been on vacation or otherwise under a rock, a case that is rocking Black America involves the racist conviction of six black youths, by an all-white jury, to the tune of potential 100-year sentences, while white youths were given the comparative leniency of in-school probation and non-prosecution for committing violent acts. This legal lynching of six young Black students by officials in Jena, La. is not only a continuing manifestation of Southern justice, it is a symptom of a vicious period in American history now in existence emphasizing the use of the law to severely punish Blacks. So, while there are justified mobilizations taking place around the Jena 6 injustice, the heat of the Black community, activists, officials, church leaders, all, should be directed toward the changes in the law that have made these injustices easier to perpetrate by local criminal justice officials.

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125US LA: OPED: Well-Connected Get Commutation While So Many Languish in PrisonSun, 08 Jul 2007
Source:Times, The (Shreveport, LA) Author:Hudson, Gregory Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:07/10/2007

American Express commercials used to suggest that membership has its privileges. I guess having an American Express card can prove beneficial, but membership in America's ruling class most definitely has its own set of privileges.

After all, a decent credit rating can warrant a credit card, but only the right connections and political pedigree earns one the privileges of being close to power. Such is the case of Scooter Libby. Libby found himself in a political firestorm and was convicted and sentenced to prison, but now his privilege has earned him a commutation of his 2 1/2-year jail sentence.

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126 US LA: Edu: Column: Supreme Court Rulings Show ConservativeThu, 28 Jun 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu) Author:Browne, Erik Area:Louisiana Lines:105 Added:06/29/2007

What Do Drugs, Jesus And The White House All Have In Common?

For conspiracy theorists the answer might be mind control. Or for some of the President's critics it could be Bush's alleged cocaine use and pandering to the religious right. But the answer is simply that recent legal decisions involved all three.

The First Amendment came under attack Monday when the Supreme Court - showing its new conservative leanings - ruled on two particular cases: Morse v. Frederick and Hein v. Freedom From Religion Foundation.

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127 US LA: Edu: Court Infringes On Freedom Of SpeechTue, 26 Jun 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu)          Area:Louisiana Lines:68 Added:06/29/2007

The U.S. Supreme Court made an important decision Monday that placed tighter control on students' freedom of speech.

The Court ruled, 5-4, that schools can restrict student expression when their messages seem to support illegal drug use. This decision directly stemmed from an incident where a high school student displayed a 14-foot long sign reading "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" near his high school in 2002.

The student, Joseph Frederick, who was later suspended from the school, displayed his banner outside the high school grounds while the Olympic torch relay passed through Juneau, Alaska, for the 2002 Winter Olympics.

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128 US LA: Edu: War On Drugs Runs Parallel To Iraq, Vietnam WarsTue, 26 Jun 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu) Author:Ruchalski, Joseph Area:Louisiana Lines:125 Added:06/27/2007

President Nixon's declaration that drug abuse is "public enemy number one in the United States" in 1971 launched a "war on drugs" that has raged since the war in Vietnam.

Like the war in Vietnam then and in Iraq today, this war has proven to be much more complex than a simple "red versus blue" campaign. The soldiers are sworn law enforcement officers and organized crime members playing a dangerous game of "cops and robbers." The victims are varied, some helpless, destitute, or hardened criminals themselves, but all are civilians.

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129 US LA: Edu: War On Drugs Runs Parallel To Iraq, VietnamMon, 25 Jun 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu) Author:Ruchalski, Joseph Area:Louisiana Lines:134 Added:06/25/2007

President Nixon's declaration that drug abuse is "public enemy number one in the United States" in 1971 launched a "war on drugs" that has raged since the war in Vietnam.

Like the war in Vietnam then and in Iraq today, this war has proven to be much more complex than a simple "red versus blue" campaign. The soldiers are sworn law enforcement officers and organized crime members playing a dangerous game of "cops and robbers." The victims are varied, some helpless, destitute, or hardened criminals themselves, but all are civilians.

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130US LA: Music Legend Fined in Marijuana CaseWed, 25 Apr 2007
Source:Advocate, The (Baton Rouge, LA) Author:Burgess, Richard Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:04/25/2007

ST. MARTINVILLE -- Country music legend Willie Nelson and his tour manager were ordered to pay $1,024 each and were sentenced to six months of probation after pleading guilty to possession of marijuana here Tuesday.

Nelson, tour manager David Anderson, Nelson's sister and two of the singer's tour bus drivers were cited on misdemeanor drug charges in September while traveling on Interstate 10 through St. Martin Parish.

State Police investigators said they found 1 1/2 pounds of marijuana and a small amount of hallucinogenic mushrooms in a search prompted by a "strong odor of marijuana" during a routine motor coach inspection stop of his tour bus.

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131 US LA: PUB LTE: Legalizing Drugs Could Stem CrimeMon, 09 Apr 2007
Source:Advocate, The (Baton Rouge, LA) Author:Ferry, John F. Area:Louisiana Lines:63 Added:04/09/2007

Section one of the April 3 edition of The Advocate was dominated by stories about the terrible epidemic of murder and other criminal activity causing great distress in New Orleans.

All these problems could be eliminated with one stroke of the government's pen. Decriminalize the use and sale of drugs.

Because these drugs are illegal, their price is very, very high. Nevertheless, many people are willing to risk long jail sentences, murder people, or be killed themselves trying to get the drugs for their own use or to sell at huge profits.

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132 US LA: Edu: Column: 'Bong Hits' Case Important for FreedomFri, 23 Mar 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu) Author:Ruchalski, Joseph Area:Louisiana Lines:101 Added:03/24/2007

The Supreme Court is a solemn forum where America's greatest legal minds gather to soberly weigh serious issues. But that doesn't mean they can't have a bit of a laugh every now and then. In the 1960s and 1970s justices would gather to munch on popcorn and watch pornographic movies to define what was "obscene" or not. Monday, the court heard arguments on whether "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" qualifies as free speech.

It all started when Joseph Frederick, a then-18 year-old high school senior, unfurled a 14-foot banner reading "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while his classmates and teachers gathered to watch the 2002 Olympic torch relay pass through Juneau, Alaska. High school principal Deborah Morse saw the banner, confiscated it from him, destroyed it and suspended Frederick for 10 days. Now his sophomoric prank will be the genesis of another landmark case considering the extent of student free speech on and off campus.

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133 US LA: Rotary Honors Top CopsFri, 09 Mar 2007
Source:Daily News, The (Bogalusa, LA) Author:Breland, Bob Ann Area:Louisiana Lines:108 Added:03/10/2007

Annual Award Given To Pair From Drug Unit

BOGALUSA - Pfc. Wendell O'Berry and Sgt. Kendall Bullen of the Bogalusa Police Department's Drug Task Force were honored as Policemen of the Year at this week's Rotary Club meeting.

Bogalusa Police Chief Jerry Agnew said last year the entire department was recognized instead of just one or two individuals, but this year the drug task force officers were chosen.

"They have the vision," he said in his introduction, noting that they looked at all the officers and recognized that these two are visionaries who work their beat, anticipate reality and have a dream for the city.

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134US LA: Drug Czar To Visit N.O. School That Drug-Tests StudentsWed, 07 Mar 2007
Source:Times-Picayune, The (LA) Author:Bohrer, Becky Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:03/08/2007

NEW ORLEANS - When De La Salle High School resumed drug testing after Hurricane Katrina, officials were surprised to find that 8 percent of the student body tested positive for marijuana or other illegal substances - the highest percentage at the Roman Catholic school since it began testing nine years ago.

Since then, the figure has dropped to under 3 percent, the principal says, a result that both she and the White House drug czar, who is set to visit the school Thursday, attribute to the constant threat of random drug testing.

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135 US LA: Edu: PUB LTE: Cannabis, "The Tree of Life," BringsMon, 26 Feb 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu) Author:White, Stan Area:Louisiana Lines:29 Added:02/26/2007

The tree of life, also known as cannabis, kaneh bosm and marijuana, is a plant, not a drug. However, it is one of the most important considering your column: "Religion, Drugs Similarly Affect Brain" (Feb. 23, 2007), though America's current political leaders - read, disobedient Christians - deem it the devil weed. Cannabis holds survival in its realm; the very last page of the Bible tells us the leaves of the tree of life are for the healing of the nations. Healing in every sense of the word with the ability to bring world peace and cure disease. Interestingly, while God, The Ecologist, indicates all the plants are good on the very first page of the Bible, cannabis prohibition may be the original sin. If there ever was a plant that greedy war mongers should fear and exterminate, it's the tree of life.

Stan White

Dillon, Colo. resident

[end]

136 US LA: Edu: Column: Religion, Drugs Similarly Affect BrainFri, 23 Feb 2007
Source:Daily Reveille (LA Edu) Author:Ruchalski, Joseph Area:Louisiana Lines:112 Added:02/23/2007

Revelers' beer bingeing episodes on Fat Tuesday and somber Catholic masses on Ash Wednesday are traditionally viewed as far removed from each other.

One day is filled with an excess of food, drink and hedonistic pleasure seeking.

The other is a day when the devout begin to cleanse themselves with an ashen mark of the cross on the forehead and forego those bad habits - well at least for 40 days. The mood may be different, but religion, drugs, drug users and the devout share a kinship in their experiences, attitudes and behavior.

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137US LA: Louisiana Congressman Gets Meth Bill PassedWed, 07 Feb 2007
Source:Advertiser, The (Lafayette, LA) Author:Burris, Alexandria Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:02/10/2007

The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelming passed a bill that could help fight Methamphetamine production in Louisiana.

The Methamphetamine Remediation Research Act of 2007 gives the Environmental Protection Agency $1.75 million to fund research on meth, help state and local authorities clean up labs and study long-term meth exposure to children.

U.S. Rep. Charlie Melancon, D-La., co-sponsored the bill which also gives another $750,000 to the National Institute of Standards and Technology to research equipment that can detect meth

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138 US LA: In New Orleans, Dysfunction Fuels Cycle of KillingMon, 05 Feb 2007
Source:New York Times (NY) Author:Nossiter, Adam Area:Louisiana Lines:297 Added:02/05/2007

NEW ORLEANS -- When the body was brought out, the two little boys did not stop chewing their sticky blue candy or swigging from their pop bottles. The 18-year-old mother wheeling her baby came to watch, and the teenager with the spiky hair and the bulky duffle coat was laughing up on the worn stoop.

Only the cries of Linda Holmes -- "Oh, Lord, have mercy on me, Jesus, oh my baby!" she said, over and over -- were a tip-off that this was her teenage son Ronald the man in the lab coat was laboring to pull out of the empty apartment in the Iberville housing project.

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139US LA: Freedom Snatched From Heroin LiferSat, 03 Feb 2007
Source:Times-Picayune, The (LA) Author:Hamilton, Bruce Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:02/04/2007

Top State Court Rules Against Resentencing

In the six months since he got out of Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, Wesley Dick has been trying to get his life on track.

The Lacombe man had been sentenced to life in prison for selling heroin to an undercover cop. But after a judge in Covington ordered his release in July, he quickly got a job, started to pay child support for his daughters, 9 and 12, and saved enough to buy a pickup truck.

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140US LA: Authorities Conduct Drug Search At Abbeville HighFri, 19 Jan 2007
Source:Advertiser, The (Lafayette, LA) Author:McElfresh, Amanda Area:Louisiana Lines:Excerpt Added:01/21/2007

According to a news release from Vermilion Parish Sheriff Mike Couvillon, authorities conducted a random drug search on the campus of Abbeville High School on Friday after receiving complaints about possible drug activity on school grounds.

Couvillon said a minimal amount of suspected marijuana was found in a student's vehicle, and according to school officials, the student has been suspended from school pending an expulsion hearing. Couvillon said the student may also face criminal charges, depending on the results of an investigation.

The search was conducted by more than 30 officers and 14 trained K-9 dogs from the Vermilion Parish Narcotics Task Force, Vermilion Parish Sheriff's Criminal Investigations Division, Special Response Team, K-9 division and Water Patrol division.

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