Pubdate: Sat, 13 Sep 2003 Source: Anchorage Daily News (AK) Copyright: 2003 The Anchorage Daily News Contact: http://www.adn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/18 Author: Dirk R. Nelson WAR ON MARIJUANA UNCONSTITUTIONAL; OFFICIALS SHOULD UPHOLD THE LAW In Mr. Barton's letter "Appeals Court ruling on marijuana places police agencies at odds" (Sept. 9) he exemplifies part of the problem in police forces today. Surely Mr. Barton, being a law enforcement officer, knows something about constitutional and legal processes. Therefore I assume he also knows a constitutional right cannot be voted in or out with a simple voter initiative. The Ravin decision has been the supreme law in Alaska concerning adult possession of small amounts of cannabis in the home since 1975. When Gov. Steve Cowper signed the unlawful recriminalization into statute in 1990, he said, "This is probably unconstitutional." No one amongst the many observers asked the obvious question, "Why then, as governor, having sworn an oath to uphold Alaska's laws, are you signing it?" For 13 years Alaskans endured violations of their state constitutional right to privacy, rarely if ever defending themselves from the unlawful armed invasions of their privacy. They listened as the state spewed untruths about the harms of cannabis as justification for the waste caused by the war on (some) drugs; destroyed families and futures. Ravin is the law, and the Anchorage Police Department and other agencies can either uphold it or find new jobs and face charges of malicious prosecution. "When those who swear an oath to uphold the law, instead choose to violate the law, then there is no law." Dirk R. Nelson Ester - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens