Pubdate: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 Source: Anchorage Press (AK) Copyright: 2005 Anchorage Publishing, Inc. Contact: http://www.anchoragepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3078 Author: Eric Friend Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) I DON'T LIKE POT LAWS I want my police getting violent criminals off the street, not chasing marijuana users. The Alaska Public Defender Agency says that half of the 500 marijuana-related misdemeanors they handle a year would be felonies under a proposed new state law. These new laws will fill Alaska prisons with hundreds of nonviolent offenders. Marijuana's felony status will divert police resources from fighting violent crimes, which we can't afford. Alaska has six times the national average of reported child sexual assaults and 2.4 times the national average of reported rapes. However, in Anchorage alone, police fail to investigate almost 25 percent of rapes and about 40 percent of crimes against children. If Murkowski wants to amend the constitution, he shouldn't try to do it behind our backs. The Alaska Supreme Court has held that Alaskans' constitutionally-guaranteed right to privacy in the home extends to adult possession of up to four ounces of marijuana. Toward the end of the state senate hearing on March 23, several witnesses opposed to S.B. 74 were allowed to testify, including Barbara Brink, the director of the Alaska Public Defender Agency. As she finished, Senator Gary Wilken of Fairbanks attacked her presence, stating that he was "shocked" and "disappointed" that she would testify against the bill in her official capacity. What is "shocking" and "disappointing" is that neither Senator Wilken nor the rest of the committee offered the same criticism of the parade of uniformed law enforcement officers who testified in their official capacities for S.B. 74 over two days. Supporters of S.B. 74 and H.B. 96 argue that marijuana is harmful because people arrested for other crimes have had marijuana in their system, and impoverished Alaskans have high marijuana usage-rates. But these points mistake correlation for causation. Marijuana use by impoverished Alaskans does not indicate that marijuana made them impoverished, nor does marijuana use by criminals imply that it made them commit crimes. Supporters of S.B. 74 and H.B. 96 argue that marijuana is more potent now than it used to be; therefore, it's more dangerous. First, they offered no legitimate proof for this. Second, potent marijuana doesn't equal dangerous marijuana. If anything, people who use more potent marijuana need to use less of it - this means they ingest less smoke, tar, and other irritants. Eric Friend Anchorage - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake