cannabisnews.com: Police Union, Norquist Spar Over Marijuana





Police Union, Norquist Spar Over Marijuana
Posted by FoM on February 10, 2000 at 11:35:23 PT
By Greg J. Borowski of the Journal Sentinel Staff 
Source: JSOnline
The two sides argue over a 1997 ordinance slashing penalty for small amounts. In a letter to thousands of likely primary voters, the Milwaukee Police Association blames Mayor John O. Norquist and the 1997 decriminalization of possession of small amounts of marijuana for an increase in killings and drug violence.
Norquist aides on Wednesday slammed the letter, which suggests George Watts as a better alternative to Norquist in Tuesday's primary election, even though the MPA has not endorsed Watts.Meanwhile, Milwaukee County District Attorney E. Michael McCann said statements attributed to him in the letter were taken out of context and that the letter wrongly attributes street violence to the marijuana change, which was aimed at creating equal penalties between the city and suburbs."The killings in Milwaukee - very few, if any, are related to marijuana," said McCann. "If it was marijuana, you'd see it elsewhere, too. The violence is primarily a result of crack cocaine."The MPA spent $2,590 on the mailing, according to a filing Monday with the state Elections Board. The letter first came to light Wednesday in a news release from the Norquist campaign, saying it explains Watts' "flip-flop" on support for Police Chief Arthur Jones.Watts initially said he supported Jones and his quality-of-life policing approach, but has since said he wants to get rid of Jones and scrap the approach.Bill Christofferson, Norquist's campaign head, said Watts had "sold out his beliefs" to get the support of the MPA and its president, Bradley DeBraska."Watts is saying the words, but DeBraska is writing the script," he said.Told of the criticism, DeBraska said: "It sounds to me like a full admission to the content of the letter we sent out."It wasn't clear how many letters were mailed, but if 33-cent postage is used as a gauge, it would have to be less than 8,000.The letter cites a 1997 ordinance change that, in effect, decriminalized the possession of 25 grams (.875 ounce) or less of marijuana. The move, which was passed by the Common Council on a 9-8 vote, was backed by Norquist, Jones and McCann, among others.Supporters said the change put Milwaukee on par with the suburbs. Opponents saw it as a retreat in the drug war.The MPA letter links the 1997 change to last year's increase in city homicides. It cites a federal grant to fight drug trafficking - Milwaukee was one of nine cities to get the money - that followed the change.It also cites a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article in which McCann says the city's homicide increase from 117 in 1998 to 124 last year can be attributed in part to turf battles among drug dealers. The letter skips over McCann's other reasons: More people killed for no apparent reason other than spite and more killed in domestic violence disputes."Norquist and Chief Jones have the blood of innocent victims on their beat," says the letter, signed by DeBraska on behalf of his executive board. It asks voters who they'll choose Feb. 15: "Norquist/Jones or Watts."The MPA recently called for Jones to be removed, after the city lost a federal lawsuit filed by two police officers who said Jones and former Chief Philip Arreola retaliated against them for exercising their rights to free speech. The two were awarded $380,000 in damages. The city is likely to appeal.The MPA has long been at odds with Norquist and Jones. While it has not endorsed Watts in the race, which also includes Wendell Harris, the union was required to report the mailing as an independent expenditure.Norquist spokesman Jeff Fleming said the change wasn't a softening on crime.He noted penalties remain for other drugs, for those who sell marijuana and those who possess more than 25 grams. "Brad DeBraska is so preoccupied with undermining the Police Department's leadership, he's lost track of reality," he said.Watts couldn't be reached for comment Wednesday evening.Appeared in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on Feb. 10, 2000.© Copyright 2000, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Newshawk: Frank S. WorldDrug Policy Forum of Wisconsinhttp://www.drugsense.org/dpfwi/Cannabis News Archive Search:http://www.alltheweb.com/cgi-bin/asearch?type=all&query=cannabisnews+
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Comment #2 posted by FoM on February 10, 2000 at 18:55:19 PT
Related Article
Taking a stand against drug abuse is a good thing, but doing so at the expense of the truth is not. Since some people will likely read the letter entitled "Stop Insane Talk of Legalizing Marijuana" by Shannon Worthington and believe the "facts" contained therein, I feel it is my moral obligation to correct Ms. Worthington on several points. I'm not a doctor or pharmacologist, but I did do extensive research on the known facts about marijuana for a college term paper about the legalization issue. Pubdate: Tue, 08 Feb 2000 Source: Watertown Daily Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 Watertown Daily Times Click the link to read the complete article.
Letter About Marijuana Didn't Stick To Facts
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Comment #1 posted by kaptinemo on February 10, 2000 at 12:07:28 PT
It doesn't get any clearer than this
Money=politics. Politics=money. Very simple equation.The police union is looking at all the hours of easy paid overtime (spent writing reports rather than actual patrolling of the streets) it will lose if the rule stands. Not to mention the fact that if it gives so much as an inch in this they will lose the political clout the hysteria the WoSD has given them. So, it is trying to overturn a no-doubt popular ruling. And it knows that the only way to do that is to do as all DrugWarriors do: misrepresent the facts and commit character assassinations. But this time, it may backfire, with potentially explosive results for the MPA. Another sign of the worm turning.Hang in there people, we *are* winning, slowly but surely. This is just the latest proof of that.
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