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02-24-2005, 05:17 AM #1
OPSenior Member
West Virginia still arrests medical marijuana patients
http://www.mapinc.org/find?GAC=n-us-...ginia&YY1=1998
http://www.mpp.org/WV/action.html
West Virginia still arrests medical marijuana patients
Karen O'Keefe, MPP legislative analyst; February 21, 2005
Can you believe that in this day and age -- in 2005 -- West Virginia state law still treats medical marijuana patients as common criminals? The legislative session is now under way, which gives you the chance to help right this injustice.
Please click here and tell your legislators that you care about medical marijuana patients and that medical decisions should be made by patients and doctors, not police and prosecutors, and ask your senator and representative to sponsor legislation that would protect medical marijuana patients from arrest and criminal penalties.
After you choose your favorite pre-written letter and type in your address, our site will automatically e-mail your letter to your legislators ... all with the click of a few buttons. The whole process takes less than two minutes, but it makes a world of difference. Also, you can print the letters and send them to your legislators through regular mail.
Or, if you prefer to call your legislators, you can click here to find their names and numbers. Click here to get talking points, or here to get more background information on medical marijuana.
Legislators truly do listen to their constituents. According to former U.S. Congressman Billy Evans (D-GA), "Legislators estimate that 10 letters from constituents represent the concerns of 10,000 citizens. Anybody who will take the time to write is voicing the fears and desires of thousands more."
With your help, West Virginia could become the 11th state to recognize that sick people shouldn't have to be criminals for reducing their suffering with medical marijuana. Please, Take Action now.
Thank you for supporting the Marijuana Policy Project. Please pass this on so that even more West Virginians can participate in reform.NowhereMan Reviewed by NowhereMan on . West Virginia still arrests medical marijuana patients http://www.mapinc.org/find?GAC=n-us-wv&LABEL=West+Virginia&YY1=1998 http://www.mpp.org/WV/action.html West Virginia still arrests medical marijuana patients Karen O'Keefe, MPP legislative analyst; February 21, 2005 Rating: 5
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03-22-2005, 04:06 AM #2
OPSenior Member
West Virginia still arrests medical marijuana patients
this is scary shit
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n285/a01.html
PRISON POPULATION TO RISE BY THOUSANDS
The state's prison population will grow from a little more than 5,000 today to nearly 7,000 in 2014, according to a report released by the state's Criminal Justice Analysis Center Friday.
The center predicts prison growth will be sparked by the increased imprisonment of thieves, drug users and other non-violent offenders.
"While the growth in the correctional population is forecasted to be less than what was observed in the 1990s, the current projections imply that public officials and correctional administrators should plan for a larger correctional population in the future," wrote the report's authors, center director Stephen Hass and Theresa Lester.
The report comes as Gov. Joe Manchin and other state leaders are trying to grapple with the costs of a decade of explosive prison growth. In the last 10 years, the state has doubled prison spending to $103 million as the number of inmates ballooned from 2,325 in 1994 to 5,067 in 2004.
Earlier this week, the state Council of Churches, the Appalachian Institute of Wheeling Jesuit University and Grassroots Leadership of Charlotte, N.C., called on the state to freeze prison spending and take steps to stem the growth of its prison population.
If the prison population continues to grow, "it will be an enormous drag on the budget," said Jill Kriesky of the Appalachian Institute.
West Virginia's prison population remains small when compared to the rest of the country. Its incarceration rate of 260 inmates per 100,000 people was 41st in the nation.
But in the last decade, the state is expanding its prison population by an average of 8.3 percent a year. Only North Dakota and Oregon have been expanding their prisons at a faster rate.
More and more prisoners are nonviolent offenders convicted of things such as burglary, drug crimes and property offenses, according to the report.
And they are staying longer. While violent offenders have seen their average sentence drop in the last five years, the report said nonviolent offenders have watched the average sentence for property and drug crimes go up.
About 85 percent of West Virginia's prisoners are white. About 14 percent of the prisoners are black, a disproportionately large group in a state where about 3 percent of all residents are black, the report said.
The report predicts little will change in the next decade.
The prison population will go up, albeit at a slower average annual rate of about 4 percent. Judges will continue to send more nonviolent offenders to prison than they did the year before.
The report's authors did not say if their estimates for prison growth would change if the state began funding more programs that allow judges to put people in community corrections programs instead of prison.
Advocacy groups like the state Council of Churches say that the state could reduce its prison population by expanding community corrections programs and paroling more inmates.
Manchin has proposed expanding the state's community corrections program. It is in place in the state's Northern Panhandle, Logan County and Mercer County.
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n267/a05.html
LOCK 'EM UP
West Virginia Upsurge
ASK yourself: Did West Virginians abruptly become more criminal in the past decade? Of course not. Mountain State people always have had a low crime rate, indicating innate decency.
Then why did the number of West Virginians locked in state cells more than double, from 2,392 to 5,032? Why did the state's incarceration growth rate hit 9.3 percent in 2001, the highest in America?
Why did West Virginia spend more than $100 million on new prisons in the past decade? Why did the Corrections Division budget soar 140 percent from 1992 to 2002, in inflation-adjusted dollars, while higher education spending rose only 23 percent?
All these figures -- from a new report by the state Council of Churches and other humanitarian groups -- imply that the "lock 'em up" mentality has risen sharply in West Virginia in recent years.
Worsening spread of illegal drugs undoubtedly is a factor in the prison boom. But something more -- a hardening of the punitive mindset -- probably is causing the state to pour millions of taxpayer dollars into steel cages.
We've always advocated more probation, more work-release, more home confinement -- alternative sentences that let defendants work as self-supporting people, instead of being locked in crime-breeding stockades, at enormous public cost.
The new church report confirms the wisdom of that approach
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