Welcome to joe the stoner's blog ~ An American Pothead from Boulder, CO

http://www.joethestoner.blogspot.com/

....as an American Pothead it is my right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness - My life as a stoner, the liberty to enjoy my life in this fashion, and the pursuit of happiness to enjoy smoking without having the fear of Federal Agents busting the door down just for smoking a bud or having a few plants for personal, recreational, medicinal or pleasurable use.....
~ Joe the Stoner


Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Denver enacts new pot shop rules



DENVER - In front of a packed audience of medical marijuana supporters and opponents Monday evening, the Denver City Council voted unanimously to enact new restrictions on where pot dispensaries can operate, and who can own them.

In a 13-0 vote, council members voted to restrict dispensaries from operating with 1000 feet of each other, schools and child care centers. The new ordinance also denies people convicted of felonies within five years from obtaining a license to operate a dispensary, and also bars on-site consumption of marijuana.

Dispensary owners will have to pass a criminal background check, pay a $2,000 application fee, and pay $3,000 a year to renew licenses. The new rules will likely result in the closure of several dozen medical marijuana dispensaries which are already open for business.

Prior to the vote, the council heard public comments from both sides of the issue. Some 92 people signed up to speak.

"The whole country and many parts of the world are intensely watching Colorado. What we do here will effectively change the course of American history," said one man who opposes the new restrictions.

Many argued that Denver voters have repeatedly spoken on this issue, and have approved medical marijuana sales and possession in several elections.

"The council's haste and its arrogant disregard for the will of its constituents is completely unacceptable," one opponent told council members. "This is still a civil rights issue, a human rights issues, and it's a health issue, not a criminal issue," another shouted.

While the crowd may have been overwhelmingly opposed to the new restrictions, there were a handful of supporters.

"I want you to close all dispensaries which are already located 1000 feet from schools," one woman said. "I believe that (the dispensaries) just a target for crime," said another.

Rob Corry, a pro-medical marijuana criminal defense attorney, says he plans to sue Denver over the legality of the new restrictions.

City officials estimate there are 390 medical marijuana licensing applications pending approval.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Boulder approves temporary medical pot rules


A "green" issue much different than the Boulder City Council is used to discussing brought out more than 100 area residents Tuesday night amid concerns that the city might ban medical-marijuana dispensaries. While the council didn't go that far, it did approve a set of temporary regulations for an industry that was otherwise unregulated.

Just after midnight this morning, the council voted 4-2 to pass an emergency ordinance aimed at keeping medical marijuana dispensaries away from schools, clustering together or operating in neighborhoods. Councilmembers Lisa Morzel and Macon Cowles voted against the regulations, while Councilmembers Crystal Gray, Ken Wilson, Angelique Espinoza and Susan Osborne voted in favor of interim rules.

The ordinance means that through March 31, 2010, any dispensaries that want to open in Boulder may only do so if they are at least 500 feet away from schools or licensed daycare centers, are not within 500 feet of three or more other dispensaries, and are not located in residential areas.

The rules do not apply to the 42 businesses that have already pulled sales-tax licenses with the city, or the 21 or so dispensaries that applied for permits prior to Nov. 6.

The council stopped short of ordering a moratorium on new dispensaries. Most of the leaders agreed that the city needs more time to study how marijuana dispensaries should be regulated in the long-term, and that short-term regulations are appropriate now.

Osborne said the temporary rules give the city "some breathing room" to consider more comprehensive regulations.

Cowles said he would support a "green" ribbon commission to study the issue through the spring.

"I think this is potentially an important industry," he said, adding that he wouldn't mind seeing commercial marijuana growing operations flourish in Boulder.

Cowles even suggested that Boulder could eventually offer a "city marijuana facility" in which growers could bring excess products for redistribution to patients -- a sort of pot clearinghouse.

The vote didn't satisfy many of the 100 or so medical marijuana advocates who attended the late-night meeting, but most said it was a better decision than a wholesale moratorium on the industry.

The public debate began just before 9 p.m., with a flood of impassioned public comment.

Cheryl Crosby, 70, a nurse, came to the meeting from her home in Lafayette. Crosby said she has a prescription for medicinal marijuana to treat the inflammation and pain in her eyes caused by glaucoma.

"Even I, myself, didn't understand how effective it is for pain," she said.

Crosby uses a Boulder dispensary to obtain her medication, and she fears that the city is rushing to regulate the one thing that treats her symptoms effectively without the use of strong pharmaceuticals.

"To say you can only have 42 of a certain kind of business in a city seems strange," she said, referring to a proposal to limit the number of dispensaries allowed to do business within city limits.

Crosby said the city is unfairly targeting users of legal marijuana by not also taking a hard look at other drug providers -- such as pharmacies.

Amendment 20, approved by state voters in 2000, allows patients and caregivers to have marijuana for medical use in Colorado. There are now 42 medical-marijuana dispensaries licensed to do business in Boulder, although the number of storefronts is thought to be smaller. At least 21 other businesses have applied for licenses but are not yet approved.

Kim Cohen, a Boulder nurse practitioner, also said she uses marijuana to treat her glaucoma. Wearing a vintage 1965 button reading "All Power to the People," Cohen said that individuals, not the city, should decide where and how they receive medication or medical treatment.

"We are not 23-year-old frat boys looking to get high," she said.

But Peter Rogers, a Boulder resident and lawyer, is opposed to medical marijuana being sold or grown in the city.

"I would urge council to enact a moratorium now," he said. "I think we've got to be extremely careful -- marijuana is still against the law."

City Attorney Jerry Gordon told the council up front that the state laws regulating medical marijuana are "enormously confusing," but the city is well within its rights to regulate land uses and business zoning.

The Boulder Planning Board last week recommended not imposing a moratorium on dispensaries and instead using some interim regulations to prevent problems until permanent regulations can be adopted. The City Council softened those recommendations with their vote.

Adrian Sopher, chairman of the Boulder Planning Board, told the City Council on Tuesday that the density of dispensaries is especially a concern in the downtown and University Hill areas. Such businesses, he said, should be spaced out "just in the same way we don't want to have bank after bank" lining any given street.

Andrew Shoemaker, a Boulder attorney and member of the Planning Board, told the council that Boulder should do anything to help legalize the drug and bring about "the beginning of the end of prohibition" on marijuana.

Pot, he said, could help pay for city services through taxation.

"It will pay for itself," he said. "Get Boulder ready for the inevitable."

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Not guilty pleas for three men in Boulder medical-pot robbery case


Trials for the co-defendants scheduled to begin in February
John Aguilar, Camera Staff Writer

Separate trials were scheduled Friday for three co-defendants in the case of a Boulder medical marijuana dispensary that was robbed in June.

David Henderson, 40; Justin St. John, 29; and Lamare McGee, 22 pleaded not guilty to charges of robbery and kidnapping.

A fourth defendant in the June 16 robbery of New Options Wellness Center -- 21-year-old Walter Carter -- isn't scheduled to be arraigned in the case until Sept. 25.

The quartet is accused of sending St. John into the medical marijuana facility at 2885 E. Aurora Ave. to make a phony pot purchase and case out the place.

Minutes later, McGee and Carter entered New Options, restrained the female employee working there, and stole 26 pint jars with marijuana, 72 sample packs of the drug, canisters of hashish, cannibis pills, pipes, security system components and $1,128 in cash, according to police.

Henderson is accused by prosecutors of masterminding the entire plan and driving the getaway vehicle.

The men were stopped by police driving eastbound on U.S. 36 shortly after the incident and arrested. St. John's trial, scheduled for Feb. 16, is up first.

It will be followed a week later by Henderson's trial. McGee is set to go on trial March 1.

The Boulder County District Attorney's Office has not yet filed a motion to consolidate the cases into one trial.St. John and McGee are free on bond, while Henderson and Carter remain behind bars.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Darine Chely - Felony Charges 2009


THIS POST WILL BE UPDATED AS NEW INFORMATION BECOMES AVAILABLE. PLEASE CHECK BACK REGULARLY

To view the Arrest Warrant - CLICK HERE


If you have any information or evidence regarding any crimes committed by this career criminal, please contact the Boulder Police Department at (303) 441-3333 and ask for Detective Carey Lutz.


CHELY, DARINE

Court Docket Number: 09CR293 Division: 6
Law Agency: BOULDER POLICE DEPT Agency Number: 07-17233
Case Status: Open Felony

Prosecuting Attorney MICHAEL FOOTE
Defense Attorney MARK E. BIDDISON

Charges
1 F5 FORGERY
2 F6 CRIMINAL ATTEMPT TO COMMIT FORGERY
3 M2 FIRST DEGREE OFFICIAL MISCONDUCT

Case Events
1/14/2009 2:00 PM BOND HEARING Held Okubo
1/22/2009 2:00 PM FILING OF CHARGES Continued
1/23/2009 2:00 PM FILING OF CHARGES Continued
1/27/2009 2:00 PM FILING OF CHARGES Held
3/16/2009 9:00 AM STATUS CONFERENCE Held Bakke withdraws
5/29/2009 1:00 PM ARRAIGNMENT Continued
7/10/2009 1:00 PM ARRAIGNMENT Continued
8/4/2009 8:15 AM ARRAIGNMENT Posted


Court Docket Number: 09CR595 Division: 9
Law Agency: BOULDER POLICE DEPT Agency Number: 09-3022
Case Status: Open Felony Violent Crime

Prosecuting Attorney MICHAEL FOOTE
Defense Attorney MARK E. BIDDISON

Charges
1 F6 POSSESSION OF A WEAPON BY PREVIOUS OFFENDER
2 F6 VIOLATION OF BAIL BOND CONDITIONS
3 M3 RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT
4 M3 RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT
5 M3 RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT

Case Events
3/20/2009 2:00 PM FILING OF CHARGES Held Welsh
4/9/2009 1:30 PM PRELIMINARY HEARING Waived
5/29/2009 1:00 PM ARRAIGNMENT Continued
7/10/2009 1:00 PM ARRAIGNMENT Continued
8/4/2009 8:15 AM ARRAIGNMENT Posted

ON 4/10/2009 A BAIL BOND REVOCATION HEARING WAS HELD AND DARINE CHELY WAS ONCE AGAIN SENT TO JAIL. THIS TIME HER BAIL WAS RAISED TO $30,000.00 AND SHE IS BACK OUT ON THE STREETS OF BOULDER WITHIN HOURS.

(The information posted above is a matter of Public Record and was obtained from the Boulder County District Attorney website)

Monday, April 13, 2009

Loveland, CO - Shop To Offer Medical Pot


Loveland’s first medicinal marijuana dispensary will open this week - more than eight years after Colorado voters legalized the drug for such use.

Rich Present, 37, and Drew McNeil, 33, plan to open Nature’s Medicine today at 843 Cleveland Ave.

Along with selling marijuana, Nature’s Medicine will provide a variety of alternative health-related services, such as low-cost acupuncture and massage, meditation, and a variety of herbs and supplements.

The business will also contract out for more intensive home care; and in August, a certified nursing assistant will join the staff.

“This will be a totally on-site thing,” Present said, adding that the business will have professionals on hand for walk-in services aimed at patient care.

The store will sell smoking accessories and some clothing as well.

McNeil would like to see the business as a place people can visit for a variety of things, even for tea or fresh-squeezed juice, he said.

Still, the business likely will be best known as a marijuana dispensary, featuring a locked room where state-registered patients may purchase marijuana in a variety of forms, including budding plants, baked goods and in liquid form.

Present would like to create a cooperative of legal marijuana growers through Nature’s Medicine to drive down the drug’s price for medicinal users, he said.

“If we are not beating the street ( value ) for $300 ( an ounce ), then why should they come to us,” Present said.

One ounce of marijuana at Nature’s Medicine will cost between $250 and $300 and one-eighth of an ounce will cost $50, plus standard sales tax, Present said.

Colorado medical marijuana laws state that anyone registered to use the drug can grow six plants for personal use.

However, they also can designate someone as a caregiver to grow those plants for them.

As of February, about 6,800 Colorado residents have registered as medical marijuana users; 569 of them are from Larimer County, according to information from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Larimer County comes in as the region with the fourth-largest number of people on the registry, behind Denver, Jefferson and El Paso counties.

Present and McNeil are registered users and caregivers for 20 patients.

Loveland police Sgt. Benjamin Hurr said police were consulted and this type of operation is a legal business as long as the business owners follow state and municipal laws.

Nature’s Medicine is at least the second dispensary to open in Larimer County.

One year ago, Enerchi Healing Center opened in Fort Collins providing similar services.

“We’ve seen phenomenal success with our community,” Enerchi owner Pam Fleming said, adding she has not had any problems with the Fort Collins police.

BREAKING NEWS: Sides will debate marijuana issue - CU's 420 Event

By Joey Bunch
The Denver Post

Organizers of the University of Colorado's 420 pot-smokers' holiday hope attendees don't just get high, but also get smart.

Student organizers have lined up local and national speakers from both sides of the issue, including liberals and conservatives, legalization advocates and law enforcement leaders for forums Saturday through Monday.

"There never has been an intellectual public discourse on marijuana" in the event's 16 years at CU, said Alex Douglas, a junior sociology major and director of the school's chapter of National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML.

"Putting both sides of the issue on the table, the forum offers the opportunity for students and the community to be engaged and educated in all aspects of the marijuana issue."

Besides Douglas, the lineup of speakers includes:

  • Steve Bloom, founding editor of High Times magazine.
  • Kevin Booth, producer and director of the documentary "American Drug War."
  • Jessica Peck Corry, a conservative pundit and executive director of the Colorado Civil Rights Initiative.
  • Retired Lafayette judge Lenny Frieling.
  • Food and Drug Administration official Devin Koontz.
  • Allen St. Pierre, national executive director of NORML.
  • Cmdr. Tom Sloan of the Boulder County Drug Task Force.

    The forum culminates with hundreds of students and other pot users toking up at 4:20 p.m. on April 20 on CU's Norlin Quad in Boulder. A similar event will be held at the same time in Denver's Civic Center Park.

    The national event is named after "420," the statute number in the California legal code that bans marijuana possession.

    In past years CU has tried to thwart the event, writing tickets, taking photographs and posting them online, even turning on sprinklers. Denver police also have written citations, but mostly monitor the crowd for safety issues, police said last year.

    For a schedule of speakers visit www.normlcu.com/.

  • Sunday, April 12, 2009

    LETTER TO WASHINGTON from Joe the Stoner


    Dear Mr. President, Vice President and Congress:

    This letter is addressed to ALL of YOU, whether you are Republican, Democrat, Independent, Conservative, Liberal, Socialist, Communist, Fascist or whatever your ideology may be. Your "Party" doesn't make the slightest difference here.

    Forgive me for being blunt, but do any of you have the courage to end America's dependence on ALL OIL, both foreign and domestic, and convert all our automobiles to run on hemp fuel?

    Do any of you have the foresight to create millions of American jobs in the Hemp Industry, a clean, green and renewable source of energy?

    Do any of you have the bravery to legalize something that has already been banned for way too long at the cost of millions of American lives in the ever-losing Drug War?

    How much money is the government spending to fight marijuana and how many Americans will you jail for something that you cannot possibly ever control unless you legalize it?

    Do you even realize that Cannabis IS the "Green Energy" of the FUTURE?

    Did you know that this could be accomplished in less than a year!

    Imagine, America could be FREE FROM FOREIGN OIL DEPENDENCE IN LESS THAN A YEAR!

    Did you even know that Cannabis Hemp amd Marijuana have so many other uses? Clothing, Plastics, Rope, Paper, Health benefits, in some people even CURES CANCER, it is a natural alternative medicine to so many damaging prescription drugs, etc..... and oh yeah, lets not forget that the marijuana plant's "bud" can get you high.

    Millions of Americans smoke marijuana. You CANNOT and MORALLY SHOULD NOT jail such a huge portion of the population of our own country in such a foolish manner. It is a waste of valuable resources. These millions of Americans that we currently jail are taken away from being productive to society, their families and communities, all because they chose to get high, whether for recreational, medicinal or emotional purposes.

    Please do not let history repeat itself. During the Great Depression, America went into an even deeper slump because of Prohibition. Prohibition in the early 20th Century nearly destroyed America. Do not let America's Prohibition of Marijuana destroy our nation.

    It's a fact of life: America Smokes Pot and LOTS OF IT!!!

    Keep an open mind and envision the inevitable fact that marijuana, cannabis, and hemp are what is destined to save humankind and our planet.

    America needs to lead in developing this renewable energy source before we fall behind the rest of the world as slowly all nations will open their eyes to the things they can do with this miracle plant, cannabis.

    The potential to once again become the "World's Leading Economy" is in your hands. America needs to push aside the old myths about marijuana that got a nation so paranoid about it, we outlawed hemp - We made it illegal and banned an industry that today has the potential to create millions of jobs, billions in exports, and trillions in taxes and related revenues.

    Mr. President, Vice President and Congress - PLEASE SAVE AMERICA - PLEASE LEGALIZE AND LET THE STATES REGULATE CANNABIS, HEMP & MARIJUANA.

    OPEN YOUR EYES AMERICA - DEMAND A CHANGE SO DRASTIC THAT IT COULD SAVE THE WORLD AND END DEPENDENCY ON OIL TODAY!

    PLEASE, FOR THE SAKE OF OUR CHILDRENS FUTURE AND OUR NATION'S SURVIVAL......END PROHIBITION NOW.

    Joe the Stoner

    (NOTE: In the original letter, the word "balls" was replaced with courage, foresight and bravery - funny how a male appendage can be associated with words that describe our founding fathers - courage, foresight and bravery = balls)

    Wednesday, April 1, 2009

    COLORADO: Medical Marijuana Registry Program Update

    Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment

    Medical Marijuana Registry Program Update

    (as of February 28, 2009)

    In the November 2000 general election, Coloradoans passed Amendment 20, and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) was tasked with implementing and administering the Medical Marijuana Registry program. In March of 2001, the State of Colorado Board of Health approved the Rules and Regulations pertaining to the administration of the program, and on June 1st, 2001, the Registry began accepting and processing applications for Registry Identification cards.

    Statistics of the registry include:

    • 6,796 new patient applications have been received to date since the registry began operating in June 2001. Thirty-four (34) applications have been denied, 14 cards have been revoked, 145 patients have died, and 1,175 cards have expired, bringing the total number of patients who currently possess valid Registry ID cards to 5,428. The renewal rate is 57%.
    • Seventy-one percent of approved applicants are male.
    • The average age of all patients is 36. Currently 4 patients are minors (under the age of 18).
    • Sixty-two counties (95% of counties) in Colorado have registered applicants. Forty-nine percent of patients reside in the Denver-metro and Boulder area, with the remainder of patients found in counties throughout Colorado.
    • Patients on the Registry represent all the debilitating conditions covered under Amendment 20. Severe pain accounts for 87% of all reported conditions; muscle spasms account for the second-most reported condition at 23%.
    • Fifty-nine percent of patients have designated a primary care-giver (someone who has significant responsibility for managing the patient’s care).
    • Over 600 different physicians have signed for patients in Colorado.

    Please see the tables below for a complete listing of all statistical information.

    As of June 14, 2004 care-givers are no longer issued cards.

    As of January 25, 2008 only a portion of the patient’s social security number appears on their registration card.

    As of October 27, 2008 all applications, renewal and changes to the Registry must be submitted via mail and include a legible photo copy of the patient’s Colorado Identification. Faxes and emails will no longer be accepted.

    As of December 1, 2008 all changes to the Registry must be signed by the patient making the change in blue ink.

    The Amendment requires that an application be approved or denied within 35 days of receipt by CDPHE. Currently, the Registry is issuing ID cards within three weeks of receipt of a complete application.

    In addition to administering the Registry, CDPHE has been charged with accepting and reviewing petitions to add conditions to the current list of debilitating medical conditions/symptoms. To date, four petitions have been received, one for Parkinson’s disease, one for Asthma, one for Anxiety and another for Bi-Polar Disorder. All petitions were subsequently denied due to lack of scientific evidence that treatment with marijuana might have a beneficial effect.

    There have been three marijuana-related convictions of patients on the Registry, and no physicians have experienced federal reprisals. However, reluctance to participate due to the inconsistencies between state and federal marijuana laws has been expressed by doctors and patients alike.

    Another barrier to participation on the Registry may be the cost. No general funds have been designated for this program, and the Amendment allows CDPHE to collect fees to cover the administrative costs of administering the program. Currently the fee is $90, and is evaluated annually by CDPHE. The fee was lowered from $110 on June 1, 2007.

    Numerous questions have arisen regarding interpretation of statutory language. The law does not clearly state where marijuana plants may be grown or if two or more patients and/or care-givers may share one growing space. Statutory language also places certain burdens upon local and state law enforcement officers, such as the requirement of keeping alive plants that are confiscated until a resolution is reached (i.e. a decision not to prosecute, the dismissal of charges, an acquittal, etc.).


    Table I: County Information

    County

    Number of Patients Percent of Patients

    Adams

    365

    7%

    Alamosa
    7
    <1%

    Arapahoe

    421

    8%

    Archuleta

    17

    <1%

    Baca
    6
    <1%
    Bent 3 <1%

    Boulder

    517

    10%

    Broomfield

    47

    <1%

    Chaffee

    32

    <1%

    Cheyenne

    *

    *

    Clear Creek

    14

    <1%

    Conejos * *
    Costilla * *
    Crowley
    5

    <1%

    Custer

    8

    <1%

    Delta

    51

    1%

    Denver

    686

    13%

    Dolores
    6 <1%

    Douglas

    153

    3%

    Eagle

    41

    <1%

    El Paso

    604

    11%

    Elbert

    17

    <1%

    Fremont

    52

    <1%

    Garfield

    42

    <1%

    Gilpin

    26

    <1%

    Grand

    32

    <1%

    Gunnison

    29

    <1%

    Hinsdale
    3
    <1%

    Huerfano

    36

    <1%

    Jackson * *

    Jefferson

    637

    12%

    Kit Carson

    *

    *

    La Plata

    88

    2%

    Lake

    26

    <1%

    Larimer

    569

    10%

    Las Animas

    17

    <1%

    Lincoln

    *

    *

    Logan

    9

    <1%

    Mesa

    139

    3%

    Moffat
    5

    <1%

    Montezuma

    21

    <1%

    Montrose

    63

    1%

    Morgan
    8
    <1%
    Otero
    25
    <1%

    Ouray

    9

    <1%

    Park

    57

    1%

    Phillips

    4

    <1%

    Pitkin

    6

    <1%

    Prowers * *

    Pueblo

    95

    2%

    Rio Blanco

    5

    <1%

    Rio Grande 5 <1%

    Routt

    14

    <1%

    Saguache

    11

    <1%

    San Juan

    *

    *

    San Miguel

    11

    <1%

    Sedgwick * *

    Summit

    69

    1%

    Teller

    63

    1%

    Washington * *

    Weld

    232

    4%

    Yuma 4 <1%

    * Indicates fewer than three patients in each category

    Table II: Conditions

    Reported Condition

    Number of Patients Reporting Condition

    Percent of Patients Reporting Condition**

    Cachexia

    109

    2%

    Cancer

    193

    4%

    Glaucoma

    72

    1%

    HIV/AIDS

    94

    2%

    Muscle Spasms

    1,221

    23%

    Seizures

    214

    4%

    Severe Pain

    4,737

    87%

    Severe Nausea

    1,139

    21%

    **Does not add to 100% as some patients report using medical marijuana for more than one debilitating medical condition.

    Table III: User Characteristics

    Sex

    Percent on Registry

    Average Age**

    Male

    70%

    36

    Female

    30%

    38

    ** The overall average age of all patients is 36 years old.

    (Source: http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/hs/Medicalmarijuana/marijuanaupdate.html)

    Saturday, March 21, 2009

    COLORADO: Do Not Limit Medical Marijuana Patients' Rights



    (Reposted from the NORML website)

    Proposed rule changes to Colorado's medical marijuana law:

    The Colorado Board of Health will soon be considering a proposed regulation change which would restrict the number of patients that may be provided for by a state-authorized caregiver. The hearing was originally scheduled for March 18, but has been rescheduled due to the large number of people wishing to testify against this change. You can view the proposed changes at http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/op/bh/hearingnotices/Medical....

    NORML's affiliates and allies in Colorado believe that the establishment of this proposed policy is not in the best interest of the patient and is likely to result in serious, negative health consequences for ill Coloradans. If the policy passes, it would block safe access to medicine, ripping thousands of sick patients from their current, safe caregiver relationship and forcing them into the uncomfortable and potentially dangerous position of having to find a new caregiver. It will force patients into illicit market situations where they run the serious risk of physical assault or theft.

    The policy would also limit patient rights. Patients deserve the right to select the caregiver of their choice, in the same manner that a patient may select a preferred doctor. Both doctors and caregivers are individuals charged with the important task of caring for the health care of the patient. This is an important and personal decision which can have major ramifications on the health of the patient.

    Finally, it is an irrational policy. The State's arbitrary limit is tantamount to restricting a neighborhood pharmacy such as Walgreens to serving only five patients. It is economically inefficient and masses significant costs onto patients, most of whom are of limited financial means as brought on by their debilitating diseases. The State should not interfere with, and affirmatively restrict, such an essential, life-and-death
    relationship.

    With 40 million uninsured Americans and in the midst of the most severe economic crisis in decades, a policy that increases the cost and decreases access to healthcare is not in the interest of Coloradans. Please do not enact the "Five Patient Policy".

    You may contact the Colorado Board of Health with your concerns at:

    Colorado Board of Health
    C/O Linda Shearman, Program Assistant
    Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment
    4300 Cherry Creek Drive South EDO-A5
    Denver CO 80246-1530

    lindashearman@state.co.us
    FAX: 303 691 7702

    Public comments may also be e-mailed at:

    cdphe.MedicalMarijuanaRegulations@state.co.us

    Thank you for supporting Joe the Stoner's and NORML's marijuana law reform efforts in Colorado.

    Sunday, March 15, 2009

    Stem the Violence, Make Marijuana Legal

    (reposted from http://www.cannazine.com.uk and edited for personal accuracy by Joe the Stoner
    Imagine you had a really smart bomb - a genius bomb - that could blow up the leaders of every drug cartel in Mexico.

    By the time the smoke cleared, a new pusher would be sitting in every cartel's big chair and the distribution networks would continue satisfying the demand of every junkie and recreational-drug user in America.

    Mexico's drug cartels would continue to be, in the words of the Justice Department's National Drug Threat Assessment for 2009, "the greatest drug-trafficking threat to the United States."

    Now, imagine a different weapon.

    Consider the impact of eliminating the most profitable product the cartels sell.

    All we have to do is legalize marijuana."

    Marijuana is the (Mexican cartels') cash crop, the cash cow," says Brittany Brown of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Washington office, which does not advocate legalizing pot.

    Marijuana is cheap to grow and requires no processing. More than a million pounds of it was seized in Arizona in each of the past two years, according to figures provided by Ramona Sanchez of the DEA's Phoenix office. But those seizures were just a cost of doing business for multibillion-dollar drug lords. Marijuana continued to be widely available - and not just to adults.

    Teens tell researchers that buying pot is easier than getting cigarettes or booze, says Bill Piper, director of National Affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance, which does advocate legalizing marijuana.

    Cannabis vs. alcohol

    Some argue that if you legalize marijuana there would still be a black market. They say that because the product is so cheap to produce, the black market could underprice legal pot and sell to kids. But consider what we know about alcohol.
    • First, Prohibition didn't work.

    • Second, even though alcohol sales are regulated, back-alley or school-yard sales of moonshine is not a billion-dollar problem.

    • Third, alcohol, like its addictive killer-cousin tobacco, is taxed, which helps cover its costs to society.Not so with marijuana.After decades of anti-pot campaigns, from Reefer Madness to zero tolerance, so many Americans choose to smoke marijuana that the Mexican cartels have become an international threat to law and order.Instead of paying taxes on their vice, pot smokers are enriching thugs and murderers.
    "People who smoke pot in the United States don't think they are connected to the cartels," Brown says. "Actually, they are very connected."

    American drug users help sharpen the knives that cartel henchmen use to behead their enemies and terrorize Mexican border towns.

    Even marijuana grown in the United States, increasingly in national parks and on other public lands, is often connected to Mexican cartels, Brown says.

    According to the Justice Department's 2009 assessment, cartels have "established varied transportation routes, advanced communications capabilities and strong affiliations with gangs in the United States" and "maintain drug-distribution networks or supply drugs to distributors in at least 230 U.S. cities." Including Phoenix and Tucson.

    The DEA says cartels are "poly-drug organizations" that routinely smuggle cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin and precursor chemicals through our state."

    (But) marijuana generates the most profit," Sanchez says.


    Removing a cash cow

    Legalizing marijuana would not stop pushers from selling other, more lethal poisons. But taking away their most profitable product would hurt criminal organizations that have grown richer, more powerful and better armed during the so-called war on drugs that was first declared by President Richard Nixon.

    Today's Mexican cartels "are as ruthless and brutal as any terrorist organization," says Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who is opposed to legalizing marijuana.

    Their brutality is destabilizing Mexico. Several years after Mexican President Felipe Calderón bravely decided to take on the cartels, Mexico ranks with Pakistan as "weak and failing states" in a recent report by the United States Joint Forces Command. Why? Because Mexico's "government, its politicians, police and judicial infrastructure are all under sustained assault and pressure by criminal gangs and drug cartels," the report says.

    While U.S. drug users enrich the cartels, the U.S. government pours huge amounts of money into defeating them.

    The Bush administration sold Congress on the Merida Initiative, a multiyear, $1.4 billion aid package designed to provide training and high-tech assistance to help a besieged Mexican government combat the cartels.

    Even in these days of gazillion-dollar bailouts, that's a chunk of change.

    But consider this: According to a report last fall from the Government Accountability Office, the United States has provided more than $6 billion to support Plan Colombia since fiscal 2000. The goal of reducing processing and distribution of illicit drugs (mostly cocaine) by 50 percent was not achieved, the GAO found.

    A GAO report from July 15, 2008, says that since fiscal 2003, the United States has provided more than $950 million to counternarcotics efforts in the 6 million square-mile "transit zone" that includes Central America, the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico and the eastern Pacific Ocean.

    What did this buy?"

    Despite gains in international cooperation, several factors, including resource limitations and lack of political will, have impeded U.S. progress in helping governments become full and self-sustaining partners in the counternarcotics effort - a goal of U.S. assistance," the report said.

    Weary of the drug war

    Our southern neighbors are getting tired of fighting our drug war.

    Last month, the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy called for a shift from the "prohibitionist policies based on eradication, interdiction and criminalization." Former Latin American Presidents Ernesto Zedillo (Mexico), Cesar Gaviria (Colombia) and Fernando Henrique Cardoso (Brazil) said the drug war has failed.

    It was a tragically costly failure.

    In testimony before Congress last June, Peter Reuter of the University of Maryland School of Public Policy and department of criminology, said, "It is likely that total expenditures for drug control, at all levels of government, totaled close to $40 billion in 2007."

    He said about 500,000 people are in prison in the United States for drug offenses on any given day. Piper says 800,000 people a year are arrested on marijuana charges, the vast majority for simple possession.

    Now, consider the possibilities of a new approach.

    In 2005, economist Jeffrey A. Miron put together a report suggesting that if marijuana were taxed at rates similar to alcohol and tobacco, legal sales would raise $6.2 billion a year. California Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, a Democrat from San Francisco, is trying to get his state to legalize marijuana for adult use, set up a state licensing system and levy a tax that some say could raise $1 billion a year.

    Let's be clear: Marijuana cannot cause dependency. It is healthy yet smelly. I use it. And a lot of people like the effects of this "alleged" intoxicant; they believe they can control its addictive properties. This is exactly why people drink margaritas during happy hour.

    This is also why a war on drugs is unwinnable.

    You'd think a country built on capitalism would understand basic laws of supply and demand. Instead, a failed and irrational national policy blunders forward, costing billions, incarcerating large numbers of people and enriching ruthless crime syndicates.

    The cartels are not stagnant. They are growing in power and influence. In Phoenix, Mexican cartels are blamed for a dramatic rise in kidnapping and other violence.

    Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard says it may be only a matter of time before the kind of turf battles that are common in Mexico erupt along drug-transit corridors in Arizona. Goddard, who does not support legalization, says, "I do support an intelligent dialogue (on legalization)."

    Brave but hopeless fight

    Law enforcement has a smart-bomb approach to eliminating the bad guys.

    Last month, the DEA announced Operation Xcellerator, a 21-month multi-agency effort aimed at the Sinaloan cartel. It culminated in more than 750 arrests and the seizure of 23 tons of drugs and $59.1 million in cash.

    The police work involved was smart and courageous. After all, cartels torture and kill cops.

    But while police were putting their lives on the line for the war on drugs, U.S. drug users were helping the cartels make up for any economic losses.

    It's time to hit the bad guys where it really hurts.

    Take away their cash cow. LEGALIZE MARIJUANA!

    Saturday, March 14, 2009

    Boulder woman suspected of shooting neighbor's home



    As reported in the Daily Camera of Boulder, CO: (by Vanessa Miller - March 13, 2009)


    BOULDER, Colo. — A Boulder woman arrested Friday on suspicion of firing a bullet from her home into her next-door neighbor’s house — nearly hitting a mother and her 4-year-old daughter — accidentally fired the round while she was going through some belongings, according to Boulder police.

    Darine Chely, 49, turned herself into police after firing the gun about 3:50 p.m. Thursday, said police spokeswoman Sarah Huntley. She immediately posted a $5,000 bond to get out of the Boulder County Jail and faces one felony and two misdemeanors: possession of a weapon by a previous offender, prohibited use of a weapon and reckless endangerment.

    Police were called to the Dakota Ridge neighborhood in North Boulder by the neighbor, who told police she was lying on her bed with her 4-year-old daughter in their single-family home in the 1000 block of Terrace Circle when she heard a “loud boom,” according to Huntley.
    The woman, whose name has not been released, saw wooden blinds on a nearby window blow into the room and shatter into pieces, Huntley said.

    Investigators later determined the noise and damage were caused by a bullet that went through Chely’s external wall, an outside wall of the neighbor’s house and a piece of furniture before finally ending up in the daughter’s room in a wall over the bed, Huntley said.
    No one was hurt.
    “They are very fortunate that this didn’t end more tragically,” Huntley said.
    After obtaining a search warrant, police entered Chely’s home and found a 16-gauge shotgun, a .44 Magnum handgun and one box of ammunition inside.

    “She has indicated that she didn’t mean to fire the gun,” Huntley said. “She was going through belongings and found the gun and didn’t realize it was loaded and pulled the trigger.”

    Huntley said the neighbor, who was missed by the bullet, also has a 2-year-old child.
    “It’s my understanding that she was very fearful and concerned about the welfare of her children,” Huntley said.

    Chely has a lengthy criminal history, involving numerous money, theft and forgery charges in Boulder, Jefferson, Arapahoe, Adams and Eagle counties, according to court records. A 2009 forgery case remains open and is awaiting trial, and Huntley said Chely shouldn’t have had a weapon because of those charges.

    Chely couldn’t be reached for comment Friday, and a man who answered her home phone wouldn’t comment except to say, “It was an accident.”
    To view the Arrest Warrant and Affidavit, please CLICK HERE

    Marijuana: What Are the Laws in Colorado?




    Boulder, CO - March 14, 2009 by Joe the Stoner

    As the movement to Legalize Marijuana continues to grow, many Coloradoans are faced with possibly having to decide in the near future whether Colorado reforms current Marijuana Legislation.

    Hopefully, as the movement continues to grow, the upcoming elections may include reform legislation for legalizing marijuana and the voters of Colorado will need to make the decision.

    Many people wonder what the laws really are in Colorado when it comes to Marijuana.

    For a link to the current laws in effect in Colorado, please visit:
    http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?wtm_view=&Group_ID=4526 where a chart shows exactly how much in quantity is legal and the consequences and penalties for larger amounts in possesion.

    If you would like to help contribute and/or donate to the cause, please visit http://www.joethestoner.com/ and click on the "Donate" with PayPal link

    Thank you for your support and please check our blog frequently for updates to news in Boulder, CO and the "420" Marijuana Movement.

    The Financial Crisis Just Might Lead to Legal Pot

    By Marcelo Ballve, New America Media. Posted March 13, 2009





    NEW YORK -- In 1977, President Jimmy Carter asked Congress to decriminalize marijuana possession (it never did). The next year, the Ladies Home Journal described a summer jazz festival on the White House's South Lawn where "a haze of marijuana smoke hung heavy under the low-bending branches of a magnolia tree."

    The late 1970's may have been the high-water mark for permissiveness regarding marijuana. But advocates of decriminalized pot believe a confluence of factors, especially the country's economic malaise, are leading to another countrywide reappraisal of the drug.

    "There is momentum of the sort I haven't seen since I've been involved in this," says Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance, which supports easing marijuana laws.

    He says incidents like then-candidate Barack Obama's early admission of pot use or the flap over Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps's bong-smoking may lead to initial public hand-wringing, but in the end they tend to legitimize pot use. So does the growing recognition of medical marijuana.

    But, he adds, "the economic crisis is the single most important factor" in this new shift in perceptions.

    That's because the ailing economy is triggering a scramble for new government savings or sources of revenue. Nadelmann compares today's marijuana laws to alcohol prohibition, approved during prosperous times in 1920 only to become unpopular during the Great Depression. Prohibition was finally repealed in 1933, in part due to the cost of reining in illegal booze and the need to recoup lost tax revenue in tough economic times.

    As he signed a law easing prohibition, President Franklin Roosevelt reportedly quipped, "I think this would be a good time for a beer."

    Is our recession-plagued present a good time for a joint? Legalizing, taxing and regulating marijuana, would pull the rug out from under pot dealers in urban America, and create a crisis for them, but it would likely prove a boon for state budgets. In an oft-cited 2006 report on U.S. marijuana production, expert Jon Gettman used "conservative price estimates" to peg the value of the annual crop at $36 billion--more valuable than corn and wheat combined.

    Three national polls this year showed a surprising number of Americans think marijuana should be legal. Zogby, CBS News and Rasmussen all recorded support for legalization hovering at around 40 percent. Nadelmann of the DPA believes support would have been higher if the question was whether or not marijuana should be taxed and regulated.

    California Assemblyman Tom Ammiano has proposed a bill to tax and regulate legal marijuana, which he says would generate $1 billion in revenue for the Golden State's anemic budget. Ammiano, who represents areas of San Francisco, says his proposal, unveiled last month, is "simply common sense," considering the unprecedented economic emergency. The measure would also save California an estimated $150 million in enforcement costs.

    Rising support for decriminalization has also come from drug war-ravaged Latin America. Former presidents of Colombia, Mexico and Brazil headed the 17-person Latin American Commission on Drugs, which included intellectuals and statesmen. It issued a report last month calling the drug war failed. It called, among other changes, for the personal use of marijuana to be decriminalized.

    Currently, marijuana is already decriminalized in some form in 13 U.S. states, including California and New York, according to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). Typically in these states, marijuana possession in small amounts is reduced to a minor offense punishable by a low fine. Alaska has a particularly liberal law, allowing possession of up to an ounce of pot at home without penalty.

    Some eight additional state legislatures are currently considering decriminalization, or the expansion of already existing allowances, according to NORML.

    No other state has gone as far as the sweeping "tax and regulate" plan Ammiano proposed for California, but all this talk of legalizing pot has Eric Voth, M.D., deeply worried. Voth, chairman of the Institute on Global Drug Policy, believes advocates of legal marijuana are exploiting the country's economic insecurities to advance their agenda, despite evident risks.

    Pointing to alcohol and tobacco, which are taxed, he argues the resulting revenue hardly compensates for the social and public health damage wreaked by both substances, including spillover use among youth. In the 1970s, when marijuana use was at its peak, some 11 percent of high school seniors used marijuana daily, whereas today only between two and three percent do so. If marijuana were legal, more kids would smoke it and face health, addiction and learning problems, says Voth, who advised the White House under Republican and Democratic administrations. "I'm not a prohibitionist, I'm a physician and I've seen those problems face-to-face in the trenches."

    But, as Voth himself admits, the lobby to decriminalize marijuana is increasingly organized, with a strong presence in state capitols and Washington, D.C. When Ammiano announced his California plan, he enlisted the DPA and the Marijuana Policy Project to back him up. "High Times," the popular pot enthusiasts' magazine, has spearheaded its own "420 campaign" for marijuana legalization. Libertarian organizations, like the Cato Institute, tend to be skeptical of pot prohibition, too.

    But there are legal questions over states' efforts to decriminalize. Lenient state laws (not to mention Ammiano's legalization plan) clash with separate federal laws on marijuana, which are strict, calling for up to a year imprisonment and a $1,000 fine for possession of any amount, even if it's a first offense.

    Last year, U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), sponsored legislation to decriminalize marijuana federally, earning a handful of co-sponsors, but the bill quickly stalled in committee.

    Ammiano says his plan isn't radical, since pot would simply be taxed just as tobacco and alcohol are now. But for his opponents that comparison sets off alarm bells.

    Both industries have a bad record of facing up to the adverse health effects of their products and its availability to underage users. A legally sanctioned marijuana industry, opponents say, would open the door to another powerful, cynical, corporate dispenser of legal drugs.

    Friday, January 23, 2009

    Boulder Process Server Arrested and Charged with Felony Forgery



    Boulder, CO - January 23, 2009 (blog post from Ross Investigators)

    A Boulder process server was arrested last week and charged with a felony count of forgery.

    The charge against Darine Chely says she also uses the names Darine and Dee Bateman. She is reported to be the owner and operator of Quality Process Servers & Investigations.

    The charge poses a legal problem for those who have relied on affdavits of service signed by Chely. Those who have done so are urged to contact Detective Carey Lutz at the Boulder Police Department at (303) 441-3333.

    Chely was arrested Jan. 14 and released on posting of $10,000 bond.

    Her attorney is Ingird Bakke.

    UPDATE: NEXT COURT DATE March 16, 2009 - Hearing for Status Conference
    It has also been reported that March 16, 2009 is Darine's birthday - hope your birthday finds you in prison where you belong Darine!