Thousands attend 43rd annual Hash Bash in Ann Arbor

 

Thousands of people attended an annual pro-marijuana rally today that’s been held on the University of Michigan campus for 43 years.

The event on the university’s campus has historically celebrated marijuana and promotes its legalization. A new group of organizers this year has extended the hours and brought in speakers to cover various topics.

Longtime Hash Bash organizer, and this year’s emcee, Adam Brook said he remains focused on the rallying and campaigning efforts.

“Local ballot initiatives are, in my opinion, the most important thing,” said Brook, who served a two-year prison sentence after police raided his Royal Oak home and discovered more than a pound of marijuana. Many people consider him to be a leader of the movement to legalize cannabis in the state.

“That’s what’s going to change and persuade the legislators,” he said. “That people want the change.”

The Hash Bash began in 1971 after a local activist, John Sinclair, was sent to prison for 10 years for selling two joints to undercover police. He was released after the Michigan Supreme Court ruled the state’s marijuana statutes were unconstitutional.

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http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20140405/METRO06/304050047?fb_action_ids=618442964907430&fb_action_types=og.recommends&fb_source=feed_opengraph&action_object_map=%7B%22618442964907430%22%3A609632522457795%7D&action_type_map=%7B%22618442964907430%22%3A%22og.recommends%22%7D&action_ref_map=%5B%5D

 

Larry Sanders of Milwaukee Bucks: ‘I believe in marijuana’

ESPN.com news services
LArry Sanders

AP Photo/David ZalubowskiBucks center Larry Sanders, suspended five games for using marijuana, said Friday he has studied it and knows its benefits.
Bucks center Larry Sanders advocated for marijuana’s legalization Friday, hours after it was announced he would be suspended five games by the NBA for its use.
Sanders said the drug’s stigma is rooted in its illegal status and that once its prohibition is lifted “this all will go away.”
“It’s something I feel strongly about, just to let you know something personal about me,” Sanders said in an interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel before the Bucks’ 102-90 loss at Chicago. “I will deal with the consequences from it.
 
Full Article:
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/10732646/larry-sanders-milwaukee-bucks-advocates-marijuana-ban

Majority of Law Enforcement Officers Support Marijuana Policy Reform

Photo Credit: RDaniel / Shutterstock.com
 
Though not conducted with the methodological rigor of the  Pew poll that came out yesterday showing 54% of Americans support the legalization of marijuana and two-thirds believe drug policy should focus on treatment rather than prosecuting drug users,  Law Officer magazine has provided LEAP a poll of its own showing an even more surprising finding: a majority of law enforcement officers also support marijuana policy reform.
 
Full Article:
http://www.alternet.org/drugs/majority-law-enforcement-officers-support-marijuana-policy-reform

Fusion Taps Ryan Nerz as TV’s First Chief Cannabis Correspondent

 @AndiSeikaly

ryannerz-fusionphoto
 
 
At first blush it sounds like something out of a Cheech & Chong movie, but in fact it’s a serious effort.Fusion, the startup cabler run by ABC News and Univision, has named  journalist Ryan Nerz as its chief cannabis correspondent.
TV PILOTS/DEVELOPMENT SCORECARD: Follow all of the development action during upfront season
Given the spread of legalized marijuana availability in the U.S., Nerz will cover the  growing market for pot, examining economic and cultural impact of the shift in public policy.
 
Full Article:
http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/fusion-taps-ryan-nerz-as-tvs-first-chief-cannabis-correspondent-1201152283/

AG Holder willing to consider dropping marijuana from same drug category as LSD, heroin and ecstasy

Marc Stewart
Holder Testifies At Senate Judiciary Committee On Justice Dep't Oversight
 
DENVER – Friday nights are some of the busiest at the Citi-Med dispensary, where for the moment, only green can be used to buy green.
In the eyes of the Drug Enforcement Agency, Marijuana is categorizedjust like heroin, LSD, and ecstasy.
It’s why most banks won’t accept money from pot sales.
Yet there may be a shift by the feds in making marijuana more mainstream.
Attorney General Eric Holder now says he’s willing to work with Congress to possibly remove pot from the “dangerous drug list.”
“We’d be more than glad to work with Congress if there is a desire to look at and reexamine how the drug is scheduled, as I said there is a great degree of expertise that exists in Congress,” Holder told the House Appropriations Committee hearing Friday, the Huffington Postreported. “It is something that ultimately Congress would have to change, and I think that our administration would be glad to work with Congress if such a proposal were made.”
 
Full Article:
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/ag-holder-willing-to-consider-dropping-marijuana-from-same-drug-category-as-lsd-heroin-and-ecstasy04042014?autoplay=true

Kansas – Marijuana raid in Bates County illustrates the evolution of an issue

BY DONALD BRADLEY The Kansas City Star


 
ADRIAN, Mo. — As usual, Gene Halbin rolled a fat one after lunch.
He’d taken a couple of hits when two strangers appeared at the front door. Halbin’s place sits way out of town, off the blacktop, down a dirt road, round a bend, over a bridge and deep into some woods in northwestern Bates County.
Good bet they weren’t solicitors working the neighborhood.
But they did come with purpose and the first words out of one of their mouths stated it clearly:
“I can smell marijuana right now.”
For the rest of the day, Halbin, 60, a retired air conditioning serviceman with a rare and severe form of glaucoma, sat quietly as officers carted out 41 pot plants, growing lights, a dozen or so guns and his grandfather’s pipe collection.
Sometime during all this, Halbin’s wife, Dolores, a registered nurse, came home and saw all the cars. She figured what was happening, got scared and drove on past. She drove around until she ran out of gas.
 
Full Article:
http://www.kansascity.com/2014/03/29/4924807/marijuana-raid-that-removes-a.html

Hemp-to-Biofuels Research Gets Green Light

by 
vote-hemp
 
A crop that has had an undeserved stigma attached to it could now become a source for biodiesel and ethanol. The recently passed and signed Farm Bill contains a provision that would allow hemp to be grown for research purposes, including making it into the green fuels.
“Hemp is a great crop for biodiesel, and we’ve already started experimenting with [cellulosic ethanol made from hemp],” explained Ben Droz with Vote Hemp, a group trying revitalize industrial hemp production in the U.S., at last week’s National Agriculture Day in Washington, D.C. He pointed out that hemp goes back a long ways in this country’s history, including being grown by the Founding Fathers and the founder of our modern automobile industry. “Henry Ford was actually doing research on hemp fuels and hemp biocomposites. And now today we are looking back to see if we can grow hemp once again.”
 
Full Article:
http://domesticfuel.com/2014/04/03/hemp-to-biofuels-research-gets-green-light/

The Shame of “Equitable Sharing” – How local cops are still colluding with the feds to seize pot-related assets—even in states with legal marijuana.

By 
140401_JURIS_PotBust.jpg.CROP.promo-mediumlarge
 
Local law enforcement needs only to “collaborate” with a federal agency in order to do an end run around a state law regarding marijuana. Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
 
When voters in Colorado and Washington state approved legalizing marijuana in 2012, those votes undermined an abusive—and profitable—police practice: civil forfeiture. Unlike with criminal forfeiture, undercivil forfeiture people do not have to be convicted of or even charged with a crime to permanently lose their cash, cars, and other property. Police can then auction off that seized property and use the proceeds to fund themselves. In the 42 states that allow police departments to profit from forfeiture, that cash flow has funded both themilitarization of police and allowed law enforcement to make ridiculous purchases, including a margarita machine, a Hawaiian vacation, and a Dodge Viper.
 
Full Article:
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2014/04/equitable_sharing_legalized_marijuana_and_civil_forfeiture_the_scheme_that.html
 

Poll: Nationwide marijuana legalization inevitable

By KRISTEN WYATT
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Nationwide marijuana legalization seems inevitable to three-fourths of Americans, whether they support it or not, according to a new poll out Wednesday.

The Pew Research Center survey on the nation’s shifting attitudes about drug policy also showed increased support for moving away from mandatory sentences for non-violent drug offenders.

The telephone survey found that 75 percent of respondents — including majorities of both supporters and opponents of legal marijuana— think that the sale and use of pot eventually will be legal nationwide. It was the first time that question had been asked.

 
Full Article:
http://news.yahoo.com/poll-nationwide-marijuana-legalization-inevitable-150206513.html

Kenneth ‘K’ Morrow Discusses The Future Of Dabs & Cannabis Concentrates

by Drake Dorm
terpeneisolation
 
 
At the moment, concentrate makers worldwide are producing, or attempting to produce, an absolute – a hard piece of see-through shatter/glass. Essentially, what they are looking for is a stable piece of concentrate that can be held in hand without sticking to it. To achieve this goal, they utilize various methods and equipment such as winterization, vacuum purging, and vacuum drying ovens.
The levels of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in concentrates overall are getting higher, some exceed 80% THC (either in the raw THCA form or as activated Δ-9 THC). But the pursuit of elevated THC levels has come at the expense of terpenes.
 
Full Article:
http://www.medicaljane.com/2014/04/01/kenneth-k-morrow-discusses-the-future-of-dabs-cannabis-concentrates/