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Soros
Group Targets Florida, Ohio, Michigan The Drug Reform Coordination Network's (DRCNet) Week Online (Issue # 189) reports: "The 800-lb. gorilla of the drug reform movement is moving at full speed to introduce similar [to Prop. 36] initiatives in at least three large states. The troika of billionaires George Soros and Peter Lewis and centimillionaire John Sperling will meet later this summer to give final approval for a multi-million dollar 'treatment not jail' initiative campaign in the key Midwest states of Michigan and Ohio and the Brave New South of Florida next year. . . ." "'We
are already underway in Florida,'
the Campaign for New Drug Policies' (CNDP) Bill Zimmerman told DRCNet,
'and we will meet soon to make the final decisions on Michigan
and Ohio. Polling in all three states
tells us we have majorities in favor of treatment and sentencing reforms.
These will be styled after Prop. 36, with some minor adjustments to
fit local political systems,' Zimmerman said. 'The initiatives will
offer treatment instead of jail to nonviolent first or second time drug
possessors -- they have the option not to take treatment -- and the
initiatives will also reduce some drug sentences. "The careful reliance on polling, incremental steps and not getting ahead of the voters have been hallmarks of Zimmerman and CDSP's work, and while the Campaign has at times raised hackles among grassroots activists for its cautious, pragmatic approach and limited goals, that approach has resulted in an impressive record at the ballot box. Zimmerman, a Santa Monica-based political consultant, has been the point-man for most of the trio's impressive string of ballot-box victories, ranging from California's groundbreaking 1996 Prop. 215 medical marijuana initiative (where the pros joined forces in an uneasy alliance with grassroots activists) to last fall's near sweep in California (Prop. 36), Colorado and Nevada (medical marijuana) and Oregon and Utah (asset forfeiture reform). The Campaign's chain of victories was snapped only in Massachusetts, where by a 52-48 margin voters declined to extend to low-level dealers the same treatment options that would have been available to persons convicted of nonviolent drug possession offenses. "The
Wall Street Journal recently referred to CNDP operation as 'a formidable
political machine.' It seems especially so in the wake of the Prop.
36 victory in the nation's most populous state, where a 61% majority
voted to bring the state's nation-leading drug imprisonment binge to
a screeching halt. Now, with a resounding victory in California, the
machine is shifting gears to emphasize 'treatment not jail' initiatives
over its previous favorites, medical marijuana and asset forfeiture
reform. "Such efforts will almost certainly meet with opposition from the law enforcement and drug court lobbies in their respective states. In an article announcing that Ohio was a possible target state, the Cleveland Plain Dealer was quickly able to find foes of 'treatment not jail' reforms. "Stacey Frohnapfel, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services, said an initiative patterned after California's, set to take effect July 1, would be 'a step back for Ohio.' Defending a rapidly expanding drug court system, she told the paper, 'We would like to continue to grow the drug court system, which has resulted in cost savings and fewer jail days and less prison time.' She added that drug users often need the threat of prison to clean up their acts. "Zimmerman told the Plain Dealer that isn't enough. 'I think that there's a difference between making progress and a program actually working,' he said. 'If Ohio is still sending 3,000 people a year to prison for nonviolent drug use, then it's not working.'" Drafts of Florida, Ohio propositions. Prop. 36 Clones Split Legalization Groups African Americans Protest Conference, Call Legalization "Elitist" |
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