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Mexican President will sign bill legalizing marijuana, cocaine, heroin and other drugs for personal use

Associated Press

May 2, 2006

MEXICO CITY -- Mexican President Vicente Fox will sign into law a measure that decriminalizes the possession of
 
May 4, 2006:

Amid US pressure,
Mexican president backs off
drug decriminalization bill


Whew, that was close.
They almost allowed a smidgen of freedom.
small amounts of marijuana, cocaine, heroin and other drugs for personal use, his spokesman said Tuesday.

Spokesman Ruben Aguilar defended the law, which was approved Friday by Mexico's Senate, despite criticism in the United States that it could increase casual drug use.

"The president is going to sign this law," said Aguilar, who called the legislation "a better tool ... that allows better action and better coordination in the fight against drug dealing."

"The government believes that this law represents progress, because it established
 
FILE PHOTO 
the minimum quantities that a citizen can carry for personal use," Aguilar said.

Under current Mexican law, judges can drop charges against people caught with drugs if they can prove they are addicts and if an expert certifies they were caught with "the quantity necessary for personal use."

The new bill makes the decriminalization automatic and drops the addict requirement -- automatically letting any "consumers" have drugs.

While police will still be able to detain people for public consumption or
 
Under current Mexican law, judges can drop charges against people caught with drugs if they can prove they are addicts and if an expert certifies they were caught with "the quantity necessary for personal use."

The new bill makes the decriminalization automatic and drops the addict requirement -- automatically letting any "consumers" have drugs.
possession of drugs, it appears that those caught could only be referred to a treatment program -- of which Mexico has few -- or have their names added to a registry of addicts.

On Friday, Mayor Jerry Sanders of San Diego, said he was "appalled" by the bill. The city of 1.3 million people is a short drive from the Mexican border town of Tijuana.

 
The list of illegal drugs approved for personal consumption by Mexico's Congress last week is enough to make one dizzy -- or worse. Cocaine. Heroin. LSD. Marijuana. PCP. Opium. Synthetic opiates. Mescaline. Peyote. Psilocybin mushrooms. Amphetamines. Methamphetamines.
"I certainly think we are going to see more drugs available in the United States," Sanders said. "We need to register every protest the American government can muster."

Under the new law, consumers may possess up to 25 milligrams of heroin, five grams of marijuana (about one-fifth of an ounce, or about four joints), or 0.5 grams of cocaine -- the equivalent of about four "lines," or half the standard street-sale quantity.

The law also establishes allowable quantities for other drugs, including LSD, ecstasy -- about two pills' worth -- and amphetamines.

However, the bill stiffens penalties for trafficking and possession of drugs -- even small quantities -- by government employees or near schools, and it maintains criminal penalties for drug sales.

It also gives local police more power to go after small-scale dealing.

As originally published

 
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There's much more than this at Unknown News.

 
Commentary by Helen & Harry Highwater:

If you fear freedom, decriminalization is frightening, horrible, ghastly news.

San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders fears freedom -- he says he's "appalled" by the bill. And who-knows-how-many thousands of narks, DEA agents, and local cops fear freedom, mostly because their jobs are based on arresting people who smoke, snort, or inject themselves with illegal substances.

But if you think freedom is a good idea -- if you think people ought to be able to do what they want with their own bodies, minds, and time -- then Mexico's decriminalization of drugs is terrific news.

For decades, the "war on drugs" has wasted billions of dollars, jailed hundreds of thousands of people, corrupted countless police officers, taught otherwise law-abiding citizens to be fearful of police, and daily doublecrossed America's promise of freedom.


Helen & Harry
Filed under:
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