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Steve Kubby returns to jail. Medi-pot patient, Prop 215 coauthor, w   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #1236 of 1505 |
 
Please forward. Article below is full of links. Go to the first web address
below, if necessary, to get to the article with the clickable links.
 
 
-------MarijuanaNews.com article begins-----
 
Top Story: Kubby to Return to Jail. Survival Depends on Marinol. Two and Half Years Probation to Follow. Triumph of Prosecutorial State. Special to MarijuanaNews.
Posted by Richard Cowan on 2006-03-14 16:20:00
Source:
 
Posted March 14, 2006
Special to MarijuanaNews.com
 
Having no choice, Steve Kubby pled guilty today to violating his probation and will have to return to Placer County jail for up to 60 days; however, it is expected that he will be released after serving just 20 days, inasmuch as the jail remains overcrowded.
 
Moreover, it is unlikely that Placer County would want to hold him beyond 20 days, because Steve has just enough Marinol to last him for that period. If Placer were to hold him longer they could then be confronted with a demand that they start paying for life-saving medicine for their prisoner, and we all know that would send the wrong message to children.
 
After he is released, he will then have to serve two and half years of felony probation, but no added time, and he will be allowed to use whole cannabis during probation. Of course, he will be homeless, his life in tatters, and he will be almost 60 years old with terminal cancer. The State of California and Canada will have spent huge sums to have brought him to this point. What a triumph of stupidity and evil!
 
As I have previously said, I think that it is unfortunate that this case is – however understandably – seen as just being about medical marijuana. Kubby needs cannabis to live, and the whole case began with an anonymous letter alleging that he was selling marijuana, but this case really should [stand out] as a complete failure of the California legal system. (And a disgrace to Canada, as well.)
 
 
It is difficult to evaluate all of the individual cases such as Kubby’s to quantify the problem with prosecutors and the courts, but the facts about the state’s enormous prison system are there for all to see. The prisons are both the means and the end of the criminal justice system. The “system” is responsible for the prisons and the prisons are the system’s ultimate tool. (The death penalty has only limited utility.) 
 
The February 24th 2005 edition of the The Economist reported,
 “The state's (California’s) imprisonment rate—455 out of every 100,000 people were inside in 2003—is a little below the national average and well behind Texas (702) and Louisiana (801); but it is still several times that of Britain or indeed any other developed country.
California's jails now house 163,000 prisoners (each at an annual cost of $31,000); that is more than France, Germany and the Netherlands combined.
 
In an American context, California's prisons stand out for two things: overcrowding and recidivism. The state has only 32 prisons, which hold twice as many people as they were designed for. By contrast, New York state has 65,000 inmates in 70 prisons and Florida has 82,000 in 121 facilities. Worse, California's “correctional facilities” singularly fail to correct: three in four prisoners will be convicted of another crime within three years—and three out of five will be back in prison. (Nationally, a quarter are back in prison for new crimes and another quarter are back in prison for parole violations.)…
 
The California Correctional Peace Officers Association (CCPOA), which represents 31,000 guards, has been a generous donor to governors from both parties—and has been well looked after itself. The average guard's salary rose from $14,400 in 1980 to $54,000 in 2002, almost twice the national average for a prison officer.”
 
On October 11, 2005, an article in the LA Times By Maura Dolan, reported,
"There is almost no aspect of California corrections, adult or juvenile, that is not subject to a court order, and almost all of those are the result of suits brought by the Prison Law Office," said Barry Krisberg, president of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency….
Earlier this year, U.S. District Judge Thelton Henderson reported that at least 34 inmates had died recently because of neglect, incompetence and "even cruelty" by medical staff. Henderson's action followed a lawsuit by the Prison Law Office.
On a tour of medical facilities at San Quentin, the judge observed a dentist who neither washed his hands nor changed his gloves after placing his hands in patients' mouths.  
 
"On average, an inmate in one of California's prisons needlessly dies every six to seven days due to constitutional deficiencies in the … medical delivery system," Henderson said.
 
Of course, we are supposedly doing all of this "for the children", so consider this Los Angeles Times editorial, STATE PRISONS' REVOLVING DOOR, An Education in Brutality, published on February 19, 2004, said,
 “The images of what goes on in California's juvenile prisons are vivid: Teenagers beat and stab others and are beaten themselves, in daily and expectable routines. Some are confined 23 hours a day in 4-by-8 cells, where for meals they must suck pulverized bologna and milk from a straw stuck through a small metal slit. The mentally ill are often thrown into predatory general populations, getting only sporadic medical treatment.

Five newly released studies recount in numbing detail this brutality of life for the 4,000 offenders locked up by the California Youth Authority.

At a hearing on the CYA today, Sen. Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles) plans to denounce the 11-prison system as "a fraud to the taxpayers, who expect rehabilitation and safer communities for the $80,000 they spend annually on every CYA ward
… a fraud to the parents who hope their children would be changed for the better, only to [see them] come out harder, angrier, more mentally unstable or more criminally sophisticated."
 
 
 
--------end of MarijuanaNews.com article-----------
 
 
---------------------
 


MMM (Global Million Marijuana March):
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cannabisaction
Newsweek, Nov. 14, 2005, page 36:
"The most recent evidence comes from autopsies of 44 prisoners who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan in U.S. custody. Most died under circumstances that suggest torture. The reports use words like 'strangulation,' 'asphyxiation' and 'blunt force injuries.' ...  A few months before the [Abu Ghraib] scandal broke [spring 2004], Coalition Provisional Authority polls showed Iraqi support at 63 percent. A month after Abu Ghraib, the number was 9 percent. Polls showed that 71 percent of Iraqis were surprised by the revelations."


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Wed Mar 15, 2006 12:15 pm

tents444
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For background, info, photos, and many links; go here: http://gallery.marihemp.com/auburn2006jan31 and http://gallery.marihemp.com/prisons and ...
Eco Man
tents444
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Mar 15, 2006
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