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| Former Drug Warrior Persecuted for Activism Uses Arrest to Push Jury Nullification | | Print | |
| Written by Alex Newman | ||||||||||
| Wednesday, 07 July 2010 10:30 | ||||||||||
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The TV cameras were already rolling because an unrelated fake bomb threat had been called in for that morning. So when Cooper showed up with “Jury Nullification” scrawled across his forehead and “Constitutional Obedience” written on his shirt, he got plenty of media coverage. Photo of prohibition protest: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (5)
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doNatas
said:
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marijuana prohibition corrupts Prisoners being held for the peaceful, non-violent possession, sale, transport or cultivation of cannabis hemp must be released immediately. Money and property seized must be returned. Criminal records must be wiped clean, amnesty granted and some sort of reparations paid for time served. These cannabis prisoners are the real victims of this monstrous crime against humanity called the “War on Drugs.” The United States is supposed to be a free country, yet those who choose to smoke or eat this mostly harmless drug are penalized. An American can go out and drink themself to death, but they cannot freely use a drug which is less toxic and less prone to making one out of control than alcohol. I say this is not only unfair, but also un-American! The police, prosecutors and prison guards should not be in charge of which herbal therapies people may use to treat their personal health problems. Federal Judge Francis Young in 1988 called “one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man.” |
Tonewah
said:
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Wow. Catch a public servant stealing money and get your house raided by SWAT for filing a false report. Unbelievable. The taxpayers of that area should be screaming for scalps. |
R. Wollus
said:
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END THE WAR!!! You know, I'm as anti-drugs as the next person, but the lives and families that have been destroyed because of this unconstitutional war are not a price I'm willing to pay. As much as I disagree with it, if people want to consume poison, I don't own them, so what can I really say about it if they aren't violating anyone's rights? Mr. Cooper and his family are in my prayers. I'm happy to see some coverage of jury nullification. There are plenty of situations these days where I think this is an appropriate course of action. I read somewhere the other day that virtually every American is a felon. Keep that in mind next time you are on a jury! With all these tens of thousands of pages of stupid, unconstitutional laws, how can a person ever know them or understand? |
Bill Harris
said:
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Peace on the Home Front One need not travel to China to find indigenous cultures lacking human rights. America leads the world in percentile behind bars, thanks to the ongoing open season on hippies, commies, and non-whites in the war on drugs. Cops get good performance reviews for shooting Phish-fans in a barrel. If we’re all about spreading liberty abroad, then why mix the message at home? Peace on the home front would enhance global credibility. The drug czar’s Rx for prison fodder costs dearly, as lives are flushed down expensive tubes. My shaman’s second opinion is that psychoactive plants are God’s gift. Behold, it’s all good. When Eve ate the apple, she knew a good apple, and an evil prohibition. Canadian Marc Emery was extradited to prison for helping American farmers reduce U. S. demand for Mexican pot. The CSA (Controlled Substances Act of 1970) reincarnates Al Capone, endangers homeland security, and throws good money after bad. Fiscal policy burns tax dollars to root out the number-one cash crop in the land, instead of taxing sales. Society rejected the plague of prohibition, but it mutated. Apparently, SWAT teams don’t need no stinking amendment. Nixon passed the CSA on the false assurance that the Schafer Commission would later justify criminalizing his enemies, but he underestimated Schafer’s integrity. No amendments can assure due process under an anti-science law without due process itself. Psychology hailed the breakthrough potential of LSD, until the CSA shut down research, and pronounced that marijuana has no medical use. |
lee schubert
said:
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... In the land that WAS known as freedom...a war was fought that cost over one trillion dollars and countless lives,that according to U,S. Federal judge Milton Shaydur,was lost before it began. |





Former Texas narcotics officer turned anti-drug-war 

