Archive for the ‘420 law’ Category

REMEMBER, green flag compliance is NOT advocacy

but remember
green flag compliance training is not legal marijuana advocacy
green flag compliance guidelines are strict
green flag rules MUST be followed to obtain legal privilege

if you decide to accept the privilege
you must accept the responsibility

Advocacy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Advocacy is the pursuit of influencing outcomes — including public-policy and resource allocation decisions within political, economic, and social systems and institutions — that directly affect people’s current lives. (Cohen, 2001)

Therefore, advocacy can be seen as a deliberate process of speaking out on issues of concern in order to exert some influence on behalf of ideas or persons. Based on this definition, Cohen (2001) states that “ideologues of all persuasions advocate” to bring a change in people’s lives. However, advocacy has many interpretations depending on the issue at stake, which can be different from this initial value-neutral definition.

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Forms of advocacy

There are several forms of advocacy, which each represent a different approach in the way change is brought into society. One of the most popular forms is social justice advocacy.

Although it is true, the initial definition does not encompass the notions of power relations, people’s participation and a vision of a just society as promoted by social justice advocates. For them, advocacy represents the series of actions taken and issues highlighted to change the “what is” into a “what should be”, considering that this “what should be” is a more decent and a more just society (ib., 2001.) Those actions, which vary with the political, economical and social environment in which they are conducted, have several points in common (ib., 2001.) They:

  • question the way policy is administered
  • participate in the agenda setting as they raise significant issues
  • target political systems “because those systems are not responding to people’s needs”
  • are inclusive and engaging
  • propose policy solutions
  • open up space for public argumentation.

Some of the other forms of advocacy include:

  • Ideological advocacy: in this approach, groups fight, sometimes during protests, to advance their ideas in the decision-making circles.
  • Mass advocacy: is any type of action taken by large groups (petitions, demonstrations, etc.)
  • Interest-group advocacy: lobbying is the main tool used by interests groups doing mass advocacy. It is a form of action that does not always succeed at influencing political decision-makers as it requires resources and organisation to be effective.
  • Bureaucratic advocacy: people considered “experts” have more chance to succeed at presenting their issues to decision-makers. They use bureaucratic advocacy to influence the agenda, however at a slower pace.
  • Legislative advocacy: legislative advocacy is the “reliance on the state or federal legislative process” as part of a strategy to create change.(Loue, Lloyd and O’Shea, 2003)
  • Media advocacy: is “the strategic use of the mass media as a resource to advance a social or public policy initiative” (Jernigan and Wright, 1996.) In Canada for example, the Manitoba Public Insurance campaigns illustrate how media advocacy was used to fight alcohol and tobacco-related health issues. We can also consider the role of health advocacy and the media in “the enactment of municipal smoking bylaws in Canada between 1970 and 1995.” (Asbridge, 2004)
  • Budget advocacy: Budget advocacy is another aspect of advocacy that ensures proactive engagement of Civil Society Organizations with the government budget to make the government more accountable to the people and promote transparency. Budget advocacy also enables citizens and social action groups to compel the government to be more alert to the needs and aspirations of people in general and the deprived sections of the community.

Different contexts in which advocacy is used:

  • In a legal/law context: An ‘advocate’ is the title of a specific person who is authorized/appointed (in some way) to speak on behalf of a person in a legal process. See advocate.
  • In a political context: An ‘advocacy group’ is an organized collection of people who seek to influence political decisions and policy, without seeking election to public office. See interest group.
  • In a social care context: Both terms (and more specific ones such as ‘independent advocacy’) are used in the UK in the context of a network of interconnected organisations and projects which seek to benefit people who are in difficulty (primarily in the context of disability and mental health).
  • In the context of inclusion: Citizen Advocacy organisations (citizen advocacy programmes) seek to cause benefit by reconnecting people who have become isolated. Their practice was defined in two key documents: CAPE, and Learning from Citizen Advocacy Programs. See Citizen Advocacy organisations.

Advocacy groups

Advocacy is led by advocates or, when they are organized in groups as is the case most of the time, advocacy groups. Advocacy groups as defined by Young and Everritt (2004, 5) are different from political parties which “seek to influence government policy by governing.” They are “any organization that seeks to influence government policy, but not to govern.” This definition includes social movements, sometimes network of organizations which are also focused on encouraging social change. Social movements try to either influence governments or, like the environmental movement, to influence people’s ideas or actions.

Today, advocacy groups contribute to democracy in many ways (ib., 2004.) They have five key functions:

  • Give a voice to (misrepresented) citizen interests
  • Mobilize citizens to participate in the democratic process
  • Support the development of a culture of democracy
  • Assist in the development of better public policy
  • Ensure governments’ accountability to citizens.

In comparison to other countries and other the last thirty years, an increasing number (40 percent) of the Canadian population is member of an organization which has had an advocacy role and has tried to achieve political change. Such a level of participation is a positive indicator of the health of the democracy in Canada (ib., 2004.)

Transnational advocacy

Advocates and advocacy groups represent a wide range of categories and support several issues as listed on World Advocacy. The Advocacy Institute, a US-based global organization, is dedicated to strengthening the capacity of political, social, and economic justice advocates to influence and change public policy (Cohen, de la Vega & Watson, 2001.)

The phenomenon of globalization draws a special attention to advocacy beyond countries’ borders. The core existence of networks such as World Advocacy or the Advocacy Institute demonstrates the increasing importance of transnational advocacy and international advocacy. Transnational advocacy networks are more likely to emerge around issues where external influence is necessary to ease the communication between internal groups and their own 1 government. Groups of advocates willing to further their mission also tend to promote networks and to meet with their internal counterparts to exchange ideas (Keck and Sikkink, 1998.)

See also

References

  • Asbridge, M. 2004. Public place restrictions on smoking in Canada: assessing the role of the state, media, science and public health advocacy. Social science & medicine 58(1):13-24.
  • Cohen, D., R. de la Vega, G. Watson. 2001. Advocacy for social justice. Bloomfield, CT: Kumarian Press Inc.
  • Jerningan, D.H. and P. Wright. 1996. Media advocacy: lessons from community experiences. Journal of Public Health Policy Vol.17, No.3: 306-330.
  • Keck, M.E. and K. Sikkink. 1998. Activists beyond borders: advocacy networks in international politics. Baltimore, MD: Cornell University Press.
  • Loue, S., L.S. Lloyd, D. J. O’shea. 2003. Community health advocacy. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
  • Young, L. And J. Everitt. 2004. Advocacy groups. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press

External links

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Regulatory compliance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Regulatory compliance describes the goal that corporations or public agencies aspire to in their efforts to ensure that personnel are aware of and take steps to comply with relevant laws and regulations.

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International Compliance

The International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) produces international standards such as ISO17799. The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) produces international standards in the electrotechnology area.

Compliance in the USA

In general, compliance means conforming to a specification or policy, standard or law that has been clearly defined.

Corporate scandals and breakdowns such as the Enron case in 2001 have highlighted the need for stronger compliance regulations for publicly listed companies. The most significant regulation in this context is the Sarbanes-Oxley Act developed by two U.S. congressmen, Senator Paul Sarbanes and Representative Michael Oxley in 2002 which defined significant tighter personal responsibility of corporate top management for the accuracy of reported financial statements.

Compliance in the USA generally means compliance with laws and regulations. These laws can have criminal or civil penalties or can be regulations. The definition of what constitutes an effective compliance plan has been elusive. Most authors, however, continue to cite the guidance provided by the United States Sentencing Commission in Chapter 8 of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.

On October 12 2006, the U.S. Small Business Administration re-launched Business.gov which provides a single point of access to government services and information that help businesses comply with government regulations.

There are a number of other regulations such as GLBA, FISMA, and HIPAA. In some cases other compliance frameworks (such as COBIT) or standards (NIST) inform on how to comply with the regulations.

Compliance in Australia

Standards Australia revised the standard titled "AS 3806 - Compliance Programs". While many aspects of the original standard produced in 1998 standard appear in the 2006 version there are additional principles covered. The regulators in Australia continue to endorse and encourage (by regulation) the use of the standard when establishing a compliance framework.

The regulators are the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA).

Compliance demands in the superannuation industry continue to increase due to the new licensing regime implemented by APRA. The new licensing regime requires trustees of superannuation funds to demonstrate to APRA that they have adequate resources (human, technology and financial), risk management systems and appropriate skills and expertise to manage the superannuation fund. The licensing regime has lifted the bar for superannuation trustees with a significant number of small to medium size superannuation funds exiting the Industry due to the increasing risk and compliance demands.

Compliance in the UK

There is considerable regulation in the UK, some of which is from EU legislation. Various areas are policed by different bodies, such as the FSA (Financial Services Authority), Environment Agency and Scottish Environment Protection Agency, Information Commissioner's Office and others.

Important compliance issues for all organisations large and small include the Data Protection Act 1998 and, for the public sector, Freedom of Information Act 2000.

Combined Code issued by the London Stock Exchange (LSE) is the Sarbanes-Oxley equivalent in the UK.

Definitions Related to Compliance

Compliance data is defined as all data belonging or pertaining to enterprise or included in the law, which can be used for the purpose of implementing or validating compliance. It is the set of all data that is relevant to a governance officer or to a court of law for the purposes of validating consistency, completeness, or compliance

See also

External links

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gina our automated mom for green flag compliance reminds you that medical marijuana green flag rules is NOT advocation for legalized marijuana

Marijuana legalization

expected to go to ballot in California

By John Byrne
Wednesday, October 28th, 2009 — 8:09 am

 

 

SCHWARZENEGGER Marijuana legalization expected to go to ballot in California

Opponents of a plan to legalize marijuana for personal possession in California have conceded that supporters of the measure are likely to get their proposal on a statewide ballot, the New York Times revealed in a longer story about possible legalization Wednesday.

California lawmakers are taking up a bill that would legalize, tax and regulate marijuana, a first in the United States. Officials estimate the bill could bring in an additional $1.4 billion a year, a huge sum of money in a state bedeviled by financial woes.

While the “legislature is uncertain, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, has indicated he would be open to a “robust debate” on the issue,” the Times wrote.

Perhaps equally important, the paper adds:

California voters are also taking up legalization. Three separate initiatives are being circulated for signatures to appear on the ballot next year, all of which would permit adults to possess marijuana for personal use and allow local governments to tax it. Even opponents of legalization suggest that an initiative is likely to qualify for a statewide vote.

All of us in the movement have had the feeling that we’ve been running into the wind for years,” said James P. Gray, a retired judge in Orange County who has been outspoken in support of legalization. “Now we sense we are running with the wind.”Proponents of the leading ballot initiative have collected nearly 300,000 signatures since late September, supporters say, easily on pace to qualify for the November 2010 general election. Richard Lee, a longtime marijuana activist who is behind the measure, says he has raised nearly $1 million to hire professionals to assist volunteers in gathering the signatures.

“Voters are ripping the petitions out of our hands,” Mr. Lee said.

Despite widespread support, however, the bill would almost certainly run into thorns with federal law, which classifies marijuana as an illegal substance. Some supporters are encouraged, though, by the Obama Administration’s announcement that they will not prosecute those involved in the medical marijuana trade.

Lee, the organizer, says he intends to spend $20 million on a campaign to win passage of the measure.

Numerous states have already decriminalized personal possession of small amounts of marijuana, though none have legalized it.

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California marijuana

legalization debate at Capitol

Posted: 10/28/2009 12:00:00 AM PDT

Updated: 10/29/2009 06:46:16 AM PDT

 

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// ]]>SACRAMENTO — Marijuana legalization advocates and law enforcement officials duked it out in a three-hour legislative hearing Wednesday on whether making the drug legal under state law would be good public policy.

Advocates said legalization and regulation could bring as much as $1.4 billion in state and local excise and sales tax revenue per year; control the drug’s potency; do more to keep it out of children’s hands; and end a centurylong double standard in which alcohol and tobacco — which they say are more harmful — are legal while marijuana isn’t, leading to a war on drugs particularly destructive to people of color.

Law enforcement officials testified the harms caused by marijuana legalization would far outweigh whatever tax revenue it might bring — more, not less, use by children; more people driving under the influence, causing more injuries and deaths; decreased worker productivity that could hurt the economy; and a still-thriving black market.

The hearing was convened by Assembly Public Safety Committee Chairman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, who earlier this year introduced a bill to legalize and tax marijuana under a system not unlike that used for alcohol. Even as several proposed ballot measures for legalization seek to qualify for next year’s ballot, Ammiano is rewriting his bill to bring it forward again in January, and Wednesday’s hearing was supposed to help him gather input for that revamp. First up Wednesday were the Legislative Analyst’s Office, which said state and local law enforcement could save “several tens of millions of dollars each year” by no longer pursuing marijuana cases, and the Board of Equalization, which has estimated $1.4 billion in annual revenue from taxes on legalized marijuana.

Then came the lawyers. Drug Policy Alliance staff attorney Tamar Todd and American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Allen Hopper testified California is free to criminalize or not criminalize whatever it wants, and can and should chart its own course as a laboratory for new social and economic policy.

But Martin Mayer, general counsel to the California Peace Officers’ Association and the California Police Chiefs Association, underscored there would be no protection from federal law enforcement agencies arresting, charging and prosecuting Californians for violating the federal marijuana ban.

California Peace Officers’ Association President John Standish said there’s “no way marijuana legalization could protect or promote society — in fact, it radically diminishes it” by impairing educational ability, worker productivity, traffic safety and drug-related crime rates.

Ammiano asked whether police resources now used to fight marijuana would be better spent fighting harder, more harmful drugs such as methamphetamine.

“That’s like, ‘When did you stop beating your wife?’”‰” Standish replied, calling marijuana and methamphetamine “both equally critical problems our society needs to address.”

Sara Simpson, acting assistant chief of the state Justice Department’s Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, said much of California’s major marijuana cultivation is run by Mexican drug cartels on remote public lands, and she recited a litany of violent and deadly clashes with armed guards at such sites. Such growing operations also are environmentally devastating, she said, and produce marijuana far more potent than that used just years ago. There’s no reason to believe the cartels would adhere to state laws on cultivation, potency and taxation any more than they adhere to prohibition now, she said.

Rosalie Pacula, co-director of the Drug Policy Research Center at renowned think-tank RAND Corp., said prohibition has kept marijuana prices high, and legalization with heavy taxation that elevates marijuana’s price far above the cost of its production will lead to a thriving black market.

But Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice Executive Director Dan Macallair said arrest statistics from the past 20 years show California law enforcement is far more focused on prosecuting simple possession and use than cultivation and sales. Various counties are more or less tolerant of marijuana use, he said, a lack of consistency and continuity that could be solved by regulation.

And retired Orange County Superior Court Judge Jim Gray said the state can allow and regulate marijuana without condoning its use just like alcohol and tobacco, but any legalization legislation must ban advertising lest marijuana use become glamorized.

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Bob Egelko:

Feds vs. state pot war down the road?

Now that the Obama administration says it won’t arrest medical marijuana patients and suppliers who are following their own state laws, a Northern California congressman wants the same leeway for those who are already being prosecuted.

Currently, someone who’s charged in federal court with growing or selling marijuana can’t argue that he or she was just doing what’s allowed by the law of California or one of the 13 other states that recognize the medical use of cannabis. A bill introduced Tuesday by Rep. Sam Farr, D-Monterey, would change that.

Farr’s H.R. 3939 wouldn’t legalize medical marijuana under federal law. But it would require a not-guilty verdict if the defendant was complying with state law, even if a future presidential administration repealed the guidelines announced by Attorney General Eric Holder earlier this month.

“This bipartisan bill is about compassion and states’ rights,” said Farr.

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach, a co-sponsor, said, “The federal government should never have overridden state law on this issue to begin with, and this legislation will prevent them from doing it again.”

It’s yet another attempt to get Congress to soften the federal law that prohibits all possession, cultivation and transfer of marijuana and has been used by successive administrations to go after medical pot suppliers in California.

A group of Democrats and libertarian Republicans has been trying for years to get the feds to lay off marijuana dispensaries and growers in states where they operate legally. They’ve been beaten back by law enforcement interests and presidential drug czars who argue that medical pot is a myth and a smokescreen for legalization.

Whether the Obama administration follows the same course remains to be seen.

In Sacramento, meanwhile, Assemblyman Tom Ammiano’s bill to legalize marijuana for personal use in California in being heard this morning before the Assembly Public Safety Committee. If the San Francisco Democrat’s AB390 becomes law, or voters approve any of the circulating legalization initiatives next November, get ready for another state-federal drug war.

Bob Egelko covers legal issues for The Chronicle. E-mail him at begelko@sfchronicle.com.

Posted By: Michael Collier (Email) | October 28 2009 at 11:33 AM

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kamala

make this the green flag rules for california

as the next attorney general

jerry

support these green flag rules

in your unofficial run for govenor

++++++++++++++++++++++++

amend the 2010 california attorney general

compassionate care guidelines to read:

make all compassionate care participants take

green flag rules compliance education training annually

like this dmv list of  schools for car dealer pre-licensing

make all caregivers hold a green flag rules license

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make all green flag caregivers post a bond

like this bond requirement for licensed car dealers

make all green flag caregivers submit fingerprints

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make all green flag caregivers obtain local zoning approval

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Libertarians Applaud

Federal Reprieve For Medical Marijuana

October 21st, 2009 ·

From CalFreedom.net:

The U.S. Justice Department on Monday issued new guidelines telling prosecutors they “should not focus federal resources in your States on individuals whose actions are in clear and unambiguous compliance with existing state laws providing for the medical use of marijuana.”  Below is a roundup of reactions from libertarians. At the end is a must-see video from Reason TV in which Drew Carey reports on the ongoing efforts of the Obama Justice Dept. to sentence Californian Charles Lynch to five years in prison for dispensing marijuana to the parents of a teenage cancer victim.

The Libertarian Party: This is a small step in the right direction. The federal government currently wastes tremendous resources in the War on Drugs, creating a huge, vicious, violent black market. This new policy will reduce the damage and destruction, and it will hopefully end some of the unjust prosecution of peaceful medical marijuana providers and patients.  The LP has long called for the repeal of laws that criminalize the medicinal or recreational use of drugs.

Article continues at CalFreedom.net

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US vows

crackdown on

medical marijuana

By correspondent Kim Landers for The World Today

 

 

 

Marijuana 'collectives' could be the answer to ensuring legitimate LA distribution for medicinal purposes.

Marijuana ‘collectives’ could be the answer to ensuring legitimate LA distribution for medicinal purposes. (Victoria Police: supplied)

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Officials in the United States are vowing to crack down on medical marijuana facilities even as the Obama administration signals a new hands-off policy on the drug.

Los Angeles officials have been agonising for two years over a move to introduce what they call sensible guidelines to help regulate the booming industry.

In the US, 14 states have laws allowing the use of medical marijuana, but no state has gone further than California and no city has gone further than LA, where there are more marijuana dispensaries than public schools.

Brian Berens is the owner of Green Oasis, a medical marijuana dispensary in LA.

“Daily I would say we get about 30 to 50 people in a day. We service the local community and most of the people live within two miles of the dispensary,” he said.

“Our collective is a little bit different than most; we’re a large operation, we have a second floor – we have a vapour lounge which is much like an Amsterdam cafe.”

He says his medical marijuana cooperative complies with state laws, but the city of Los Angeles is vowing to eradicate what it calls the illegal sales of marijuana in many of the city’s dispensaries.

Legitimate sales

David Berger, an assistant city attorney for the city of Los Angeles, says not even 10 per cent of the dispensaries are selling marijuana for legitimate reasons.

“How many places are there selling marijuana? About a thousand – how many of them are genuinely supplying medical marijuana to people legitimately in need? Perhaps a hundred,” he said.

“What these other places are doing is basically saying, ‘if you’re a recreational user, if you just want to get high, find a doctor who for $150 will write you a recommendation, come in here on a nod and a wink and we will give you marijuana’.”

The city of Los Angeles says California state law only allows the exchange of marijuana between growers and patients who are members of a cooperative and that it has to be on a non-profit, non-cash basis.

But Mr Berger says that for the past two years, medical marijuana dispensaries have mushroomed in the city.

“How did it happen? It’s because the law that allowed this to come into effect was very poorly written and expressed in very broad terms,” he said.

“And you know the emotion of allowing seriously ill people to obtain some relief was used to basically allow a poorly written law into effect.”

‘For medicinal use only’

LA is now trying to mount a crackdown. The council will debate an ordinance next month that introduces strict new rules about medical marijuana dispensaries.

Mr Berger says marijuana collectives, not shops, is the way forward.

“It has to be a collective, not a shop, a collective, and a collective is basically a group of people who come together for a common purpose,” he said.

“In this case, it’s to cultivate marijuana for medicinal use only and only amongst themselves. They cannot sell it.

“All they can do is share it amongst themselves and share the costs of cultivating the marijuana.”

He also says the dispensaries will not be able to have more than two kilograms of marijuana on the premises at any one time.

No on-site consumption will be allowed and the collectives will not be able to be within 300 metres of schools, parks or other collectives.

Threat of legal action

But Mr Berens says the owners of medical marijuana facilities will fight the ordinance in court if it is passed.

“I don’t know if they will be able to ratify ordinances in November – this might be just a lot of lip service for the public,” he said.

“Even if they do, we have already notified Los Angeles of certain points in the proposed ordinances that our attorney will sue them if they approve them.”

While the city of Los Angeles tries to crack down on medical marijuana dispensaries, the Obama administration has told federal authorities not to arrest or prosecute medical marijuana users and suppliers who are not violating local or state laws.

In a statement, US Attorney General Eric Holder says: “It will not be a priority to use federal resources to prosecute patients with serious illnesses or their caregivers who are complying with state laws on medical marijuana.”

“But we will not tolerate drug traffickers who hide behind claims of compliance with state law to mask activities that are clearly illegal,” the statement adds.

The city of Los Angeles says its planned crackdown would comply with these guidelines.

It says the Obama administration is making it clear that its hands-off policy towards medical marijuana only applies to places that are complying with state and local law.

But Mr Berger thinks the Obama administration’s policy is the seed from which the movement to legalise all marijuana will grow.

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.--(Business Wire)--
Cannabis Science Inc. (OTCBB: CBIS) an emerging pharmaceutical cannabis company
is very pleased to announce that has added four prominent attorneys, who
specialized in marijuana-related cases, to its Policy Advisory Board, as medical

marijuana legalization moves closer with President Obama`s New Medical Marijuana
Policies and initiatives.

Cannabis Science Inc., President & CEO, Dr. Robert Melamede Ph.D., stated, "We
will continue to add teams of industry experts to our Company. We are honored

that our Policy Advisory Board is expanding with some of the nation`s top
medical marijuana attorneys. Obviously, we are operating in an area where the
laws are evolving very rapidly, and we are pleased to have so many experienced

attorneys on board, helping steer the company through these complex and evolving
opportunities for us. More professionals will be added who are expert in other
relevant fields, such as FDA procedures and state and federal laws. These new

outstanding additions to the CBIS team will provide the Company with an expanded
base of knowledge to build on. As noted yesterday, the new policy means that
state compliant intrastate research in Colorado, California and other states

with medical marijuana laws are now protected from federal prosecution."

The four new additions to the Cannabis Science Policy Advisory Board

Robert Raich

Robert A. Raich practices law in Oakland, California, and is a graduate of

Harvard University and the University of Texas School of Law. He is one of the
most respected attorneys in the area of medical marijuana. He is General Counsel
of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, and was one of the attorneys in the

U.S. Supreme Court case, United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Coop. and
another federal medical cannabis case. He is a member of the California Attorney
General's Medical Marijuana Task Force (Chairman, Caregiver Issues

Subcommittee).

Sean T. McAllister

Sean T. McAllister is a public interest attorney with offices in Denver and
Summit County. Sean has been involved with drug policy reform efforts for over a
decade. He serves as the Chair of the Board of Directors of Sensible Colorado.

Sean is a lifetime member of the NORML Legal Committee. He is a member and Board
member of the Colorado Criminal Defense Bar. He helped start the Colorado Bar
Association Criminal Sentencing Project in 2005 to focus on criminal justice and

drug policy reform. Recently, Sean was appointed to the Governor`s Drug Policy
Task Force, which is working on reducing drug-sentencing laws to save the state
money while maintaining public safety. Along with Brian Vicente, Sean recently

founded the Canna-Business Institute designed to educate dispensary owners and
caregivers on how to legally operate medical marijuana businesses in Colorado.

Warren Edson

Warren Edson is an experienced criminal defense lawyer in Colorado, having taken

part in over 1,000 trials. He is also one of the organizers of Colorado's
Medical Marijuana Law, Amendment 20, and is a Lifetime Member, NORML Legal
Committee, and is a member, Colorado Criminal Defense Bar, and the National

Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and is a Board Member, Colorado NORML.

Robert J. Corry, Jr.

Robert J. Corry, Jr. is a Denver-based civil rights and criminal defense
attorney, specializing in medical marijuana, who has successfully litigated

several high profile cases around the country. He is admitted to the bars of
Colorado, California, and Washington, D.C., federal courts in these
jurisdictions, as well as the U.S. Supreme Court. Mr. Corry earned his law

degree from Stanford University.

About Cannabis Science, Inc.

Cannabis Science, Inc. is at the forefront of medical marijuana research and
development. The Company works with world authorities on phytocannabinoid

science targeting critical illnesses, and adheres to scientific methodologies to
develop, produce, and commercialize phytocannabinoid-based pharmaceutical
products. In sum, we are dedicated to the creation of cannabis-based medicines,

both with and without psychoactive properties, to treat disease and the symptoms
of disease, as well as for general health maintenance.

This Press Release includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of

Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Act
of 1934. A statement containing works such as "anticipate," "seek," intend,"
"believe," "plan," "estimate," "expect," "project," "plan," or similar phrases

may be deemed "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Some or all of the events or results
anticipated by these forward-looking statements may not occur. Factors that

could cause or contribute to such differences include the future U.S. and global
economies, the impact of competition, and the Company's reliance on existing
regulations regarding the use and development of cannabis-based drugs. Cannabis

Science, Inc. does not undertake any duty nor does it intend to update the
results of these forward-looking statements.

Cannabis Science Inc.
Dr. Robert J. Melamede, President & CEO, 1-888-889-0888
info@cannabisscience.com

www.cannabisscience.com
or
Peter Glaser, Investor Relations, 1-954-687-3717
info@cannabisscience.com
www.cannabisscience.com

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gina our automated mom asks : is san francisco REALLY the model for medical marijuana

Why Is L.A.’s District Attorney

Aiding and Abetting

Mexican Drug Cartels?

By Bruce Mirken, Daily News
http://www.alternet.org/story/143310/

Last week, Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley announced a sweeping new plan to boost the profits of Mexican drug cartels, a plan almost certain to increase the slaughter these vicious gangs are perpetrating on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border.

Of course, Cooley didn’t call it that. He claimed, on dubious legal grounds, that all medical marijuana dispensaries in the county are illegal and announced plans to crack down on them. While no one denies that L.A.’s attempts – or, more accurately, nonattempts – to regulate these operations have been a mess, Cooley’s crackdown is guaranteed to make a bad situation worse.

While state law is not as precise as it might be in setting legal parameters for dispensing medical marijuana, guidelines issued last year by state Attorney General Jerry Brown make clear that dispensing collectives are legal and can include storefront operations.

“It is the opinion of this Office that a properly organized and operated collective or cooperative that dispenses medical marijuana through a storefront may be lawful under California law,” the guidelines state, so long as other requirements are met.

It may well be that some are operating outside these guidelines, but until and unless Cooley closely inspects their operations, he is simply making things up. That’s not how law enforcement should operate.

But even if Cooley were right on legal grounds, as policy his stand borders on the insane.

California law unmistakably gives patients the right to use and possess marijuana for medical purposes when recommended by their physician. And a flood of medical research over the last several years – much of it conducted by the University of California – has confirmed that marijuana can indeed provide safe, effective relief for a number of conditions, including certain hard-to-treat types of excruciating nerve pain.

So the question facing local leaders is not whether patients can have medical marijuana, but how they will obtain it. Will it be from licensed businesses operating under appropriate rules and regulations, or from drug dealers on the streets? Does Cooley really believe it’s better for either patients or communities to have the state’s medical marijuana patients – who number more than 200,000 by most estimates – getting their medicine from street dealers?

Sending patients to the streets for their medicine is clearly dangerous, subjecting sick people to risky transactions in order to purchase medicine of unknown quality, purity and origin. But it’s the question of origin that should alarm all of us.

We know that a significant amount of street marijuana can be traced to the murderous Mexican cartels – vicious gangs who make around two-thirds of their profits from the illicit marijuana trade, according to U.S. and Mexican officials. We know that these gangs are operating in at least 230 U.S. cities, including Los Angeles, Hacienda Heights and Garden Grove.

A mass shutdown of medical marijuana dispensaries will simply hand these thugs a massive new pool of customers and millions of dollars in extra profits. There is a better way.

The experience of other cities, including Oakland and San Francisco, has shown that well-crafted regulations can allow medical marijuana patients to access their medicine safely, from well-run organizations that follow the law and respect their neighborhoods.

In San Francisco, medical marijuana dispensaries have simply ceased being controversial, as explained last year by C.W. Nevius, arguably the San Francisco Chronicle’s most conservative local columnist:

“Quietly, with little fanfare, San Francisco is on the way to becoming a model for medical marijuana clubs done the right way. Exploitative, profit-hungry drug clubs are being forced out and community-based, patient-friendly ones are becoming the norm. Neighbors have shut down dispensaries in school zones, and patient services have been increased.”

It’s long past time for California’s legislature to set clear, statewide standards and licensing rules for medical marijuana providers. But until then, local officials like Cooley need to use common sense and not pursue policies that will simply enrich murderous thugs.

Bruce Mirken is communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project.

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Congratulations!

The New Federal Guidelines

are a Victory for Patients

This morning, the U.S. Department of Justice issued new guidelines on medical marijuana. These guidelines are a big victory for medical marijuana patients. There is still much more work to be done, but this is a great step in the right direction.

The Federal guidelines are directed at U.S. Attorneys in states that have adopted medical use laws. In the words of US Attorney General Eric Holder:

“It will not be a priority to use federal resources to prosecute patients with serious illnesses or their caregivers who are complying with state laws on medical marijuana, but we will not tolerate drug traffickers who hide behind claims of compliance with state law to mask activities that are clearly illegal.”

Thank you for helping make this happen. Your emails, phone calls, and activism helped shift the debate in America!

For the first time, the US Department of Justice is formally advising prosecutors not to interfere with medical marijuana patients in medical marijuana states. This is a big deal.

We will continue to work with President Obama, the Justice Department, and the U.S. Congress to establish a comprehensive national policy, but it’s good to know that in the meantime states can implement medical marijuana laws without interference from the federal government.

It is worth remembering that during the Bush Administration, there were more than 200 federal raids in California alone. Even now, the federal government is prosecuting more than two dozen medical marijuana cases in which defendants are prevented from using medical evidence.

There is much more work to be done. But thank you for helping us get this far.

Sincerely,

Steph Sherer
Executive Director
Americans for Safe Access

P.S. As we continue our work, we could use your help. Consider making a contribution to ASA today.

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