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News (Media Awareness Project) - US AZ: Attorney General Says He Might Consider Pot Legalization
Title:US AZ: Attorney General Says He Might Consider Pot Legalization
Published On:2008-12-24
Source:Sun, The (Yuma, AZ)
Fetched On:2008-12-26 05:35:53
ATTORNEY GENERAL SAYS HE MIGHT CONSIDER POT LEGALIZATION

PHOENIX - Attorney General Terry Goddard said Tuesday he might be willing
to consider legalizing marijuana if a way can be found to control its
distribution - and figure out who has been smoking it.

Goddard said marijuana sales make up 75 percent of the money that Mexican
cartels use for the other operations, including smuggling other drugs and
fighting the army and police in that country. He said that makes fighting
drug distribution here important to cut off that cash.

He acknowledged those profits could be slashed if possession of marijuana
were not a crime in Arizona. But Goddard said a number of other hurdles
remain before that even becomes a possibility.

Goddard's comments came after a press conference Tuesday announcing the
breakup of a major ring that police said has been responsible for bringing
about 400,000 pounds of marijuana across the border and into Arizona each
year since 2003.

The operation has so far led to the indictment of 59 people and the arrest
so far of 39 of them, some in this country legally and others who were not.

Phoenix Police Lt. Vince Piano said the operation was very sophisticated,
complete with specially designed heavy-duty trucks to actually let vehicles
drive over the border fence.

They also had solar-powered radio towers and a network of lookouts who told
the trucks, each carrying up to 2,500 pounds of marijuana, when to move and
when to hide under camouflage. He said there even was a system of "food
drops" to supply the drivers.

Piano said this operation was one of several under contract to Mexican drug
lords to transport the marijuana from the border through the Tohono O'odham
Reservation all the way to Phoenix.

Piano said busting this organization doesn't stop the flow of drugs, saying
this is one of several "transportation groups" working with the cartel. But
he said it disrupts at least part of the flow.

The issue of Arizona drug laws came up during questions about the operation
of drug cartels and the violence associated with their operations,
particularly in the Mexican state of Sinaloa.

"The key is, they will no longer exist when people don't buy marijuana,"
said Matthew Allen, special agent in charge of the office of investigations
for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. "This is a market-driven
economy and this is a market-driven activity."

Allen said the question of legalization to eliminate those profits is a
policy question.

"But if we're going to go down that road, what is the acceptable amount of
marijuana that you want a bus driver to have in their system," he continued.

"I believe it's zero," Goddard said later.

Goddard said there is a lot of time and money spent on enforcement
activities like the one that resulted in the bust announced Tuesday. He
said that requires "a hard look" at the issue.

But Goddard said it's not as simple as simply declaring it legal. He said
there would need to be some controls on who gets the drugs - and how much
they use.

"Right now I've not found, and do not know of, a way to make a prescription
control over marijuana as a consumer product. As long as we can't do that,
as long as we can't put it behind the counter and in a safe distribution, I
don't believe there's any way to make it legal."

Goddard said no one has found a way to put the kind of controls on
marijuana he would want before he would consider legalizing it.

"If they could do that, we could certainly cut the legs out of some of
these criminal activities. But until they do, we're going to have to
continue to go after the folks that are moving marijuana and are thereby
funding violent crimes throughout the hemisphere."

Allen backed up Goddard's statements that the smuggling operation is not
simply about marijuana.

He said Mexican cartels also are in the business of smuggling cocaine and
other drugs on behalf of other cartels in places like Colombia. He said
they make up the money they lose when those drugs are seized through the
profits they make selling marijuana in the United States.
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