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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: Sandoval Says He 'Stands By' Opinion On Petitions
Title:US NV: Sandoval Says He 'Stands By' Opinion On Petitions
Published On:2005-01-04
Source:Nevada Appeal (Carson City, NV)
Fetched On:2008-01-17 04:39:29
SANDOVAL SAYS HE 'STANDS BY' OPINION ON PETITIONS

LAS VEGAS - Despite mounting pressure and the threat of a lawsuit, the
Nevada attorney general's office will not change an opinion that led
to the disqualification of initiative petitions to limit smoking in
public places and legalize marijuana.

Attorney General Brian Sandoval "stands by the opinion," Tom Sargent,
spokesman for Sandoval, said Monday. Sargent said reversing the
decision would defy a precedent the Nevada Supreme Court set in a
similar case in 1994.

A Washoe County District Court judge will review the issue Feb. 7 in
Reno.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada said Monday it will
represent the Marijuana Policy Project, a group that wants the
Legislature to consider letting adults possess up to one ounce of
marijuana for personal use.

"What we have is an utter mess," said Gary Peck, ACLU executive
director. "It disenfranchises the thousands and thousands of people
who signed onto these petitions with the expectations that the state
was going to follow its own rules, respect voters their first
amendment rights and have a fair process."

Peck said ACLU lawyers planned to file a federal lawsuit this
week.

"Unfortunately, we seem to be headed inexorably into federal court and
another costly lawsuit for the people of the State of Nevada," he said.

Nevada Secretary of State Dean Heller had asked Sandoval to reconsider
after an appeal from Robert Crowell, attorney for the Nevada Clean Air
initiative petition that seeks to limit smoking in public buildings.

Backers of the clean air petition

Crowell said Heller accepted an initiative petition to change medical
malpractice laws after the 2002 November election, and determined the
measure qualified for the ballot based on 10 percent of the voters in
the 2000 election.

Heller said there were enough signatures to qualify the malpractice
petition based on 10 percent of the voter turnout in 2000 and 2002.

Crowell said the health coalition relied on the advice of the
secretary of state in its initiative petition guide that only 51,337
signatures were needed and then agreed to the request by county
officials not to file the petition before the election because the
officials had too much work facing them.
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