News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: Police Union Leader Rebukes Support Of Marijuana |
Title: | US NV: Police Union Leader Rebukes Support Of Marijuana |
Published On: | 2002-08-08 |
Source: | Las Vegas Sun (NV) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-22 20:55:31 |
POLICE UNION LEADER REBUKES SUPPORT OF MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
Metro Police's union not only opposes the initiative to legalize
marijuana but is asking the umbrella police lobbying organization that
endorsed the ballot question to reconsider its action, a union leader
said today.
"It is my intention to ask (the Nevada Conference of Police and
Sheriffs) board to reconvene and revisit the issues," said Detective
David Kallas, executive director of the Police Protective Association,
union for about 2,100 Metro police and corrections officers. "We are
adamantly opposed to legalization of marijuana."
NCOPS, a statewide police organization, announced Tuesday its board of
directors voted 9-0 to support the proposed constitutional change that
would decriminalize possession of up to 3 ounces of marijuana.
Andy Anderson, NCOPS president and former head of the Police
Protective Association, said the initiative will allow police to focus
on violent crimes instead of spending hours on paperwork booking
someone into jail on a marijuana possession charge.
The board is made up of two members from the PPA, two from the
Henderson Police union, two from the state law enforcement officers'
union and one each from the North Las Vegas Police and school police
unions along with Anderson.
Anderson said the board can call for another meeting, but added the
cops are missing the point of the initiative.
"We're not endorsing smoking marijuana, but when you have a majority
of people in the polls (saying decriminalize marijuana) you have to
get your head out of the sand and decide how to regulate it," Anderson
said. "I didn't say I want my grandkids or my kids to use marijuana.
Do you think it is hard for kids to get marijuana now? I'm saying
let's regulate it and make it more difficult."
But local cops have come out against the initiative and the
endorsement, saying 3 ounces of marijuana goes beyond personal use and
that it would create a new set of policing problems. Nevada changed
its marijuana laws last year, making it a misdemeanor for possession
of less than 1 ounce instead of a felony.
"One ounce is a lot for personal use; 3 ounces is ridiculous,"
Undersheriff Richard Winget said. "You can make 120 marijuana
cigarettes with 3 ounces. That's not for individual use; that amount
is for dealing."
Kallas, who cut short his vacation and returned to Las Vegas after
being told of NCOPS' endorsement, said he has spoken with the heads of
the North Las Vegas and Henderson police unions and neither
organization supports the marijuana proposal.
Winget said the police would do whatever possible to oppose the ballot
question.
"We are organizing with all local law enforcement to develop our
plan," he said.
Anderson said the state has already passed laws making possession of
less than an ounce not only a misdemeanor, but a crime that ends with
a citation issued not an arrest.
"There is a changing attitude in society," he said.
Metro Police's union not only opposes the initiative to legalize
marijuana but is asking the umbrella police lobbying organization that
endorsed the ballot question to reconsider its action, a union leader
said today.
"It is my intention to ask (the Nevada Conference of Police and
Sheriffs) board to reconvene and revisit the issues," said Detective
David Kallas, executive director of the Police Protective Association,
union for about 2,100 Metro police and corrections officers. "We are
adamantly opposed to legalization of marijuana."
NCOPS, a statewide police organization, announced Tuesday its board of
directors voted 9-0 to support the proposed constitutional change that
would decriminalize possession of up to 3 ounces of marijuana.
Andy Anderson, NCOPS president and former head of the Police
Protective Association, said the initiative will allow police to focus
on violent crimes instead of spending hours on paperwork booking
someone into jail on a marijuana possession charge.
The board is made up of two members from the PPA, two from the
Henderson Police union, two from the state law enforcement officers'
union and one each from the North Las Vegas Police and school police
unions along with Anderson.
Anderson said the board can call for another meeting, but added the
cops are missing the point of the initiative.
"We're not endorsing smoking marijuana, but when you have a majority
of people in the polls (saying decriminalize marijuana) you have to
get your head out of the sand and decide how to regulate it," Anderson
said. "I didn't say I want my grandkids or my kids to use marijuana.
Do you think it is hard for kids to get marijuana now? I'm saying
let's regulate it and make it more difficult."
But local cops have come out against the initiative and the
endorsement, saying 3 ounces of marijuana goes beyond personal use and
that it would create a new set of policing problems. Nevada changed
its marijuana laws last year, making it a misdemeanor for possession
of less than 1 ounce instead of a felony.
"One ounce is a lot for personal use; 3 ounces is ridiculous,"
Undersheriff Richard Winget said. "You can make 120 marijuana
cigarettes with 3 ounces. That's not for individual use; that amount
is for dealing."
Kallas, who cut short his vacation and returned to Las Vegas after
being told of NCOPS' endorsement, said he has spoken with the heads of
the North Las Vegas and Henderson police unions and neither
organization supports the marijuana proposal.
Winget said the police would do whatever possible to oppose the ballot
question.
"We are organizing with all local law enforcement to develop our
plan," he said.
Anderson said the state has already passed laws making possession of
less than an ounce not only a misdemeanor, but a crime that ends with
a citation issued not an arrest.
"There is a changing attitude in society," he said.
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