T
The420Guy
Guest
HILO -- Angered by police raids on medical marijuana users, some Hawaii
County Council members strongly urged acting Police Chief Lawrence Mahuna
this week to refocus drug enforcement on crystal methamphetamine.
"What I see is a paramilitary force outside of civilian control,"
Councilman Curtis Tyler told Mahuna, who became acting chief after the
retirement of Chief James Correa last week.
"Get real," Tyler demanded Tuesday during a Council committee meeting.
"People are dying (from methamphetamine)," he said.
Referring to a recent incident in which police operating from a helicopter
destroyed three marijuana plants belonging to a medical marijuana user in
Puna, Tyler said: "Let's try to protect our community instead of rappelling
out of helicopters. This is outrageous what's going on in this community."
"I hope you will say no one will ever encroach on anyone's constitutional
rights," Tyler said.
A subdued Mahuna, who is normally soft-spoken anyway, answered that police
are "bound" to protect constitutional rights.
Regarding new police rules that recognize the rights of registered medical
marijuana users, Mahuna said: "We will comply with these rules and
regulations as best we can. Each one of our officers will enforce the law
with the proper perspective."
Mahuna's comments followed testimony from Kona medical marijuana user
Rhonda Robison, who played a videotape of her own arrest last month.
On the tape, a vice officer informs her the marijuana supplies of the three
medical users at her house are not legal because they are not "definitively
separated," a version of the law which state Public Safety head Ted Sakai
later said was not accurate.
After seeing the tape, Mahuna said, "It was an eye-opener for me."
Allegations of misconduct by officers in the raid are being investigated,
he said.
Robison said she lost her job in a law office because of the raid.
Cancer patient Kealoha Wells, who lives with Robison and her husband, said
she lost five pounds after the raid. With her marijuana supply confiscated
by police, she could not eat because as soon as she did, she vomited, she said.
Councilwoman Nancy Pisicchio said police should go after crystal
methamphetamine, also known as ice, "the real problems that's killing people."
Councilwomen Julie Jacobson and Bobbie Jean Leithead-Todd both called for
more money to fight ice.
Federal, state, and county officials will hold a "Methamphetamine Summit"
on the island Aug. 27.
An invitation letter to the event says ice arrests increased 431 percent on
the island from 1997 to 2000.
State Child Protective Services reports that it had to remove hundreds of
children from their homes in recent years due to family problems with ice
and other drugs, the letter says.
A religious marijuana advocate, the Rev. Dennis Shields, cited a 1994
federally funded report by Patricia Morgan which found that the ice problem
in Honolulu began after 1987, partly because marijuana enforcement made
that substance scarce and almost as expensive as ice.
Not all Council members joined Tyler's criticism of police. Councilman and
former police Capt. Leningrad Elarionoff called Tyler "out of line."
Pubdate: Thu, 15 Aug 2002
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2002 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact: letters@starbulletin.com
Website: Honolulu Star-Advertiser | Hawaii News, Sports, Weather and Entertainment
Details: MapInc (Hawaii)
County Council members strongly urged acting Police Chief Lawrence Mahuna
this week to refocus drug enforcement on crystal methamphetamine.
"What I see is a paramilitary force outside of civilian control,"
Councilman Curtis Tyler told Mahuna, who became acting chief after the
retirement of Chief James Correa last week.
"Get real," Tyler demanded Tuesday during a Council committee meeting.
"People are dying (from methamphetamine)," he said.
Referring to a recent incident in which police operating from a helicopter
destroyed three marijuana plants belonging to a medical marijuana user in
Puna, Tyler said: "Let's try to protect our community instead of rappelling
out of helicopters. This is outrageous what's going on in this community."
"I hope you will say no one will ever encroach on anyone's constitutional
rights," Tyler said.
A subdued Mahuna, who is normally soft-spoken anyway, answered that police
are "bound" to protect constitutional rights.
Regarding new police rules that recognize the rights of registered medical
marijuana users, Mahuna said: "We will comply with these rules and
regulations as best we can. Each one of our officers will enforce the law
with the proper perspective."
Mahuna's comments followed testimony from Kona medical marijuana user
Rhonda Robison, who played a videotape of her own arrest last month.
On the tape, a vice officer informs her the marijuana supplies of the three
medical users at her house are not legal because they are not "definitively
separated," a version of the law which state Public Safety head Ted Sakai
later said was not accurate.
After seeing the tape, Mahuna said, "It was an eye-opener for me."
Allegations of misconduct by officers in the raid are being investigated,
he said.
Robison said she lost her job in a law office because of the raid.
Cancer patient Kealoha Wells, who lives with Robison and her husband, said
she lost five pounds after the raid. With her marijuana supply confiscated
by police, she could not eat because as soon as she did, she vomited, she said.
Councilwoman Nancy Pisicchio said police should go after crystal
methamphetamine, also known as ice, "the real problems that's killing people."
Councilwomen Julie Jacobson and Bobbie Jean Leithead-Todd both called for
more money to fight ice.
Federal, state, and county officials will hold a "Methamphetamine Summit"
on the island Aug. 27.
An invitation letter to the event says ice arrests increased 431 percent on
the island from 1997 to 2000.
State Child Protective Services reports that it had to remove hundreds of
children from their homes in recent years due to family problems with ice
and other drugs, the letter says.
A religious marijuana advocate, the Rev. Dennis Shields, cited a 1994
federally funded report by Patricia Morgan which found that the ice problem
in Honolulu began after 1987, partly because marijuana enforcement made
that substance scarce and almost as expensive as ice.
Not all Council members joined Tyler's criticism of police. Councilman and
former police Capt. Leningrad Elarionoff called Tyler "out of line."
Pubdate: Thu, 15 Aug 2002
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2002 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact: letters@starbulletin.com
Website: Honolulu Star-Advertiser | Hawaii News, Sports, Weather and Entertainment
Details: MapInc (Hawaii)