Pubdate: Tue, 01 Feb 2011 Source: Dispatch, The (NC) Copyright: 2011 The Lexington Dispatch Contact: http://www.the-dispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1583 Author: Marvin Callahan LEGALIZE MARIJUANA Editor: My grandson was in the car with someone who had marijuana in his possession. The man admitted to the officers and in court that my grandson had nothing to do with it, but he was charged and convicted anyway, placed on probation and given fines over $3,000. There was no way he could pay, so now he's in jail. I sat in his probation office, and everyone was there for drug offences. One did 10 years in jail and a lady eight years. The only way they could pay their fines was to sell more drugs or steal. Probationers must pay to see their probation officer and even pay a fee to do community service. If you lose your case, you pay both the court-appointed lawyer's fee and court costs (his court costs alone were over $800). If found not guilty, he owed nothing, so where then is there an incentive for his lawyer to defend him? That lawyer would lose his fee defending him, wouldn't he? Our legislators have created laws making marijuana and cigarette smokers criminals requiring more jails while at the same time throwing mentally ill people out on the street to fend for themselves. Things called dope now were legal when I was growing up. Doctors prescribed them to me, but now you can buy those same drugs cheaper on the street than go to a doctor. The recent case of Thomasville's city manager makes you ask, "Is this America?" Are any freedoms or rights left when law enforcement can come on your property, sniff your house then come in and search it without a warrant? The officer said he smelled marijuana, but I don't remember anyone's nose being legal grounds for search or seizure. When I got out of the Navy my first job was making sisal pads. Later, I found sisal is hemp and hemp is marijuana, and our government grew the stuff to make high temp oil for our fighters in World War II. So, why doesn't N.C. allow medical marijuana and set a small fine for possession like California? People who kick in your door and rob your home get less bail and fines than someone caught with pot. Our jails are so full of people with drug-related offenses that criminals are not being punished for their crimes. Someone in state government needs a little common sense. Why not legalize marijuana then at least North Carolina would get the revenue instead of Mexico? Marvin Callahan Lexington - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake