-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded message follows -------
Date sent:              Thu, 05 Apr 2001 09:34:05 -0700
To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From:                   Mark Greer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                ALERT: #205 Time Mag: Narcs Want To Treat Raves Like Crack
Send reply to:          [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Organization:           DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/unsub.htm

Time Mag: Narcs Want To Treat Raves Like Crack

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PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE
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DrugSense FOCUS Alert # 205 Thursday April 5, 2001

In their newest quest to criminalize youth, some federal narcs are
attempting to apply "crackhouse laws" that were written in the 1980s to
indict people who organize raves. As Time Magazine reports this week,
the
narcs don't care if the dance party organizers are trying to sell drugs or
not, they just want someone to punish.

As usual, there is no consideration on the part of the drug warriors that
if they do effectively outlaw raves, the parties will be pushed underground
where there is even less chance of reasonable regulation. Please write a
letter to Time Magazine to say that this newest "get tough" tactic will be
just as counterproductive as all the other "crackdowns" hyped in the name
of a drug-free America.

NOTE: A one inch LTE published in TIME Magazine has an equivalent
advertising value of more that $25,000!!
See Target Analysis Below.

At Least One Letter a Month. That's All We Ask!

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This is VERY IMPORTANT as it is one way we have of gauging our
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Contact Info

Source: Source: Time Magazine (US)
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

***************************************************************************

ARTICLE

URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01.n587.a02.html
Newshawk: DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/
Pubdate: Mon, 09 Apr 2001
Source: Time Magazine (US)
Section: Society, Pg 62
Copyright: 2001 Time Inc
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.time.com/time/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/451
Author: John Cloud, New Orleans

ECSTASY CRACKDOWN

Will The Feds Use A 1980s Anti-Crack Law To Destroy The Rave Movement?

Nearly three years after her daughter's death, Phyllis Kirkland still
visits her grave every day. She drives over from the Monroeville, Ala.,
dentist's office where she works.

She weeps.

Jillian was only 17--"a beautiful 17," her mom chokes--when she died from a
drug overdose after a sweaty night of dancing at the State Palace Theatre,
a nightclub about a four-hour drive away, in New Orleans.

Jillian's August 1998 death crushed her mom, but it may also change how the
U.S. government fights its war on drugs like ecstasy.

Jillian's overdose--the coroner can't say precisely from what--and the sad
16 days she clung to life at Charity Hospital enraged doctors there.

Federal agents began investigating, and in January a grand jury indicted
three of the men who ran the club under a novel application of a 1986 law
called the Crack House Statute. It prohibits maintaining a property "for
the purpose of...distributing or using a controlled substance." Congress
wrote the law to go after sleazebag landlords who let dealers and addicts
hide the crack trade in slums.

This is the first time prosecutors have used it against a nightclub, and
drug enforcers and club owners across the U.S. are watching the case.

What's new about this drug-war strategy is that it does not require the
government to show that the defendants--brothers Robert and Brian Brunet,
who managed the State Palace, and Donnie Estopinal, who promoted its
raves--were actually selling drugs.

And so far, the government has offered no evidence that they were, though
investigators have been digging for well over a year.

Rather, U.S. Attorney Eddie Jordan plans to argue that the defendants
looked the other way as druggies turned the State Palace into a kind of
crack house for club drugs.

Cops say it was a place where partiers could easily score hits of ecstasy
and acid without getting hassled by club staff, and where the staff
encouraged the pharmacological festivities by selling rave-culture gear
such as glow sticks and pacifiers.

These are silly fashion accessories for many ravers, but they can be
drug-related too: glow sticks stimulate dilated pupils; pacifiers relieve
the teeth grinding associated with ecstasy.

The Brunets and Estopinal say they did everything they could to keep their
parties sober.

They and their A.C.L.U. lawyers also argue that those who provide music
should not be blamed for its devotees' crimes.

But the case raises an important question: Given that the use of ecstasy
continues to soar, is there any way to stop club drugs without stopping the
raves?

Could music be to blame for what happened to Jillian Kirkland?

Before he ever heard of Kirkland, before he became a nationally known
promoter and way before an attorney showed him photos of the prison he
might call home if he loses his case, Estopinal was a frat boy at Louisiana
State University. In the early '90s, according to friends--the defendants
wouldn't talk on the record--Estopinal, now 31, was waiting tables, trying
to decide whether he really wanted to be an accountant. Co-workers started
taking him dancing. Dance music was enjoying a revival, having shaken off
disco excesses and borrowed harder beats from underground. Estopinal fell
in love with the dance renaissance and began having parties at a stinky
fish-processing warehouse. By 1995, cops were closing him down for illicit
booze sales and noise, but he knew he could draw thousands of fans of the
new music.

He turned to the State Palace to help legitimize his work.

NOTE: The balance of this article has been snipped for brevity. It can be
read in full at: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01.n587.a02.html

***********************************************************************

SAMPLE LETTER

To the editor of Time Magazine:

So federal narcs want to prosecute organizers of raves where drugs are
used, even if organizers provide reasonable security measures. This is
absurd but not surprising. Drug prohibition itself causes many problems
related to illegal drugs, including dangerous adulterants and general
disrespect for official warnings regarding risks. Drug law enforcers want
to point fingers elsewhere, but a new crackdown is only going to provide a
disincentive for organizers to call an ambulance when somebody really needs
one.

Stephen Young

contact info

*************************
IMPORTANT: Always include your address and telephone number
Please note: If you choose to use this letter as a model please modify it
at least somewhat so that the paper does not receive numerous copies of the
same letter and so that the original author receives credit for his/her
work.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- TARGET ANALYSIS Time Magazine Circulation 4,250,000

Time only has seven published letters in the MAP archive. They tend to be
extremely short, between 23 and 83 words, with an average of 65 words. On
the other hand, if you can generate a short powerful reply to this article
you could potentially influence a huge audience. A one inch LTE published
in TIME Magazine has an equivalent advertising value of more that $25,000!!

http://www.mapinc.org/mapcgi/ltedex.pl?SOURCE=Time+Magazine

**********************************************************
ADDITIONAL INFO to help you in your letter writing efforts

3 Tips for Letter Writers http://www.mapinc.org/3tips.htm

Letter Writers Style Guide http://www.mapinc.org/style.htm

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Prepared by Stephen Young - http://www.maximizingharm.com Focus Alert
Specialist











Mark Greer
Executive Director
DrugSense
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

DrugSense is working to encourage accuracy, honesty, and common sense
in matters involving the failed, expensive, and destructive "War on Drugs."

Get Involved - Learn about the Issues
http://www.drugsense.org

Contribute - Help us Help Reform
http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm

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********************* Just DO It!! **********************************

Mark Greer
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DrugSense
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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http://www.mapinc.org/


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