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U.S. Drug Policy Would Be Imposed Globally By New House Bill

House Bill Us Drug Policy

First Posted: 10/07/11 02:01 PM ET Updated: 10/09/11 10:38 AM ET

The House Judiciary Committee passed a bill yesterday that would make it a federal crime for U.S. residents to discuss or plan activities on foreign soil that, if carried out in the U.S., would violate the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) -- even if the planned activities are legal in the countries where they're carried out. H.R. 313, the "Drug Trafficking Safe Harbor Elimination Act of 2011," is sponsored by Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), and allows prosecutors to bring conspiracy charges against anyone who discusses, plans or advises someone else to engage in any activity that violates the CSA, the massive federal law that prohibits drugs like marijuana and strictly regulates prescription medication.

"Under this bill, if a young couple plans a wedding in Amsterdam, and as part of the wedding, they plan to buy the bridal party some marijuana, they would be subject to prosecution," said Bill Piper, director of national affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance, which advocates for reforming the country's drug laws. "The strange thing is that the purchase of and smoking the marijuana while you're there wouldn't be illegal. But this law would make planning the wedding from the U.S. a federal crime."

The law could also potentially affect academics and medical professionals. For example, a U.S. doctor who works with overseas doctors or government officials on needle exchange programs could be subject to criminal prosecution. A U.S. resident who advises someone in another country on how to grow marijuana or how to run a medical marijuana dispensary would also be in violation of the new law, even if medical marijuana is legal in the country where the recipient of the advice resides. If interpreted broadly enough, a prosecutor could possibly even charge doctors, academics and policymakers from contributing their expertise to additional experiments like the drug decriminalization project Portugal, which has successfully reduced drug crime, addiction and overdose deaths.

The Controlled Substances Act also regulates the distribution of prescription drugs, so something as simple as emailing a friend vacationing in Tijuana some suggestions on where to buy prescription medication over the counter could subject a U.S. resident to criminal prosecution. "It could even be something like advising them where to buy cold medicine overseas that they'd have to show I.D. to get here in the U.S.," Piper says.

Civil libertarian attorney and author Harvey Silverglate says the bill raises several concerns. "Just when you think you can't get any more cynical, a bill like this comes along. I mean, it just sounds like an abomination. First, there's no intuitive reason for an American to think that planning an activity that's perfectly legal in another country would have any effect on America," Silverglate says. "So we're getting further away from the common law tradition that laws should be intuitive, and should include a mens rea component. Second, this is just an act of shameless cultural and legal imperialism. It's just outrageous."

Conspiracy laws in general are problematic when applied to the drug war. They give prosecutors extraordinary discretion to charge minor players, such as girlfriends or young siblings, with the crimes committed by major drug distributors. They're also easier convictions to win, and can allow prosecutors to navigate around restrictions like statutes of limitations, so long as the old offense can be loosely linked to a newer one. The Smith bill would expand those powers. Under the Amsterdam wedding scenario, anyone who participated in the planning of the wedding with knowledge of the planned pot purchase would be guilty of conspiracy, even if their particular role was limited to buying flowers or booking the hotel.

The law is a reaction to a 2007 case in which the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals threw out the convictions of two men who planned the transfer of cocaine from a Colombian drug cartel to a Saudi prince for distribution in Europe. Though the men planned the transaction from Miami, the court found that because the cocaine never reached the U.S. and was never intended to reach the U.S., the men hadn't committed any crime against the United States.

But the Smith bill goes farther than necessary to address that outcome in that case. "They could have limited this law to prohibiting the planning of activities that are illegal in the countries where they take place," Piper says. "That would have allowed them to convict the guys in the Miami case. There was an amendment proposed to do that and it was voted down on party lines. They intentionally made sure the bill includes activities that are legal in other countries. Which means this is an attempt to apply U.S. law all over the globe."

It wouldn't be the first time. Over the last several years, a number of executives from online gambling companies have been arrested in U.S. airports and charged with felony violations of U.S. gambling, racketeering and money laundering laws, even though the executives were citizens of and the companies were incorporated in countries where online gambling is legal.

Last May, one U.S. citizen saw how the policy can apply in reverse. Joe Gordon, a native of Thailand who has lived in America for 30 years, was arrested while visiting his native country for violating Thailand's lèse-majesté law, which bans criticism of the Thai royal family. Gordon had posted a link on his blog to a biography of Thailand's king that has been banned in Thailand.

In recent years, officials have also attempted to impose U.S. white collar crime policies on other countries as well, such as pressuring Switzerland to soften its privacy laws to help American officials to catch tax cheats and money launderers.

But Silverglate says the Smith bill breaks new ground. "I'm horrified by the pressure on Switzerland, and that's probably the libertarian in me, but at least there you have an argument that there's an American interest at stake. Here, I don't see any interest other than to a desire to impose our moral and cultural preferences on the rest of the world."

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The House Judiciary Committee passed a bill yesterday that would make it a federal crime for U.S. residents to discuss or plan activities on foreign soil that, if carried out in the U.S., would violat...
The House Judiciary Committee passed a bill yesterday that would make it a federal crime for U.S. residents to discuss or plan activities on foreign soil that, if carried out in the U.S., would violat...
 
 
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06:44 PM on 11/01/2011
My proposed laws:

1. Make it a crime if an elected official plans to introduce a bill which would reduce individual liberty.

2. Make it a crime if a police officer makes a material lie to someone in an investigation.

3. Make it a crime for the government to Monopolize any business (money production, mail, etc.)
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Joe Goforth
contempt for the status quo
12:17 PM on 10/30/2011
More police state action from U.S. Time for a dose of liberty- Vote for Ron Paul.
01:15 PM on 10/25/2011
Does anyone else see what I am reading in this article?! This is a HUGE problem. Rights are going out the window left and right. Now, it's not bad enough that the government can tell you what they want you to do on your own property, but now they are telling you what to do when you are in other countrys! This is bad- very bad. We need a revolution or I need to get the hell out of this country.
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jrgordon47
Tolerance becomes a Crime when Applied to Evil
11:06 AM on 10/24/2011
Here you have it....the thought police. This bill, according to the artical passed the Committee, but is not law yet. Why would any lucid person think of such a insane policy? We as a country can not control, imprison, the criminals that are out there now. When I hear about things like this I make a wager with myself as to the political affiliation of the sponser.....99.99999% of the time I'm right.
The republicans, who say they want less big government, are the loose cannons. This bill is just another stone on the coffin of freedom. The republicans need every angle to repress the people...now they want to tell the world how to act.
Well this may have a silver lining after all, if you can't afford medical insurance, pay your mortage or feed youself just daydream about some faraway place and imagin doing something.....free room and board provided by the feds.
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MikeCm
Occupy Reality
09:49 PM on 10/23/2011
This makes perfect sense given that we rule the world and naturally want to extend our police state jurisdiction to all of it.

Besides, the war on drugs is nearly as profitable as the war on terror.
09:06 PM on 10/22/2011
Here are a list of free video documentaries that exposes the corrupt ties between the big pharmaceutical companies and the FDA, and how they shape our medical regulations and hospital protocols in the U.S. society:

http://www.woktoss.com/%E7%99%8C%E7%97%87/

the list features the following…

The Gerson Miracle, Cancer is Curable Now (2011), The Beautiful Truth, One Answer to Cancer, Healing Cancer from Inside Out, World Without Cancer- The Story of Vitamin B17, The China Study, ect… and a bunch of related ebooks that are immediately viewable for free (faster viewing within China)
04:54 PM on 10/22/2011
Feel free to DOWNLOAD this image, print it out, snip the "tear-tabs", and post as many of them around your home town as you can. One way or another, we need to get the word out to more people. This MIGHT be a way to help achieve that. :)

http://a5.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/298882_189338077801901_100001771291818_441143_6507832_n.jpg
05:35 PM on 10/22/2011
Adults and kids are put in privatized prisons with hardened criminals and when they get out? In most states, they can't vote, they can't get a driver's license, or get any assistance from any of the social service programs. Sounds like a set-up for a lifetime of crime, don't you think? I do. And it's all horribly true. Honestly it is! The War on drugs is big business and they aren't going to want to give it up. But we have to make them give it up. This is no way to live or for them to do business. Things are going to have to change and it's up to everyone to make it happen. Otherwise, we may as well be living in the middle east. The world isn't going to stand for much more of this. The world has HAD it!! About time, I say. Don't you??
04:48 PM on 10/22/2011
This is a real good vid! A new film........... check this out and PASS IT ON! :)

What if Cannabis cured cancer? - YouTube

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9XQPJkwKpQ&feature=related
04:45 PM on 10/22/2011
Oh... wouldn't it be a lovely thing to see a fly-in. (That would be something like a sit-in) Just a week long fly-in, where people who have planes would say: "If MJ isn't made legal damed quick, some of us honest folks with planes are going to take wing and begin seeding the "entire" U.S." Hey, Florida was seeded with Melaleuca trees that way. :) Could you see it? Picture this! Wonderful little green sprouts coming up in every nook and cranny!! Way to go!! What a happy wonderful world it would be. :)
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:58 AM on 10/22/2011
The war on pot is a crime against humanity. The GOP are anti republic Tories. why does anyone vote for them?
02:19 PM on 10/21/2011
Vote for Ron Paul to end ALL the wars, including the war on drugs.
04:41 PM on 10/22/2011
Hear hear........ I agree. He'll stop the BS.
01:43 PM on 10/21/2011
Its high time to re-visit the values of the brave,insightful founders of this nation .. and get things back on track and find a definative way to prevent the rise of unwarranted power that threatens the freedom of normal everday people not only here..but throughout the world .
Has this ongoing 'war on drugs' been a resounding success for the PEOPLE of this nation ?? if the answer is NO ..then WHY are more unenforcable and intrusive laws being passed .
As we race towards becoming a full blown police state..(please note ..the 'land of the free' incarcerates a bigger percentage of its population than ANY nation on earth ..we ..5% of the world's people..have more prisoners than both Russia and China COMBINED) ..so our poitician's respond with yet more intrusive, draconain ,unenforcable laws which are totally contrary to human nature :- are they (a) on the take (b) out of touch.(c) just plain dumb (d) all of the above .... we really need some adults running our nation... where are they ??
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songchannels
11:57 AM on 10/21/2011
We need to start forming public hanging committees of these traitorous U.S. politicians. I'm serious we need to start now. We will need tar, feathers and a rope.
12:41 PM on 10/21/2011
the road to democracy is long and slow:- expose the sources of thier funding, funders and hypocracy .. and up the humour to laugh them off the stage .. the wooly mammoth party is becoming more irrelevent by the day ..and would have been extinct long ago if not for the huge power of money..which is ..all they really have (along with an abundance of fear..which far to many Americans buy into )
04:56 PM on 10/22/2011
Song, that's a "delicious" idea!!
:)
12:01 AM on 10/20/2011
I think this would be a a terrible violation of rights if passed, but I'm wondering just how close this is to passing. It's my understanding that there are many crackpot bills politicians propose to get their base all excited (which the opposite side then use to get their team all riled up) but are light years away from ever seeing the light of day. It seems that this bill has not even gone to either branch of Congress yet many commenters are under the impression this is law. It would be nice to know how imminent or far-fetched this legislation is.
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songchannels
11:58 AM on 10/21/2011
Well, it passed.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:58 PM on 10/21/2011
Only the house. it will never pass the senate (I hope). 200 bills or so passed the dem house that never passed the senate.