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FREE DRUGS OR FREE SPEECH?!?

by David Crisp, The Billings Outpost (splee2000 [at] aol.com)
The Federal Government is using the RAVE Act to squash free speech. Does anyone else feel as strongly outraged about this as I do? I really think something should be done, like a demonstration.
J. Latimer
A canceled Billings rock concert could provoke an early challenge to
new national anti-drug legislation. A May 30 fund-raising concert for
the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws was
canceled as bands were setting up for the show. The cancellation
followed a warning from a federal drug agent that the Eagles Lodge
could be fined up to $250,000 if illegal drugs were used at the event.

The day before, the concert promoter was jailed for a probation
violation. The organizer, Adam Jones, said afterward that he would
drop his activities in the NORML chapter at Montana State
University-Billings and in Students for Sensible Drug Policy as a
result of the incident.

The $250,000 penalty was included in the Illicit Drug
Anti-Proliferation Act of 2003, which President Bush signed into law
on April 30. The legislation was attached to the popular Child
Abduction Prevention Act, better known as the Amber Alert bill.

The bill's sponsor was Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., who has said that it
was aimed at those who knowingly profit from illegal drug use at
events they sponsor, especially at raves, where participants often
consume the drug Ecstasy. But critics say that the bill is so vaguely
worded that it could force innocent bar owners and event sponsors out
of business.

Some critics also have worried that the law could be used to squelch
political activity. Gay rights groups, for example, frequently use
concerts and raves as fund-raising events. The NORML benefit here was
intended to raise money to place a medical marijuana initiative on the
ballot in 2004.

The Eagles Lodge manager, who asked to be identified only as Kelly,
said that the Billings agent who approached her the day of the concert
didn't make threats but did warn of possible consequences.

"He was polite and was just explaining things," she said. She said she
referred the matter to lodge trustees, who consulted an attorney
before deciding to cancel the concert. Phone calls to Trustee Roger
Diehl were not returned Friday or over the weekend.

News of the Billings concert cancellation spread rapidly on the
Internet last week and even rated a link on Glenn Reynold's popular
InstaPundit web log site. Mr. Reynolds, a University of Tennessee law
professor with libertarian leanings, has argued that Biden's bill,
once known as the RAVE Act, was defective legislation.

"I blame Joe Biden - for sneaking through this abomination - and
[Attorney General John] Ashcroft's Justice Department, for applying it
this way," Mr. Reynolds wrote about the Billings case. "This
legislation has always been part of a culture war, not an anti-drug
effort, and this application just makes that crystal clear for anyone
who hadn't noticed."

According to the website of the Drug Reform Coordination Network,
activists were organizing last week to consider how to deal with the
case. NORML Foundation head Allen St. Pierre told DRCNet that the
Billings case appeared to be the first application of the RAVE Act and
he called it a "very scary precedent."

"Preemptively shutting down a First Amendment-protected event is
something that just doesn't happen in America," he reportedly said.
"This is absolutely what we feared and predicted would happen if the
RAVE Act passed. Isn't Montana known for being resistant to federal
encroachment? This should make them mighty uneasy."

Scott Crichton of the Montana American Civil Liberties Union returned
a phone call on Sunday from Washington, D.C., where he is attending a
conference. He said he had received an e-mail about the case but
wasn't familiar enough with the details to comment.

Billings bands apparently took the cancellation in stride. One of the
scheduled bands, ENDever, sent this e-mail to those on its
distribution list: "Please do not let the recent events at the F.O.E.
discourage you from coming out to our shows, or any shows for that
matter. We will STILL be playing at the F.O.E. it was just that the
show in question was a bit too liberal for Billings."

Mr. Jones acknowledged that his drug conviction may not have made him
the best representative of NORML in Billings. He said he has been on
probation for a year and a half after he was caught with one-half gram
of psilocybin mushrooms, enough for a felony charge. He said his
probation officer showed up at his house on Thursday, searched the
premises and arrested him for failing to report a change in
supervisors at his job. He remained in jail until Sunday, he said, and
initially failed a urinalysis test. But the test proved to have been
inaccurate, he said.

Mr. Jones said that he had been incarcerated one other time for
violating probation: when he traveled to Helena without permission to
testify in favor of a medical marijuana bill.

"The implications of the RAVE Act are scary," he said. "Obviously, our
First Amendment rights have been thrown out the window."

He said he didn't blame the Eagles Lodge.

"In no way whatsoever do I hold anything against the Eagles Lodge," he
said. "$250,000 is a very scary number."

Kelly, the lodge manager, also defended the actions of
trustees.

"They do a lot of good things for a lot of people ... but they have to
do what's best for their lodge," she said.
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