Jump to content
  • Sign Up

Another Drug War


Recommended Posts

Loretta Nall could have done a lot of things when the helicopters started to target her. She could have gotten scared. She could have moved to another house or into an apartment. She could have just tried to ignore them and prayed that they'd go away.

 

Instead, when police helicopters began hovering over her rural Tallapoosa County home, whipping the trees with high-speed winds and deafening her with thunderous noise, she got organized.

 

"I think they were looking for marijuana, but I don't know why they thought that I was growing it," she said. "I wasn't."

 

On Sept. 19, the cat and mouse games with the drug helicopters came to a head.

 

"They came over and were just sitting over my house and it was so loud. So I went outside with my video camera and pointed it up at them. That must have set them off, because within minutes, there were seven different law enforcement agencies on my front lawn," she said.

 

"They told me that they were looking for marijuana and they thought they had seen a plant. They asked me if they could search and I told them that would be fine because I knew I didn't have anything. I walked them around the property. Then, I told them that they should have spent all of that surveillance money to buy some glasses for their helicopter pilots and that I was going back inside to get a video camera to film their search. As soon as I went back inside, they all started to scramble to get back into their vehicles and peel out of there," she said.

 

Unsatisfied with her video footage of retreating officers as a souvenir of the police helicopter raid, Nall decided to take things a step further. She decided to set up a network designed to publicize the effects of the war on drugs and to promote reforms in American drug policy. Thus, the Alabama Marijuana Party was born.

 

"I started off asking some questions about the budgets of the area drug task forces and then I met some activists and then some politicians and now, we've got a web page -- http://alabama.usmjparty.com -- an e-mail listserv and a mailing list," she said.

 

The organization is now one of the most visible elements of the political struggle to craft fair and effective drug laws in Alabama and throughout the nation. Nall said that she has met with politicians from the Alabama Libertarian Party and hopes to spread word of the destructive consequences of the war on drugs to as many people as will listen.

 

The fact that Alabama now has an organization devoted to pushing reform of state and federal drug laws comes as a huge surprise to many political observers. In a conservative state not known for progressive or experimental stances on social policy, a movement to legalize drugs could be about as popular as a group of atheists or an Osama bin Laden fan club.

 

In fact, as this article was being compiled, Nall was arrested for possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

 

"On Nov. 13, investigators with the Tallapoosa County Narcotics Task Force, Tallapoosa County Sheriff's Department, Alexander City Police Department and Newsite Police Department executed a search warrant at 4633 Pearson Chapel Road, Alexander City, Alabama," said a press release from the Tallapoosa County Sheriff's Department.

 

"Recovered at the residence was approximately 5 grams of marijuana, rolling paper and a set of triple beam scales," the release said.

 

Nall was arrested at the residence and charged with Possession of Marijuana, 2nd Degree and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

 

Now free on bond, Nall said she was set up by police officers who are unhappy with her activism.

 

"We didn't have any marijuana here and the scales were used by my husband to measure legal herbs, like catnip," she said.

 

Nall said she plans to fight the charges. Her trial is currently scheduled for Feb. 11, and Nall said she intends to plead not guilty.

 

Nall traces the history of opposing the drug war back to Biblical times.

 

"If apples were the first controlled substance, then the first activist would have to be Eve. She and Adam got busted and had their assets seized and they had to emigrate. Not much different from today, huh?"

 

From ancient times, it's a short leap for Nall to trace the history of pioneers in drug policy reform through Harvard professor and LSD guru Timothy Leary and writers such as Aldous Huxley and William S. Burroughs.

 

"Each one of them became active in promoting drug responsibility and peace with journalism, with protest, with cultural and academic activities," she said.

 

The federal government maintains that marijuana is a dangerous substance and conducted a major public relations effort this fall to convince the public that its legal status is good public policy.

 

The DEA targeted Alabama for a new anti-drug program, launching the Integrated Drug Enforcement Assistance (IDEA) Summit in Mobile and Pritchard last week.

 

According to Nall, Alabama is one of the 13 states without a branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. So she decided to start her own organization.

 

According to Kris Krane, affiliate coordinator for NORML, Alabama has not traditionally been fertile group for grassroots organizing against drug laws.

 

"We haven't had anybody come up to us and identify themselves as willing to start a chapter. We only have a five person staff in the D.C. office," he said. "Generally, a chapter will start when somebody approaches us and says that they want to start one. Then, we'll follow up on that, but nobody in Alabama has done that - at least, not in the two and a half years I've worked here. Maybe an e-mail, but no follow up."

 

Nall said that her personal history of drug policy activism began at an early age.

 

"I first realized that smoking pot had a political side in 1990 at the age of 15 when the Gulf War started. I had recently read Jack Herers' The Emperor Wears No Clothes and realized that if hemp were legalized, no one would need to fight over petroleum-based oil. I understood then that it wasn't because people can get high off of marijuana that hemp isn't legal," she said.

 

With a court battle ahead of her, a relatively apathetic general public and no death of hostility from the law enforcement establishment, Nall has her hands full as a grassroots organizer for an unpopular cause. Yet, with the Canadian Senate issuing a report recommending a full legalization of marijuana, sentiments may be shifting. For now, Alabama jails grow more and more crowded with non-violent drug offenders, possibly, depending on the results of her upcoming trial, including Nall herself.

 

Source: Troy Messenger (AL)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using the community in any way you agree to our Terms of Use and We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.