I'm a 50 year old hippy/biker with a biker ol' lady. Been smoking for 36-38 years. Busted for drugs in 1973 38-190 years, did 13 1/2. Study a loy of law. Have a site at http://www.geocities.com/ovidduke/legal.html or www.geocities.com/ovidduke if you want to start at my home page.
Thanks, I've been out awhile, 10/86. It's been fun. Was a bouncer, bodyguard, enforcer, collector, repo man, shot up a few bars, left a few guys staring at the ceiling. Lot's of young (18-19 year old) biker ladies. Now I study computers and smoke a lot of dope. It grows wild out here in the canyons.
Hey bud! Looks like me and you may be the only hardcore types here-you still dabble a little? I've been luckier than you, never spent significant time inside. Spent a fortune staying out, though. Got smacked on my little honda last july- first asshole to catch me in 30 years! Leg's all fucked up- may not ride again. I'd rather be locked-up!
Yeah, my brother died February 2001 on his bike. He rode for the Vietnam Vets of America mc. Car ran him over and drug him for awhile. Big funeral, all the Arizona and New Mexico chapters and he rode for the CMA mc before that so it was a huge funeral with everyone wearing colors. I did an endo on my chopper right after that. I smoke a lot of weed, it grows wild out here in the canyon. Here's my favorite bike. Six cylinders, three dueces, stereo, and 150hp.
Nice. You ever get itchy, cruise on this way. No weed growing wild, but plenty of mushrooms in season.
Man I love shooms. I stay away from synthetics and try to stick to weed, shrooms, peyote, and jimsum weed (scary shit), mandrake root, belladonna. I don't know how you feel about God but I think he created Earth as his garden and just put Adam here to take care of it. If it's natural, it's good for you.
The first site has a bunch of posts from the Florida cop, niteshift, admitting he monitors this cop site at work with his supervisor's support and that he is a former undercover cop. This is the guy who tried to discredit all my research and when I tried to challenge him intellectually, he had me censored and banned. http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=22336&page=2&pp=10 http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=3238 http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=30440 http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=12803 http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=28407 http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=30407 http://www.marijuana.com/420/showthread.php?t=29361
13 1/2 for drugs? If so that is just sad. We lock up so many people for possession of weed. No wonder out jails are crowed. Legalize it fuckers..
Actually the first time I went to prison was for drugs. Then for survival I went from 165#s to 245#s with a 32" waist. After that I was so mean I went to work for coke dealer doing collections, enforcing, and body guarding and picked up 2 Aggravated Assaults cause I was real vicious. My last trip I did 9 1/2 flat, no good time (six murders and one atempted murder of a guard, I beat all the murders on self-defense, I'm highly trained in marial arts, and got the guard one dropped to assaulting an officer). The 13 1/2 is an accumulation of the time I've done, juvie and jail included. The 9 1/2 is the longest I did in one stretch. Marijuana Arrests For Year 2003 Hit Record High, FBI Report Reveals Pot Smokers Arrested In America At A Rate Of One Every 42 Seconds Washington, DC: Police arrested an estimated 755,187 persons for marijuana violations in 2003, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's annual Uniform Crime Report, released today. The total is the highest ever recorded by the FBI, and comprised 45 percent of all drug arrests in the United States. "These numbers belie the myth that police do not target and arrest minor marijuana offenders," said Keith Stroup, Executive Director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), who noted that at current rates, a marijuana smoker is arrested every 42 seconds in America. "This effort is a tremendous waste of criminal justice resources, costing American taxpayers approximately $7.6 billion dollars annually. These dollars would be better served combating serious and violent crime, including the war on terrorism." Of those charged with marijuana violations, 88 percent - some 662,886 Americans - were charged with possession only. The remaining 92,301 individuals were charged with "sale/manufacture," a category that includes all cultivation offenses - even those where the marijuana was being grown for personal or medical use. In past years, approximately 30 percent of those arrested were age 19 or younger. "Present policies have done little if anything to decrease marijuana's availability or dissuade youth from trying it," Stroup said, noting that a majority of young people now report that they have easier access to pot than alcohol or tobacco. The total number of marijuana arrests for 2003 far exceeded the total number of arrests for all violent crimes combined, including murder, manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery and aggravated assault. Marijuana arrests for 2003 increased 8 percent from the previous year, and have nearly doubled since 1993. "Arresting adults who smoke marijuana responsibly needlessly destroys the lives of tens of thousands of otherwise law abiding citizens each year," Stroup said. In the past decade, more than 6.5 million Americans have been arrested on marijuana charges, more than the entire populations of Alaska, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming combined. Nearly 90 percent of these total arrests were for simple possession, not cultivation or sale. During much of this time, arrests for cocaine and heroin have declined sharply, indicating that increased enforcement of marijuana laws is being achieved at the expense of enforcing laws against the possession and trafficking of more dangerous drugs. "Marijuana legalization would remove this behemoth financial burden from the criminal justice system, freeing up criminal justice resources to target other more serious crimes, and allowing law enforcement to focus on the highest echelons of hard-drug trafficking enterprises rather than on minor marijuana offenders who present no threat to public safety," Stroup said. Later this fall, the NORML Foundation will be releasing a comprehensive report examining the nature, extent and costs of marijuana arrests in the United States. The report will feature state-by-state analysis of marijuana arrests by race, as well as an economic and geographic analysis of US marijuana arrests. Further information on NORML's forthcoming report is available by contacting the NORML Foundation at: media@norml.org. YEAR MARIJUANA ARRESTS 2003 755,187 2002 697,082 2001 723,627 2000 734,498 1999 704,812 1998 682,885 1997 695,200 1996 641,642 1995 588,963 1994 499,122 1993 380,689