Michele Leonhart one step closer to officially heading up the DEA

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by oltex, Nov 18, 2010.

  1. Michele Leonhart one step closer to officially heading up the DEA
    TheDaileyCaller / Mike Riggs / 11,18.2010


    Acting director Michele Leonhart is that much closer to officially heading up the Drug Enforcement Agency after successfully navigating a hearing with the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday.

    If confirmed to the position she's already held for three years, Leonhart said she would expand the DEA's anti-cartel operations in Mexico and continue to enforce federal drug laws in states where medical marijuana is legal. Under light pressure from committee Democrats, Leonhart also restated her promise to reform prescription drug laws that have made it nearly impossible for nursing homes to administer pain medications to their residents.

    Democratic Senator Herb Kohl of Wisconsin calmly lit into Leonhart, an alumna of the Bush administration, for regulations adopted during her tenure that prohibit nursing home employees from dispensing prescription pain medication to chronic pain sufferers in their care.

    Due to a change in policy under Leonhart, said Kohl, “nursing homes [are] unable to administer pain medication to residents in a timely manner. The time that it takes for a nursing home to comply with the DEA's new enforcement policy can be an eternity to an elderly patient who is in agonizing pain.”

    According to Kohl, a deputy administer of the DEA told him during an October 2009 hearing that the DEA “would act quickly to solve this problem.” Kohl then met with Leonhart in early May of 2010 to discuss the regulations.

    “You told me you also would address the problem swiftly,” Kohl said to Leonhart during the hearing. “In August, I requested joint comments from DEA and DHHS on draft legislation that I prepared and submitted to you to facilitate more timely access to pain medication for ailing nursing home residents. I received no response.”

    “It appears the DEA is putting paperwork before pain relief,” Kohl added.
    The regulations in question prohibit nursing home nurses from administering pain medications to their residents, even those with a doctor's prescriptions. Leonhart, who has been acting director of the DEA since 2007, said that her agency is slowly working towards a solution.

    “We don't take lightly our responsibility to not only prevent aversion and do our regulatory business, but we're very concerned about those patients in need. That's why in the interim, while we're finding long-term solutions, we've come up with a few short-term solutions and policy statements. We need to do more.”

    Kohl responded rather curtly to Leonhart's explanation: “I would like to see much more progress made on this issue before you are confirmed,” he said. Kohl's statement was the first sign that Senate Democrats may not rubber-stamp President Obama's nominee.

    Perhaps due to the failure of Prop 19 in California (and despite the passage of medical marijuana in Arizona), Kohl, along with Democratic Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and Al Franken of Minnesota, made no mention of medical marijuana. Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, however, made it his prime focus.

    “I'm a big fan of the DEA,” said Sessions, before asking Leonhart point blank if she would fight medical marijuana legalization. “I have seen what marijuana use has done to young people, I have seen the abuse, I have seen what it's done to families. It's bad,” Leonhart said. “If confirmed as administrator, we would continue to enforce the federal drug laws.”

    “These legalization efforts sound good to people,” Sessions quipped. “They say, ‘We could just end the problem of drugs if we could just make it legal.' But any country that's tried that, Alaska and other places have tried it, have failed. It does not work,” Sessions said.

    “We need people who are willing to say that. Are you willing to say that?” Sessions asked Leonhart.

    “Yes, I've said that, senator. You're absolutely correct [about] the social costs from drug abuse, especially from marijuana,” Leonhart said. “Legalizers say it will help the Mexican cartel situation; it won't. It will allow states to balance budgets; it won't. No one is looking [at] the social costs of legalizing drugs.”

    While Sessions and Leonhart agreed on the precedent failures of drug legalization policies in places such as Alaska, drug policy analysts do not.

    “None of the nightmare scenarios touted by preenactment decriminalization opponents - from rampant increases in drug usage among the young to the transformation of Lisbon into a haven for ‘drug tourists' - has occurred,” read a 2009 white paper that the Cato Institute released eight years after Portugal decriminalized illegal drugs.

    “Although post-decriminalization usage rates have remained roughly the same or even decreased slightly when compared with other EU states, drug-related pathologies - such as sexually transmitted diseases and deaths due to drug usage - have decreased dramatically,” the study found. “Drug policy experts attribute those positive trends to the enhanced ability of the Portuguese government to offer treatment programs to its citizens - enhancements made possible, for numerous reasons, by decriminalization.”

    Cato and legalization advocates also argued in the lead-up to a vote on Prop 19 that legalizing, regulating, and taxing marijuana would make a small dent in California's massive deficit, and perhaps more importantly, drastically reduce law enforcement spending on marijuana enforcement.

    “What worries me is that we have seen–after years of stabilization of drug use–a spike,” Leonhart said. “I believe that spike is directly related to all the conversation we are now hearing about the legalization of drugs.”

    Sessions, a former U.S. Attorney, praised the “grassroots” anti-drug policies developed under President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. “Drug use did go down,” Sessions said. “In 1980, half the high school seniors admitted to using an illegal drug. The numbers went well below 25 a decade later.” Sessions also said that he “hope this administration will send a very clear message on this,” and echoed Leonhart's argument that legalization efforts - which Sessions called ”being all nice” - were not a valid response to Mexico's cartel violence.

    “The best way we can help the Mexican leadership…is to demolish the gangs in our country who are selling drugs, collecting the money, and taking it back to fund these entities of power and strength,” Sessions said. “Have you given any thought to focusing on the Mexican drug cartels that are the primary distribution network for cocaine in America?”

    Leonhart nodded. “A lot of the focus for DEA these days is on Mexico. And now that we have these courageous Mexican partners with President [Felipe] Calderon at the head, we have had great successes in Mexico at breaking the power and impunity of these cartels. But we can do more, and if confirmed, we will continue our partnership and expand, because we are sharing so much more intelligence [with Mexico] and with state and local law enforcement.”



    Senator Sessions political funding:

    Contributor__Total__Indivs___PACs
    Southern Co_____ $162,765___$138,265___$24,500

    Balch & Bingham _$123,775___$113,775___$10,000

    Drummond Co ___ $74,650____$44,650____$30,000

    Collazo Enterprises _ $64,900__$64,900____$0

    Vulcan Materials__ $52,150____$26,150____$26,000...view more data
    Top 5 Industries, 1996 - 2010


    Industry____________Total_______Indivs______PACs
    Lawyers/LawFirms__$1,009,054__$883,945____$125,109
    Retired___________$780,694____$780,694____$0
    Health Professionals$708,973___$538,365____$170,608
    RealEstate________$579,738___$494,597____$85,141
    Insurance_________$544,527____$239,525____$305,002 ...view more data
     
  2. what a fuckin joke man

    fuckin puppet obama

    nobama 2012
     
  3. i dont understand what this has to do with obama
     
  4. nothing really, obama is just the scapegoat for the ignorant people that can't direct their anger at the true failure, in this case, Leonhart.

    nobody is making her hate on medicinal marijuana, that's all her doing.
     
  5. Didn't Obama have the choice to appoint someone else?? Anyways I hope she goes after all those greedy bastards who voted against prop 19.
     
  6. a candidates position on marijuana reform be it medicinal or not, is not the only factor considered.
     

  7. Obama nominates heads of regulatory agencies. The DEA is a regulatory agency. Therefore, it is Obama's fault. There is no scapegoating.

    Nobody is making her do or say anything, but Obama is promoting her to the head of the DEA. You don't think this is Obama approving of what she says?? If he didn't approve of what she says/does, he wouldn't nominate her. It's not that complicated.
     
  8. it's more complicated than you think. there is no such thing as a perfect candidate. to get what matters most in a candidate you have to give up some things.

    just because he nominated her doesn't mean he agree's with ever part of what she believes in.
     
  9. Well I personally disagree with his choice, and since this subject is near and dear to my heart. I won't vote for him next election.
     
  10. ya and u think any other president would have done any differently. of course not, marijuana is a drug man and the DEA tackles illicit drugs. Obama did nothing that anyone else wouldnt have done and remember obama is looking at that second term
     
  11. Yes...lately I've noticed Obama has been a uncle Tom. Anyways Obama was doomed from the get go.
     
  12. One of the regular writers at the Huffington Post did an article in Sept that reported that Leonhart was the only person that would even take the job. If you have ever read the DEA
    blogs you would see that they hate her as bad as we do.
     
  13. shit, i'd take the head of DEA job in a heart beat... how's legal bud sound?
     

  14. Who said anything about a "perfect candidate?" Even after nomination/affirmation, Obama is still her direct boss. If he didn't want her going after MMJ and other sovereign States' rights, he would tell her to not say or do such things. While they are charged with enforcing the law, they have the discretion to not meddle in States' affairs. If Obama didn't agree with what she says/does, not only would he not have nominated her in the first place, he would have actually done something to suggest he gives a shit about States' rights. If he actually gave a shit, he would make it obvious. He's made it obvious he doesn't give a shit, in more than just this issue. Therefore it's very easy to conclude that Obama implicitly agrees with what Leonhart is saying. If you want to try to protect Obama, go for it. We see things a bit more clearly, apparently.

    The DEA doesn't have the power to change laws, only enforce them. And you would either not be nominated in the first place, or Obama would change his mind because, again, he agrees it should stay illegal. He's even said so.
     
  15. well for one, the president does not have the final say when it comes to who gets the job, that would be congress. why aren't you blaming them aswell? if what the other person said is true than obama didnt have much choice to nominate her if nobody else would take the job. the head of the DEA reports to the attorney general, not the president. also i'm not exactly an expert on our government but i'm pretty sure the head of the DEA decides their own policies, not the president.
     
  16. How does being fired so fast you spontaneously explode into a black hole sound?

    They are actually required by law to ensure that drugs stay illegal
     
  17. obviously, i was aiming more at the idea of upholding states' rights and staying away from dispenceries
     


  18. [​IMG] Got that right. Who do you think the AG reports to...?
     
  19. #19 FunkeeNuggz514, Nov 20, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 20, 2010
    This is very unfortunate. Obama was supposed to be the progressive president but I think he's doing this to appeal to the conservatives. He wants to get re-elected and he's doing what he has to. I'm anxious to see if some state reps put pressure on Eric Holder when places get raided. Jared Polis is one of those and I'm glad he is my state rep!! However, I'm worried about Colorado since the state issues licences to grow well over the amount needed for federal prosecution. It's going to be scary.

    I've also read from a couple outlets that the Dems are weighing in on legalization since key states like California and Colorado (Obama's battlegrounds with Pelosi and Bennett) are going to try it in 2012. Republicans should embrace since less government intervention is one of their values. These 2012 elections will be very interesting. I'm really anxious to see what happens...who runs...and how Obama reacts to hardcore pressure.
     
  20. republicans have been the masters of the wedge issues over the years but weed on the other hand ...

    it will be interesting indeed, the world is so ending in 2012 :D
     

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