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Resolution in Opposition to the Distribution and Use of Schedule I Drugs to Patients

WHEREAS, an initiative was passed in the states of Arizona and California, that allows physicians, under certain conditions to prescribe Schedule I drugs for patients; and

WHEREAS, the dangerous drugs that are restricted under Schedule I include not only marijuana, but heroin, LSD, amphetamines, phencyclidine and other hallucinogenic drugs; and

WHEREAS, laboratory research in animals and humans has shown that the use of marijuana, which is more carcinogenic than tobacco, or other Schedule I drugs, compromises brain functions, the immune system, the lungs, and hormonal responses to stress and metabolic change as well as making diseases such as tuberculosis, asthma and multiple sclerosis worse and does not prevent blindness due to glaucoma; and

WHEREAS, not one national health organization accepts marijuana or other Schedule I drugs as a medicine and many researchers adamantly state that marijuana or other Schedule I drugs have no medical benefit whatsoever; and

WHEREAS, the following organizations have stated that marijuana and other Schedule I drugs have not been shown scientifically to be safe or effective as a medicine: the American Medical Association, American Cancer Society, National Multiple Sclerosis Association, American Academy of Ophthalmology, National Eye Institute, National Cancer Institute, National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Strokes, National Institute of Dental Research, and the National Institute on Allergy and Infectious Diseases; and

WHEREAS, the U.S. Court of Appeals in 1994 affirmed the decision of the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration that marijuana remain a Schedule I substance; and

WHEREAS, it is neither rational nor compassionate to provide a harmful, addictive drug with no scientifically proven medical efficacy; and

WHEREAS, the passage initiatives in the states of Arizona and California are dangerous and wrong because it will make Schedule I drugs, including marijuana, available to the public without following the scientific process of the Food and Drug Administration for approval and regulation; and

NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the Florida Police Chiefs Association, duly assembled at its Mid-Winter Conference in Orlando, Florida, strongly opposes the laws passed in Arizona (Proposition 200) and California (Proposition 215), encourages public and private organizations to work with us in partnership to inform the citizens of our state about the dangers and consequences of these initiatives and urges the citizens of Florida to soundly defeat any movement that would legalize the distribution and/or use of any Schedule I drug.

Position Paper

Lakeland Police Position

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