Sheriff’s Association of Texas on medical marijuana: No!

Headlines across social media are streaming the idea of a legitimate medical marijuana program in Texas. But if the Lone Star State is going to expand the Texas Compassionate Use Program (TCUP) in 2019, it will have to do so in firm opposition to the Sheriff’s Association of Texas (SAT).

Last week, Representative Eddie Lucio III submitted his long awaited medical marijuana legislation House Bill 1365. It seeks to add several qualifying conditions, as well as lifting the THC cap restrictions. This particular bill is actually an updated version of HB 2107, a 2017 house bill that gained the support of over half the Texas House of Representatives and passed out of committee. Lucio III is a Democrat of House District 38 in the Rio Grande Valley:

Official Press Release

However, this is Texas: the land of marijuana prohibition. In an official public statement regarding a request for comment on medical cannabis bill HB 1365, SAT submitted the following:

Credit: KXAN

This should really come as no surprise. Back in November of 2018 when marijuana bills were being prefiled, the legislative director for SAT made their intentions known. Jackson County Sheriff, A.J. Louderback, argued that medical programs in other states, and marijuana legalization in general, has led to spikes in crime and “devastating social losses.”

When contacting SAT, we were referred to a comprehensive 2014 manifesto created to educate Texas Law Enforcement on the dangers of marijuana legalization.

 

Now, not all is gloom and doom. There is clearly not a unified front in the realm of Texas Sheriff Departments. A few of the metropolitan areas, like Harris and Travis Counties, have Sheriffs and District Attornies working together to defer marijuana arrests, instead giving out civil fines and drug classes.

Despite the majority of Texans who overwhelmingly support marijuana reform in 2019, as noted by SAT, there will be stiff resistance from the upper echelons of Texas Legislative Law Enforcement. A century of marijuana prohibition will not go quietly in the night.

 

***Cover Image credited to ClayGervaisGibson.com

 

 

 

4 Comments

  1. The direct benefits of legalizing pot will be huge but it will bring an unveiling of our great failure as supposedly intelligent beings, of allowing ourselves to be trapped in a vicious web of lies, led by fools, profiteers and moralists who pulled off an enormous scam on each of us, on the whole world for a hundred years. Shame on all of us for allowing this fairy tale to stand for so long, as justice and reality.

  2. Jackson County Sheriff, A.J. Louderback, argued that medical programs in other states, and marijuana legalization in general, has led to spikes in crime and “devastating social losses.”

    He’s going to need to provide citations and sources for that statement, since that statement hold back everything. Someone needs to hold bold statements accountable.

  3. They call my house every year asking for money to support their association. No.
    We pay these clowns huge salaries and benefits so they can talk trash and beg for more money?
    No.

  4. Sheriffs have a vested interest in keeping cannabis illegal. A “crime” with no victim is low hanging fruit and easy money for their departments. In addition, Sheriff’s have come to depend on funds from asset forfeitures to further feather their nests. As always, follow the money.

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