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East Bay | Drug War7/19: Memorial Vigil for Steve McWilliams before Oakland City Council meeting
When and Where: Tuesday, July 19, from 5:20 -7 PM at the Frank Ogawa Plaza at Oakland City Hall (12th St. /City Center BART). Memorial Vigil for Steve McWilliams before Oakland
City Council meeting (7/19/05 Dear Friends and Activists, Please join us locally to observe a nationwide memorial vigil coordinated by ASA to honor medical marijuana activist/patient/caregiver Steve McWilliams (see below for details on this tragedy). When and Where: Tuesday, July 19, from 5:20 -7 PM at the Frank Ogawa Plaza at Oakland City Hall (12th St. /City Center BART). If you care to share your thoughts and feelings about Steve or to express your outrage about the state of the destructive Drug War that led him to take his own life from pharmaceuticals, you will have the opportunity to do so. FOLLOWING THE VIGIL at 7 PM, you are invited to attend the city council meeting where councilmembers will be voting on an agenda item (#19) establishing Measure Z's Oversight Committee, which will further the process of implementing Measure Z. Background: Americans for Safe Access reports: On July 12, 2005, medical marijuana patient and lifelong advocate Steve McWilliams committed suicide while awaiting federal sentencing. Many of us remember Steve as the man who organized and led the September 2002 public handout of medical marijuana to patients at San Diego¹s City Hall. As a result of this sort of ³balls to the wall² activism, Steve was targeted by the DEA and arrested on charges relating to the cultivation of 25 marijuana plants grown for the medical marijuana collective he operated, Shelter from the Storm. He pled guilty because he would have been prohibited from presenting a valid medical marijuana defense in Federal court. Steve was sentenced to six months and released pending appeal but denied access to marijuana. He had been depressed and was hospitalized in terrible pain as late as last week. Steve¹s depression was apparently a combination of factors including dreadful thoughts about going to prison and his deteriorating health. He was taking powerful pharmaceuticals including opiates, anti-nausea, anti-migraine and a variety of other Œprescribed¹ drugs in far higher amounts than when he was able to medicate with marijuana. Evidently, these were the substances he used to end his life. We choose to remember him for his compassion, contributions and inspirationto the movement and will use his memory to rally support for reform. Hope to see you there. -- Mikki Norris, Director Cannabis Consumers Campaign http://www.cannabisconsumers.org/ Coordinator, Human Rights and the Drug War http://www.hr95.org/ Co-author, _Shattered Lives: Portraits from America's Drug War_ Co-author, _Human Rights and the Drug War_ Board Member, Oakland Civil Liberties Alliance http://www.taxandregulate.org/
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