dalpat077
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2019
- Messages
- 3,092

From what I’ve seen feds can hand a case off to locals. But feds have jurisdiction or trump locals.
So... Instead of focusing on opioids they will focus on whatever is the worst in an area?
Lol why wasn't it always like this? Am I missing something?
Yeah, sounds like pretty much the same-old to me. Guess they wanted to spice things up with a fancy name.So... Instead of focusing on opioids they will focus on whatever is the worst in an area?
Lol why wasn't it always like this? Am I missing something?
Yeah, sounds like pretty much the same-old to me. Guess they wanted to spice things up with a fancy name.
I'm down with what they presented. You have a better take, lets hear it?
My starter for ten points: the DEA is only the enemy if you're a manufacturer or distributor or dealer or user or addict.
Pretty much. Don't quote me out of context. I did say "up until now".Sooooo all of us? :D
The main reason why I was asking about which authority (Federal or State) has the final say is because of the Oregon thread a little further down. And I make the assumption that other States will follow at some point. In other words: how does it then work if possession (based on certain guidelines) is decriminalized yet the DEA's business is the eradication of drugs?
Pretty much. Don't quote me out of context. I did say "up until now".
The main reason why I was asking about which authority (Federal or State) has the final say is because of the Oregon thread a little further down. And I make the assumption that other States will follow at some point. In other words: how does it then work if possession (based on certain guidelines) is decriminalized yet the DEA's business is the eradication of drugs? Unless of course the new operation doesn't specifically target users and addicts gives them a rub (based on said guidelines) and only targets manufacturers and distributors and dealers and the like. Unless, as I say, this is all part of a far bigger, and dare I say beneficial to all, program.
Food for thought and comment and debate is all i.e. not making judgments at all.
There's already a case study for what you're describing: cannabis legalization in Colorado and Washington, 2012.
At that time a lot of people were contemplating what the feds would do, if they'd move in and bust heads like they did during the pre-2012 medical marijuana days. Someone posted an interesting observation that I still remember to this day, and that's the fact that out of the marijuana interdiction programs that the government was involved in, federal marijuana busts, somewhere around 99% of them relied on state local law enforcement for some part of the operation...they were almost always the people doing the actual busts. I don't think that a federally-driven prohibition regime would be effective (even to the very, very minimal extent that it is, or ever has been, effective) without the active participation of state and local law enforcement. The feds saw the writing on the wall with this issue, in regards to cannabis anyway, and that was a real turning point.