drugs legalized in mexico!!!!

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Nov 1, 2005
8,178
820
0
#1
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Possessing marijuana, cocaine and even heroin will no longer be a crime in Mexico if the drugs are carried in small amounts for personal use, under legislation passed by the Mexican Congress.


The measure given final passage by senators late on Thursday allows police to focus on their battle against major drug dealers, the government says, and President
Vicente Fox is expected to sign it into law.

"This law provides more judicial tools for authorities to fight crime," presidential spokesman Ruben Aguilar said on Friday. The measure was approved earlier by the lower house.

Under the legislation, police will not penalize people for possessing up to 5 grams of marijuana, 5 grams of opium, 25 milligrams of heroin or 500 milligrams of cocaine.

People caught with larger quantities of drugs will be treated as narcotics dealers and face increased jail terms under the plan.

The legal changes will also decriminalize the possession of limited quantities of other drugs, including LSD, hallucinogenic mushrooms, amphetamines and peyote -- a psychotropic cactus found in Mexico's northern deserts.

Hundreds of people, including several police officers, have been killed in the past year as drug cartels battle authorities and compete with each other for control of lucrative cocaine, marijuana and heroin smuggling routes from Mexico into the United States.

The violence has raged mostly in northern Mexico but in recent months has spread south to cities like vacation resort Acapulco.

Under current law, it is up to local judges and police to decide on a case-by-case basis whether people should be prosecuted for possessing small quantities of drugs, a source at the Senate's health commission told Reuters.

"The object of this law is to not put consumers in jail, but rather those who sell and poison," said Sen. Jorge Zermeno of the ruling National Action Party.

Fifty-three senators voted for the bill with 26 votes against it.

Hector Michel Camarena, an opposition senator from the Institutional Revolutionary Party, warned that although well intentioned, the law may go too far.

"There are serious questions we have to carefully analyze so that through our spirit of fighting drug dealing, we don't end up legalizing," he said. "We have to get rid of the concept of the (drug) consumer."
 
Mar 1, 2006
4,276
1,154
0
39
www.sendearnings.com
#2
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO If this shit is real WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO, Im gonna buy me little property in mexico now hahahahahaha vaction there all day and get hella high and eat hella shrooms and smoke some peyote hahahaha, im suprised they gonna let you hold heroin and coke fuuuuck, shits gonna be hella cracking when I head over there!
 

Quick

Active member
May 6, 2002
6,443
30
48
Yay Area, CA
#3
Damn a law that actually makes sense......... theres no way that they could do that in the us.... Cuz i mean really theres no way of stopping people from getting drugs there going to to tget 1 way or another, so i mean getting rid of the focus on the consumer is the right step......
 
Mar 1, 2006
4,276
1,154
0
39
www.sendearnings.com
#5
Shit I get high over there anyway but to get high in public and in clubs n shit? FUUUUUUUUUUCK ITS GONNA BE ON THIS SUMMER YO!!!! I remember in TJ I was gonna copp some regular herb from some foo off the street then a fucking cop pulls right by us and that foo played it off hella good yelling "MASSAGES, COMIDA, and PISTO"! lol and the cop was all asking dude what is he selling n shit and he was like no no im just the one that brings the customers lol.
 
Feb 11, 2005
1,646
4
0
46
#11
getting caught with some bud in mexico is like getting caught with crack over here, now i cant wait to go to mexicali this summer and get fucking blown....
 

Y-S

Sicc OG
Dec 10, 2005
3,765
0
0
#20
Mexico Passes Law Making Possession of Some Drugs Legal

Mexican lawmakers passed a sweeping new drug law early Friday that would crack down on small-time dealers, legalize the possession of small quantities of drugs and mandate treatment for addicts.

Under the bill, it would be legal to have 25 milligrams of heroin, a fifth of an ounce of marijuana or half a gram of cocaine. The bill also makes it legal to possess small amounts of LSD, hallucinogenic mushrooms, amphetamines and peyote.

President Vicente Fox had proposed the law in January 2004 in the hopes of slowing down the rapid growth in drug addiction and the ranks of small-time dealers that has hit Mexican cities and towns in recent years, just as it has long plagued American cities.

Both houses of the Mexican Congress passed it in a last-minute flurry of legislation as their session drew to a close. The final version of the bill passed the Senate by a vote of 53 to 26 during an all-night session that ended Friday morning. After its final approval, the president's spokesman, Ruben Aguilar, said Mr. Fox would sign it into law.

"This law gives police and prosecutors better legal tools to combat drug crimes that do so much damage to our youth and children," Mr. Aguilar said.

A United States Embassy official in Mexico deplored the new measure. "We have not seen the text, so we cannot comment on it in detail," said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly. "But any law that would decriminalize dangerous drugs would not be helpful."

Supporters of the bill said it was meant to fix major flaws in Mexico's current drug laws. First, it will allow local judges and the police to decide on a case-by-case basis whether people should be prosecuted when caught with small amounts of drugs. Previously, every drug suspect had to be prosecuted, a system that put many addicts in jail while dealers went free after bribing officials.

Second, the state and local police will be empowered to arrest and prosecute street dealers who are carrying more than the minor amounts allowed under the law. Under existing laws, drug crimes were handled only by federal officials.

The new measure also requires people caught with less than the legal limits to go before a judge, prove they are addicts and seek treatment.

"We are not authorizing the consumption of drugs," said Senator Jorge Zermiño, the bill's sponsor in the Senate. "We are combating it and recognizing that there are addicts that require special treatment. We cannot close our eyes, nor fill our jails with addicts."

But opponents said the law would essentially legalize drug use and lead to more drug abuse and so help drug dealers.

"Here we are authorizing drug use," said Senator Miguel Ángel Navarro of the Party of the Democratic Revolution. "Whether it's a little or a lot, we are legalizing drug use. And I ask who is selling the drugs? Is it now legal to sell drugs in the eyes of the authorities? Clearly not."

The bill was approved as Mexico finds itself in the midst of a war between rival drug cartels that has claimed hundreds of lives, including dozens of police officers, particularly in the Texas border town of Nuevo Laredo and along the Pacific Coast between Acapulco and Zihuatanejo.

The violence has been only part of the social cost of the lucrative drug trade here. Twenty years ago Mexico used to be a country through which drugs passed on their way to Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and other major American cities.

These days, however, drug dealers and addicts have become more numerous in border towns and big cities. The growing local market for drugs has spurred higher levels of prostitution, robbery and burglary.

Local police forces have been hamstrung in their efforts to stop street-level dealing. Lacking the training and authority to investigate under the old law, they could arrest someone only if the person was caught in the act of selling drugs. Only the federal police could arrest someone for drug possession.

"The current law is unclear," said José Ángelo Cordova, the chairman of the health committee in the Chamber of Deputies. "If they don't catch the person selling it, they can't charge them with a crime."