GreenSurfer
Well-Known Member
A man charged with drug offenses nearly a decade ago after a Massachusetts Institute of Technology student fatally overdosed on laughing gas contributed $25,000 to the supporters of a ballot question to decriminalize minor marijuana possession because he believes changing the law could help avert future tragedies.
Rene Ruiz, 31, of Boston made one of the largest donations to the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy this year, according to campaign finance reports filed yesterday. The group raised more than $219,000 from January to August.
He and a friend were charged with drug offenses in 1999, when police found drugs and paraphernalia in the friend's dorm apartment, where 22-year-old MIT student Richard Guy overdosed on laughing gas. Ruiz and his friend were out of state at the time, and authorities did not directly connect them to Guy's death.
Ruiz, who ultimately paid a fine and served probation, said yesterday that he is sorry for what happened. He believes drug use should be treated more as a public health issue and less as a matter for the criminal justice system.
"It's not that it's wrong to punish people for using drugs," Ruiz said. "That's perfectly fine. But punishment in and of itself has not solved the problem."
Critics, including Middlesex District Attorney Gerard T. Leone Jr., have argued that the marijuana sold on the streets today is more potent than before and that decriminalization sends the wrong message to youth. Opponents have not formally raised money to fight the ballot proposal.
If the measure is approved in November, Massachusetts would become the 13th state to lift or ease criminal penalties on marijuana possession. The proposal would make having an ounce or less of the drug a civil offense punishable by a $100 fine. It would also require parental notification and the completion of a drug awareness program for anyone under 18 caught with an ounce or less of the drug.
Meanwhile, the Coalition for Our Communities, which opposes a ballot question repealing the state income tax, raised just over $1.5 million between January and August, mostly from labor unions. The National Education Association donated $750,000.
"This reckless proposal is binding," coalition spokesman Stephen Crawford said, "and would have a devastating effect on important services every person in the state depends upon: safe roads and bridges, ambulance service that arrives in time, and classroom sizes that allow our kids to learn and become active members of our community."
The Committee for Small Government, which supports the repeal, had not posted its financial information by midevening yesterday.
Cutting the income tax would reduce by nearly 40 percent the amount of money Massachusetts takes in each year. Municipal leaders have said the proposal would cripple government, while supporters argue that taxpayers would save thousands of dollars per year.
Mayors have urged Governor Deval Patrick to campaign against the proposed income tax repeal.
"People hate paying taxes. . . . I understand that," Patrick said Thursday. "But I also think that we're going to have to start leveling with each other, that the services people say they want cost something."
Rene Ruiz, 31, of Boston made one of the largest donations to the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy this year, according to campaign finance reports filed yesterday. The group raised more than $219,000 from January to August.
He and a friend were charged with drug offenses in 1999, when police found drugs and paraphernalia in the friend's dorm apartment, where 22-year-old MIT student Richard Guy overdosed on laughing gas. Ruiz and his friend were out of state at the time, and authorities did not directly connect them to Guy's death.
Ruiz, who ultimately paid a fine and served probation, said yesterday that he is sorry for what happened. He believes drug use should be treated more as a public health issue and less as a matter for the criminal justice system.
"It's not that it's wrong to punish people for using drugs," Ruiz said. "That's perfectly fine. But punishment in and of itself has not solved the problem."
Critics, including Middlesex District Attorney Gerard T. Leone Jr., have argued that the marijuana sold on the streets today is more potent than before and that decriminalization sends the wrong message to youth. Opponents have not formally raised money to fight the ballot proposal.
If the measure is approved in November, Massachusetts would become the 13th state to lift or ease criminal penalties on marijuana possession. The proposal would make having an ounce or less of the drug a civil offense punishable by a $100 fine. It would also require parental notification and the completion of a drug awareness program for anyone under 18 caught with an ounce or less of the drug.
Meanwhile, the Coalition for Our Communities, which opposes a ballot question repealing the state income tax, raised just over $1.5 million between January and August, mostly from labor unions. The National Education Association donated $750,000.
"This reckless proposal is binding," coalition spokesman Stephen Crawford said, "and would have a devastating effect on important services every person in the state depends upon: safe roads and bridges, ambulance service that arrives in time, and classroom sizes that allow our kids to learn and become active members of our community."
The Committee for Small Government, which supports the repeal, had not posted its financial information by midevening yesterday.
Cutting the income tax would reduce by nearly 40 percent the amount of money Massachusetts takes in each year. Municipal leaders have said the proposal would cripple government, while supporters argue that taxpayers would save thousands of dollars per year.
Mayors have urged Governor Deval Patrick to campaign against the proposed income tax repeal.
"People hate paying taxes. . . . I understand that," Patrick said Thursday. "But I also think that we're going to have to start leveling with each other, that the services people say they want cost something."