Category: Addiction News

  • Imagine Dragons Release New Song About Depression

    Imagine Dragons Release New Song About Depression

    “Zero” is featured on the soundtrack for the upcoming animated movie “Ralph Breaks The Internet.”

    Ralph Breaks The Internet is the long awaited sequel to the animated hit Wreck It Ralph, and it’s due to hit theaters on November 21. On the movie’s soundtrack is a new song, “Zero,” by Imagine Dragons, and it deals with high-functioning depression.

    Dan Reynolds, the lead singer of Imagine Dragons, told The New York Post that “Zero” “is a song about somebody who feels empty, who feels like nothing, but continues on and puts a smile on their face. That’s kind of the theme of my life: a constant battle to find positivity in living and feeling a little empty at times. I’m trying to fill that void.”

    The single also captures the contradiction of high-functioning depression in that it’s a happy song in a Disney movie, but the lyrics tell us, “Let me tell you what it’s like to be a zero, let me show you what it’s like to never feel, like I’m good enough for anything that’s real, I’m looking for a way out.”

    In a press release about the single, Reynolds added, “That journey of feeling like nothing and trying to realize and recognize your worth as a human is an important part of life. And given the distorted version of reality kids face online and that expectations that come with it, this struggle is real for so many people right now.”

    Reynolds has been open about his struggles with depression in the past. He told CBS This Morning, “When I’m happy, I’m very happy. When I’m low, I’m so low, and [the band] have had to deal with that for years and years.”

    Reynolds also told the BBC he had to seek help after a tour. “It came to a point where I didn’t have an option. It was lose my family and lose my life or seek help.” Reynolds went to a therapist in 2016 “sat down and basically faced it head on for the first time.”

    “This year has been very healing for me,” Reynolds says. “I would say I’ve dealt with a much lower level of depression this year than I have in the past decade, and I think that comes from living my truth.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Artie Lange Ready For Sobriety: "It’s Been Long Enough"

    Artie Lange Ready For Sobriety: "It’s Been Long Enough"

    “I’m about to take a big step to help myself, to save my life. I’m sure you will hear about it. I feel like I’m not done. I have another run of laughing with you all.”

    Comedian Artie Lange seems ready for a change.

    Now 51 years old, his health fading, Lange appears ready to commit to sobriety. And it begins with a treatment program.

    “I’m about to go into drug treatment and commit to a full rehab, in-patient,” he said in a recent interview on The Steve Trevelise Show. “I don’t know. I’m a very humble guy at this point. And I think I”m ready to go and do what I gotta do. It’s been long enough.”

    With Kevin Meara walking him through the process, Lange is ready to receive help. This time he’s hoping it will stick. Meara is the co-chair of City of Angels, a Groveville, New Jersey-based organization that provides interventions, recovery support, counseling services and more at no cost.

    Lange did not expect to live past 25, he said in a previous interview. He was 37 at the time fellow comedian Mitch Hedberg died at the same age of a drug overdose in 2005.

    “When I heard [Mitch] died, I had such guilt and said to myself, ‘God, if I was a better person I would have just said, you know what, the heck with the Stern show, forget Caroline’s.’ I should have grabbed him and said, let’s go to the hospital right now. Let’s get detoxed and get better right now,” Lange said on The Steve Trevelise Show.

    “But Mitch was the kind of guy who openly said—he was so far gone—[that] he goes, ‘Guys, don’t try to help me. I wanna do heroin ’til I die.’ And that’s a mindset that people get into because they’re so afraid of not being on it that you lose sense of reality. It just is so sad to think of that. And even that didn’t stop me.”

    When Trevelise asked if Lange can see himself getting to this point, he replied, “I hope not. I don’t think so. I don’t think I’m even close to there yet.”

    Lange, who said in a previous interview that his fading health is starting to worry him, does not want to end up like Hedberg or Greg Giraldo, another comedian who died of a drug overdose in 2010. He was 44 years old.

    “I get nervous now, because now I wanna live. Now I do care about it, and I think that maybe I’ve done too much damage,” Lange said to NJ Advance Media in July.

    The day after his recent interview on Nov. 5, Lange tweeted some uplifting words to his followers: “I’m about to take a big step to help myself, to save my life. I’m sure you will hear about it. I feel like I’m not done. I have another run of laughing with you all. I want to thank you fans the way you thank me. You have saved my life. You are special to me. Wish me luck.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • The Character Without a Credit: Addiction in "Beautiful Boy"

    The Character Without a Credit: Addiction in "Beautiful Boy"

    David is desperate to fix Nic. He researches addiction and interviews doctors. He even takes crystal meth to try to better understand.

    Told largely from the perspective of David Sheff (Steve Carell), the father of 18-year-old Nic (Timothée Chalamet), who struggles with crystal meth addiction, Beautiful Boy is an agonizing film adaptation of memoirs written by the father-son duo: Beautiful Boy (2008) by David Sheff and Tweak: Growing Up on Methamphetamines (2009) by Nic Sheff. The crucial challenge for director Felix Van Groeningen is to distinguish his film from others in the addiction archives, capturing an elusive disease with uniqueness and poignancy without teetering into the realm of cliché. Groeningen does this by focusing on character relationships, not falling prey to plot prescriptiveness.

    New York Times film critic A.O. Scott writes that as “much as [Beautiful Boy] may want to illuminate the realities of addiction, it mystifies David and Nic’s experiences, leaving too many questions — how and what as well as why — swirling in the air.” Scott misses the point: the “how and what as well as why” is addiction. Films that do pretend to unlock answers to addiction often fall victim to over-sentimentality.

    For the sake of transparency, I bring a bias here: I’m in recovery. Addiction is “cunning, baffling, and powerful,” as the rooms of recovery reiterate. One of the most powerful scenes in the film comes after Nic relapses, and David and Karen (Nic’s step-mom, played by Maura Tierney) come to see him in rehab. Nic begins to cry because he doesn’t have any answers to how he’s ended up there again. Nic, like myself and virtually every addict I’ve ever met, feels better when he’s high: “I felt better than I ever had, so…I just kept on doing it.” And then it takes more drugs and booze to feel better until they simply don’t work anymore. It’s an unsatisfying answer, to say the least, and it’s one of the primary reasons why addiction is so hard for families to grapple with.

    The most engrossing addiction films—think Basketball Diaries or Requiem for a Dream or Trainspotting—depict the darkest moments of drug addiction. Groeningen doesn’t shy away from portraying the depths of Nic’s addiction, but shock value isn’t the primary method to propel the narrative either; the film isn’t about drugs, after all, it’s about the people who fall victim to them. The climax of the film is distressing, to say the least (spoiler alert)— Nic overdoses in a public bathroom—but the film never exploits drug usage as a default mechanism to drive the plot forward. The truth is that the swirling in the air of “how and what as well as why” is exactly what addiction does. This isn’t a copout; this is the truth.

    David is desperate to fix Nic. He researches addiction and interviews doctors. He even takes crystal meth to try to better understand. He is a writer, after all. But this is a subject he will never quite understand and the film, ultimately, is about his journey to accept that there is nothing he can do to save Nic.

    While sitting in the theater, I couldn’t help but be hyper-aware of what active addiction did to my own friends and family, especially my parents—the thoughts that still haunt my father when the phone rings late at night or I’m not on time for a family gathering. What does it do to a father or a mother or a sister or a brother for their son or sibling to disappear for days at a time? This is the essence of Beautiful Boy. And it’s painful.

    The film is authentic because the emotional turmoil—the desperation—from Carell is genuine. It’s easy for a director to inject an addiction narrative with recovery jargon and AA meetings. But that is recovery, not addiction.

    As Anna Iovine writes for Vice: “Beautiful Boy doesn’t hide the ugliest parts of addiction…But all I could think of while watching Beautiful Boy is all the pain that I wasn’t seeing, and how we willfully turn away from the plight of addicts without privilege and resources…Watch it to remind yourself that there are millions of stories like Nic’s, but they won’t have the opportunity to be made into books or films.” While walking out of the theater with one of my oldest friends, I considered where I would be if it wasn’t for family, blood or otherwise. Getting sober, with love and support, is one of the hardest things I’ve ever done. Without that love and support, I wouldn’t be here, writing this. And so it’s important, to me at least, to consider what can be done for those who want help, but have no idea how to get it, or no ability to get it. I can understand, as well as anyone, the offscreen pain that Iovine writes about. That’s a character in Beautiful Boy that doesn’t have a byline.

    Official Trailer:

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Low-Level Weed Cases Not A Priority, Michigan's Top Prosecutors Say

    Low-Level Weed Cases Not A Priority, Michigan's Top Prosecutors Say

    Michigan voters approved a ballot measure to legalize recreational marijuana last week.

    On the heels of a successful ballot measure that legalized recreational weed in Michigan, prosecutors last week put out a statement clarifying that pot is still illegal on a federal level – but they won’t make weed cases a priority. 

    “Marijuana continues to be an illegal drug under federal law,” Matthew Schneider and Andrew Birge, U.S. Attorneys for the Eastern and Western Districts of Michigan, wrote in a statement Thursday, according to the Detroit Free Press. “Because we have taken oaths to protect and defend the Constitution and the laws of the United States, we will not unilaterally immunize anyone from prosecution for violating federal laws simply because of the passage of Proposal One.”

    But – following the lead of federal prosecutors elsewhere – the duo said they wouldn’t make throwing resources at marijuana enforcement a priority. 

    “Our offices have never focused on the prosecution of marijuana users or low-level offenders, unless aggravating factors are present,” the federal prosecutors said. “That will not change.”

    The factors that could pique federal interest in a given case include everything from the involvement of other illegal drugs to suspects’ past criminal records and from the use of guns to the possibility of environmental contamination. 

    The ballot measure approved by 56% of Michigan voters on Tuesday will allow adults over 21 to grow and use weed legally, and it’ll take effect 10 days after the vote is certified.

    “The Proposal 1 campaign boiled down into one of fact versus fear,” Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol Spokesperson Josh Hovey said, according to Forbes. “The data from the nine other states to have legalized marijuana made clear that regulation and taxation are a better solution. Legalization of marijuana will end the unnecessary waste of law enforcement resources used to enforce the failed policy of prohibition while generating hundreds of millions of dollars each year for Michigan’s most important needs.”

    But, while Michiganders greenlit legal pot on Tuesday, the resignation of Attorney General Jeff Sessions a day later created some uncertainty about the future of the nation’s marijuana enforcement policies. 

    Although Sessions was no friend to marijuana reformers, he did clarify earlier this year that he was not interested in pursuing small-time weed cases due to a lack of resources for low-level crimes.

    It’s not clear what a new attorney general might mean for federal approaches to pot. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Prison Guards Accused Of Smuggling Pot, Wire Cutters Into Lock-Up

    Prison Guards Accused Of Smuggling Pot, Wire Cutters Into Lock-Up

    Three female guards are all facing charges of attempting to furnish a prisoner with contraband.

    A trio of prison visitors could end up on the other side of the razor wire after they were arrested for allegedly trying to smuggle pot and cell phones into a pair of South Carolina lock-ups. 

    The three women arrested – Yolanda Whitaker, Yvanda Maria Hardy, and Carmen Bess – are all facing charges of attempting to furnish a prisoner with contraband, according to The State.

    The set of collars came just days after one prison guard was hit with a similar contraband charge and another accused of trying to smuggle oxycodone and MDMA into a Bennettsville facility, according to the Columbia newspaper.

    The first of the visitor arrests came on Nov. 2, nine months after officials say Whitaker tried sneaking 20 cell phones, a pair of wire cutters, 3.5 pounds of tobacco, lighters and rolling papers into the medium-security prison Kershaw Correctional Institution. It’s not clear who the intended recipient was, but officials said she allegedly stuffed the verboten goods into a speaker box she mailed into the facility. 

    A day after Whitaker’s arrest, Hardy was collared for trying to bring weed into McCormick Correctional Institution. In addition to the contraband charge, she was hit with one count of manufacturing or possession of drugs and one count of conspiracy to introduce drugs. 

    The day after that, Jenkins was arrested – at the same facility – after she allegedly tried smuggling liquid perfume and 142.9 grams of pot into the prison. She faced the same set of charges as Hardy, but it’s not immediately clear where she tried hiding the smuggled goods, which were wrapped in black electrical tape. 

    The earlier arrests of officers were both announced in October. In the first case, Williams Suggs was hit with a series of charges after he allegedly stuffed a package of 40 oxycodone in his groin, along with 65 MDMA pills, 19 cigarettes, and a lighter. In his car, prison police discovered 450 grams of synthetic marijuana, authorities said at the time.

    Then, on Oct. 29, prison officials announced the arrest of Ebonyisha Moinque Casby, a Lieber Correctional guard who allegedly smuggled contraband to an inmate she was having sex with. It’s not clear what forbidden goods she was hoping to sneak into the facility, but she was also dinged for bringing a gun into the prison.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Could Limiting Social Media Use Improve Your Mental Health?

    Could Limiting Social Media Use Improve Your Mental Health?

    A new study examined whether excessive use of social media contributed to feelings of depression and loneliness.

    The more time you spend scrolling through social media, the more likely you could be contributing to your own feelings of depression and loneliness. 

    A new study from Penn State researchers has determined that social media use correlates with both depression and feeling lonely. 

    The study was led by Melissa Hunt of Penn State’s psychology department and involved 143 students from the university. The students were broken into two groups—one being told to limit social media use (Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat) for 10 minutes per app, the other instructed to continue using it as normal—and then monitored for three weeks. 

    Over the course of the study, students were assessed each week through testing for depression, social support and more. Their social media use was monitored through the iOS battery use screen.

    According to the study authors, levels of loneliness and depression decreased significantly over the three weeks. 

    “The limited use group showed significant reductions in loneliness and depression over three weeks compared to the control group,” authors wrote. “Both groups showed significant decreases in anxiety and fear of missing out over baseline, suggesting a benefit of increased self-monitoring. Our findings strongly suggest that limiting social media use to approximately 30 minutes per day may lead to significant improvement in well-being.”

    On the other hand, areas such as self-esteem and social support did not increase over the three weeks. Following up with the students was difficult, so authors were unable to fully determine if prior feelings returned or habit changes were implemented. 

    According to TechCrunch, Hunt states that by taking time away from social media, people are likely to instead focus on more fulfilling things in their lives. 

    “Some of the existing literature on social media suggests there’s an enormous amount of social comparison that happens,” she said. “When you look at other people’s lives, particularly on Instagram, it’s easy to conclude that everyone else’s life is cooler or better than yours. When you’re not busy getting sucked into clickbait social media, you’re actually spending more time on things that are more likely to make you feel better about your life.”

    The researchers did point out that their study was limiting. In future studies, they state, it could help to have a more diverse group of participants, include more social media outlets, extend the timeframe of the experiment and allow for more comprehensive follow-up with participants. Researchers also state that the set time for social media use could sway results.  

    Whatever the case, Hunt says, it’s important to take time away from technology to connect with others in your life. 

    “In general, I would say, put your phone down and be with the people in your life,” she stated. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Beautiful Boy" Shows Truth Of Addiction, Former NIDA Director Says

    "Beautiful Boy" Shows Truth Of Addiction, Former NIDA Director Says

    “The film shows the limits of treatment and family love in confronting the awesome and tenacious power of addiction.”

    Robert L. DuPont knows what addiction looks like — how it can strike anyone and tear families apart from the inside. As a doctor specializing in addiction and treatment and former National Institute on Drug Abuse and White House Drug Chief, DuPont has seen both the truth and the misconceptions around substance abuse, and says that Steve Carell’s new film Beautiful Boy portrays them both.

    “Throughout my 50-year career working on drug abuse prevention and treatment, I’ve often seen drug addiction befall every kind of person,” DuPont writes in an essay for STAT News. That can include even stable, loving families like the one portrayed in the film, which is based on the best-selling books by David Sheff and his son Nic, who progressed from sharing a joint with his father to shooting meth as addiction took hold.

    In addition to pushing back on the idea that addiction only affects people who have done something wrong, DuPont says that the film outlines the real risk of teenage drug abuse.

    “This movie is a cautionary story for teens and families. Another reason I am recommending the movie (and the books) is their riveting and relentless portrayal of how addiction hijacks the brain,” he writes. “The film shows the limits of treatment and family love in confronting the awesome and tenacious power of addiction. The movie does not let the viewer stray from that horrifying descent into this modern hell. It brutally and relentlessly portrays the chemical slavery that is addiction and the sustained helplessness of both father and son as they struggle to escape addiction’s iron grip year after devastating year.”

    Dupont, who is the author of Chemical Slavery: Understanding Addiction and Stopping the Drug Epidemic, says that people whose brains are on drugs are not the same people they were before they were using.

    “His or her brain has been reprogrammed to prioritize continued drug use over relationships and other meaningful aspects of life,” DuPont writes. “Dishonesty is part of addiction. When talking to an individual with an addiction who is using, you are talking to the drug, not to the person who existed before the addiction.”

    He says that all viewers — those who have experienced addiction in the families and those who haven’t — can take lessons from Beautiful Boy.

    “The first is the power of addiction to cause a downward spiral regardless of prior successes. Another is the danger of not confronting early drug use and insisting that a youth not use any marijuana, alcohol, or other drugs for reasons of health,” he writes. The final is the idea that addiction is a lifelong disease, and recovery a lifelong commitment.

    “When Nic leaves treatment, David does not effectively monitor him for relapse or actively manage his recovery plan. He fails to see that addiction is a lifelong threat to his son and not a temporary problem to be put behind them by even the best treatment,” DuPont writes.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Stone Cold Steve Austin Gives Up Trademark Beer Chugging

    Stone Cold Steve Austin Gives Up Trademark Beer Chugging

    The legendary WWE star has given up alcohol and taken up yoga. 

    Stone Cold Steve Austin announced on his podcast, The Steve Austin Show, that he is giving up beer. He announced to fans that he’s doing it for his health, it’s working, and that he hasn’t had a drink in over two weeks.

    “My eating program is going fantastic. [I’m] sticking to my exact macros. [I’ve had] zero alcohol for right at 14 days now,” he said on the podcast. “Pounds are coming off. My strength is going up. Jesus Christ, I’m getting as strong as a goddamn horse over here.”

    Quitting beer isn’t the only way the WWE legend is boosting his health, he also told listeners he’s started Diamond Dallas Page’s yoga program.

    “No alcohol, and when you hit the weights on a consistent basis and eat what you’re supposed to, it is amazing the difference that you can make or I’m making,” he raved on the show. “I’m also doing my DDP Yoga s***. Hell, I’m going to jump up here and do the splits like a goddamn cheerleader in a minute! I’m flexible as a motherf******. Dallas’ program works like a b****. I appreciate it, Dallas. I appreciate it, man. That’s a badass program. I’m sticking to it.”

    He also told listeners about another change, though one that’s less in interest of his health and more about trying something new: medical marijuana.

    “The times I had tried to smoke dope way back in the day, I didn’t like it because dope just always made me feel kind of dumb and when I’d said something, I’d think, ‘does that sound stupid or not?’” he recalled. “It just brought me down, so dope never was my thing. I was an alcohol guy. I liked whiskey, tequila, vodka, beer. I could go on and on.”

    After getting his hands on a “marijuana cigarette,” Austin recalled becoming paranoid as he approached a checkpoint.

    “I’m thinking, ‘man, here I am, retired from the wrestling business, a global icon and a national treasure, and I’m about to get busted for f***ing one joint because I wanted to try out a goddamn marijuana cigarette, so I could get away from the booze,’” Austin recounted.

    “We go through there, the dude looks at me and I look at him. We’ve been passing through there for 10, 15 years. I’ve been passing through my whole damn life and they knew who we are and we always say ‘hi’ to them. But anyway, on this occasion, since I’m carrying.”

    Despite the trouble, Austin found the marijuana underwhelming and asked his wife for a drink.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy Discusses Addiction in New Memoir

    Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy Discusses Addiction in New Memoir

    In his new memoir, “Let’s Go (So We Can Get Back),” the singer-songwriter details his struggles with alcoholism and Vicodin.

    Jeff Tweedy, singer and guitarist in the band Wilco, has penned a new memoir, Let’s Go (So We Can Get Back). In it, he recounts his descent into addiction and eventual decision to get clean.

    Tweedy’s troubles began young.

    “I honestly do not remember a time in my life when I didn’t have headaches,” he wrote. “I think I was six when I learned they were called migraines and that it wasn’t something that happened to everybody.”

    Tweedy suspects the migraines are hereditary as he remembers his mother and sister also suffering from them. The severity and frequency also tipped him off they were linked to an undiagnosed mood disorder, which ran in his family as well.

    “Every school year I’d end up missing many, many days because of migraines. In addition to the pain, I’d get sick to my stomach and end up vomiting so much I’d have to sleep by the toilet…” he recounted. “One year I missed 40 consecutive days of school because of my migraines and vomiting.”

    On top of the migraines and mood disorders, alcoholism was yet another hereditary hurdle Tweedy was saddled with. His grandfather on his father’s side died in a bar before Tweedy ever got to know him. He was frequently left in the care of his grandfather on his mother’s side, who he says never did not reek of alcohol. But perhaps the greatest impact on young Tweedy was his father.

    “My dad was a lifetime drinker. He’d come home from work every day and drink a 12-pack of beer. That was his standard beer consumption,” remembered Tweedy. “If it was a day off or a weekend when he wasn’t on call, he could down a case of beer. This wasn’t just over the course of a rough year or two, this is how he subsisted for the majority of his life.”

    Eventually, his dad was able to quit drinking, but in doing so allowed his mood disorders to manifest again.

    “He got sober at 81 years old, on the advice of his doctors, and he did it on his own, without rehab or any type of AA support group. He had to stop, so he stopped,” wrote Tweedy. “Then he started having panic attacks for the first time since he was young.”

    Tweedy himself picked up the bottle despite promising his mother he would never drink. Breaking a vicious cycle of guilt, he was able to quit drinking at 23, but soon found himself chasing new addictions. He started with Diet Coke and cigarettes, but in seeking avenues to medicate his anxiety—and migraines—he was led to Vicodin. Soon he was seeking out the pills wherever he went, but they eventually his migraines and anxiety outpaced the drugs.

    Tweedy attempted to quit cold turkey, but became a wreck.

    “Five weeks later—theoretically, I was clean by virtue of the fact that I wasn’t on drugs—I suffered a serious mental collapse,” Tweedy remembers. “My brain chemistry crashed, and my body was revolting against me.”

    His wife took him to the hospital, where he begged nurses to put him in a psych ward. Today, Tweedy is clean with his memoir set for release on November 13, 2018.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Drug Policy and Criminal Justice Reform at the 2018 Midterm Elections

    Drug Policy and Criminal Justice Reform at the 2018 Midterm Elections

    In one of the most talked-about reform wins of the midterm elections, Floridians approved restoring voting rights to most of the state’s roughly 1.4 million felons

    Aside from boasting impressive voter turnout, the 2018 midterm elections ushered in a number of wins for criminal justice and drug policy reformers across the country. Florida felons stand to benefit from a ballot measure there, and a trio of successful marijuana initiatives will broaden legal access to cannabis in three states. Those were some of the most-touted changes approved last week, but there’s much more to celebrate (or mourn). Here’s our overview of how drug policy and criminal justice fared at the polls.

    A Win for the Felons of Florida

    In one of the most talked-about reform wins of the night, Floridians approved restoring voting rights to most of the state’s roughly 1.4 million felons. The ballot measure finally put to rest another piece of a regressive legacy from the days of Jim Crow, bringing the number of states with felony voting bans down to just two: Iowa and Kentucky.

    The decades-old dictum was pushed into the state’s constitution after the Civil War, creating a lifetime restriction that only the governor and his Cabinet could overturn on a case-by-case basis.

    During former Gov. Charlie Crist’s four-year tenure, more than 150,000 felons were granted access to the ballot box. But since Republican Gov. Rick Scott took over in 2011, just 3,000 formerly incarcerated Floridians have won back that right, according to NPR.

    It was a system that disproportionately impacted minority voters; more than a fifth of potential black voters are banned from the ballot box due to criminal records.

    But on Tuesday, 64 percent of the state’s voters decided to change that. Now, felons — except for those convicted of murder or sex offenses — regain the right to vote once they finish parole or probation.

    It’s a change that could cause ripples far beyond the Sunshine State. Florida is consistently seen as a swing state with narrow margins for its coveted share of electoral votes; a slight shift in the voting population could have national impact.

    In 2000, when the tight presidential race came down to Florida, roughly 500 votes separated the two candidates. It’s not clear which way a possible 1.4 million new voters might lean, but we’ll soon find out. The new law goes into effect in January.

    Looking Back on Drug Laws

    Aside from enfranchising felons, the Sunshine State also made waves with another ballot measure that could help cut the prison population by making new sentencing laws retroactive.

    Until now, any time that legislators approved new laws or repealed old ones, the changes didn’t apply to anyone already locked up. The state’s constitution specifically banned that sort of retroactivity under a so-called “savings clause” aimed at preserving convictions, according to the Jacksonville Times-Union.

    But now, if someone is sitting in prison on a strict mandatory minimum under a law that’s later repealed or if they’re locked up for something that later becomes legal — they might have a chance of getting out.

    Reformers framed the measure as a means of reducing mass incarceration in a state still boasting a record-high prison population. But the change isn’t so much a step ahead as it is a game of catch-up; Florida was the only state with a ban on retroactivity baked into its constitution.

    Speaking of Baked…

    Four different states voted on pot-related measures last week, with mixed results.

    Utah and Missouri both greenlit medical marijuana, joining more than 30 states that already allow it, according to the New York Times.

    And, on the recreational front, 56 percent of Michigan voters got behind Proposal 1 to legalize weed for adults. The Great Lake State is now the 10th in the nation to just say yes to pot, a change that will take effect ten days after the election results are officially certified.

    But despite three ballot successes and growing nationwide support behind legalizing weed, pot proponents lost out in North Dakota, where 59 percent rejected a measure that would have nixed most marijuana-related arrests. The state already allows medical marijuana, but cannabis advocates faced stiff opposition leading up to Election Day.

    “It would have been a disaster for the state,” former state attorney general Bob Wefald, who chairs North Dakotans Against the Legalization of Recreational Marijuana, told the Grand Forks Herald.

    Whatever the inclinations of North Dakota voters, the midterms as a whole seemed to cap a strong year for marijuana advocates – and NORML framed it as a sign of more to come.

    “In 2019, we anticipate unprecedented legislative activity at the state level in favor of marijuana law reform legislation,” the group wrote on its website, “and we expect to see several significant legislative victories before the year’s end.”

    A Blue Wave Sweeps Across the Biggest Incarcerator in Texas

    Harris County – which has traditionally sent more people to state prison, more kids to juvenile lock-ups and more inmates to the death chamber than any other county in Texas – was swept away by Democratic candidates in Tuesday’s elections.

    While the county – which is home to Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city – already had Dems for mayor, sheriff and district attorney, many of the judges and some county commissioners were Republicans.

    Now, all 59 of the judicial benches that were up for grabs are in the hands of Democrats and at least one socialist. That could have huge implications for progressive system reforms in a county that was already beginning to lean left after years of lock-em-up justice.

    For one, the shift could help end the school-to-prison pipeline, as voters unseated the two juvenile court judges who accounted for more than one-fifth of all kids sent to state juvenile prisons. Now, all three of the juvenile benches will be held by Democrats, including a former teacher, a public defender and one of the 17 black women who won out in Houston on Tuesday.

    The Election Day shake-up could also have a huge impact on the county’s ongoing bail litigation. Last year, a federal judge deemed the county’s bail system unconstitutional because it amounted to “wealth-based detention” for minor crimes. But the county and 14 of its 16 misdemeanor judges have spent millions in taxpayer dollars fighting that ruling, which has become a contentious issue in Houston criminal justice.

    On top of all that, the new county judge — who is the county’s top executive and does not oversee a criminal court — is a 27-year-old Democrat who positioned herself as a justice reformer during the campaign. In a surprise election night upset after a close race, Lina Hidalgo — who came in with no experience in local politics — unseated the Republican who oversaw the county’s response to Harvey.

    The Drug War Wins in Ohio

    Voters in the Buckeye State rejected a progressive ballot measure that would have made drug possession a misdemeanor instead of a felony.

    The would-be constitutional amendment was projected to cut back on the state’s bloated prison population and net millions in savings for taxpayers. Currently, the state-run lock-ups are at 132 percent capacity and, according to Ohio Policy Matters predictions, the rejected measure could have cut the prison population by at least 10,000 inmates.

    Unlike in Florida, Ohio already had the ability to make new drug sentencing laws retroactive, so the new measure would have allowed already-convicted prisoners to petition the courts to apply the new law to them. And, aside from opening up the possibility of release for those already behind bars, the measure’s potential retroactivity would have meant that people who have already served their time could avoid some of the collateral consequences of a criminal conviction – like the loss of professional licenses – by having their old felonies turned into misdemeanors.

    Backed in part by robust campaigns funded by the likes of George Soros and Mark Zuckerberg, the issue sparked contentious debate, and some argued that it could gut participation in the state’s drug court programs as arrestees wouldn’t have the threat of felony charges hanging over their heads when considering treatment.

    But, amid an ongoing opioid crisis in the state, just over 63 percent of voters opposed the measure on Tuesday.

    No More Slave Labor in Colorado

    Coloradans amended their state constitution to get rid of a decades-old loophole that allowed slave labor in the state’s prisons. Now, the Centennial State can’t force its inmates to work for free.

    The constitutional language that allowed the state to use free, forced prison labor dated back to the years after the Civil War, when states – mainly former slave states – started using an abusive convict leasing system to punish crimes, thus effectively reviving slavery under the guise of law-and-order.

    Under federal law, that was still possible given the slippery wording of the 13th Amendment which ended slavery “except as a punishment for crime.” Constitutions in Colorado and at least 15 other states mirrored that language which meant that, even long after the end of convict leasing, prisons could force inmates to work for free.

    But thanks to Tuesday’s vote in Colorado, that’s now no longer the case. Amendment A nixed the language that permitted slavery, replacing it with a concise sentence banning the practice: “The shall never be in this state either slavery or involuntary servitude.”

    To an extent, the shift is only symbolic as the state’s prison labor programs were already considered voluntary, according to NPR.

    Roughly 65 percent of voters supported the amendment, according to the Denver Post. But — even though it is 2018 — some 765,000 Coloradans cast votes in support of slavery.

    A Loss and a Win for Reformers in Louisiana

    Despite the gains for felons’ right in Florida, nearby Louisiana took a step in the opposite direction, passing a ballot measure that explicitly bans felons — unless pardoned — from seeking public office until five years after finishing their sentence.

    Nearly three-quarters of voters supported the restriction. Before Tuesday’s decision, Louisiana was just one of three states that allowed felons to run for office as soon as they got out of jail or prison, according to Governing. Everywhere else, they have to wait till finishing parole or probation — if they can run at all.

    This isn’t the first time the southern state has sought to ban freshly released felons from bids for office; two decades ago voters greenlit a similar ballot measure, but it was later struck down by the courts.

    But the Bayou State offered some good news for reformers as well; Louisiana will now require unanimous verdicts for felony convictions, thanks to a different ballot measure. Previously, only 10 of 12 jurors needed to agree on guilt to put a defendant behind bars.

    Food for Inmates

    In another reform move from the Deep South, voters in two Alabama counties banned sheriffs from keeping for themselves leftover money intended for inmate food.

    More than 86 percent of voters in Cullman County and Morgan County approved nixing the controversial practice that sparked national media coverage. Famously, the sheriff in Etowah County pocketed $750,000 from inmate food funds and then bought a $740,000 beach house.

    Months after AL.com reported extensively on the sheriff’s surfside real estate purchase, the governor put out a memo clarifying that it’s not allowed. Now, the ballot measures reiterate that on a local level.

    View the original article at thefix.com