From: Mike Rosing <mrosing@igc.apc.org>Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugsDate: 28 Jun 93 09:07 PDTSubject: Italy legalizes, note from ItalyMessage-ID: <1484000250@igc.apc.org>I just recieved a letter from the International Antiprohibitionist League(Federated to the Radical Party) which I thought I'd summarize and post.Feel free to forward post where people might be interested.  The letterexplains why the Italians voted last April to legalize drugs.========================================================================REF-ENGL ARTICLOLO IN INGLESE SU REFERENDUM 1993ITALY:  REFERENDUM DELETES CRIMINAL SACTIONS FOR DRUG USERSBY GIANCARLO ARNAOA referendum about drug policy was held in Italy on April 18, 1993.  Inorder to understand the terms of the question, we will summarize thestory of the Italian drug law (no 162/90) through the last five years.EVENTS IN 1988-90[He explains how the Secretary of the PSI party (Craxi) pushes a strongantidrug campaign with direct quotes about making drug use illegal.]THE ITALIAN DRUG LAWThe new drug law (162/90) became effective on Jul. 11th 1990.  The mainfeatures of the law are: 1) sanctions, 2) option between sanction andtreatment, 3) "average daily doses".SANCTIONS According to the former drug law (in force since 1975), drug possession was not punishable in cases of "moderate amounts for personal use".  According to the 162/90, drug use itself is defined as "illicit", but no specific penalties are imposed.  Drug possesion is alwyas punishable, by either administrative or criminal sancions.Administrative sanctions are imposed for possesion of up to the socalled "average daily dose" (ADD).  They consist of suspension ofdriving licence or passport, daily appearance at a police station andpossible seizure of the vehicle, according to the circumstances.  Thesesanctions can be appealed, but are not suspended pending appeal.[lists explicit prison terms for cannabis for amounts over ADD as 2-6years, but only .5 to 4 years for "slight offenses."  Other drugs get 8to 20 years or 1-6 for "slight offenses."]OPTION SANCTION/TREATMENTAs an alternative to the administrative sanctions, it is possible toenter a treatment program, set out by a public health service, andmanaged by either a private or a public treatment agnecy.  The lawdoesn't specify the kind of treatment.Alternative treatment is also possible for people indicted fordrug-related crimes (up to 4 years jail); when the treatment iscompleted, the sanction is repealed; if the treatment is interupted,the sanction is restored.THE "AVERAGE DAILY DOSE" (ADD)The ADD discriminates between the administrative and the criminalsanctions: it is therefore a conerstone of the law.  Nevertheless, theADD is not quantified by thelaw, but by the Health Ministry.The ADDs of the main illegal or controlled substances are as follows:cannabis 50 mg fo THC, morphine 200 mg, heroin 100 mg, codeine 200 mg,phenatntyl 0.5 mg, methadone 50 mg, opium 1 gm, cocaine 150 mg, cocainebase 20 mg, amphetamine 50 mg, metamphetamine 25 mg, LSD 50micrograms.EVENTS IN THE YEARS 1990-92After the law was enforced, the number of drug overdoses kept itsupwards trend until 1991; there was a decrease in 1992, but it wasdisputed by many scholars, since it seemed it depended by a change inthe criteria of classification.  Moreover the amount of drug users, wason increase, the jails were full of drug addicts or drug users, andtribunals were jammed with drug possession trials.  In fact, the lowlevel of the ADD meand that most of cases of possession for personaluse had to be criminalized - this happened paradocically mainly forcannabis users, given that possession of only half gram hashish (aboutthree jounts) was equated to dealing.  In the last two years, therewere at least theree cases of young cannabis users that commitedsuicide after being arrested.The principle of ADD was harshly critixized by scientific, legal andpolice institutions.  Some police officers discretionally increased thelevel of ADD, in order to get rid of a multitude of irrelevant criminalcases.The law lost its favor wihtin most of public opinion, as far as it wasclear that it didn't bring along any positive change.  Meaningfully,the law was critisized by Mr. N. Amato, President of the ItalianPenitentiary System, by most judges, by V. Angnoletto, President ofAIDS Italian League and by most of Therapeutic communities managers.At the end of 1992, Mr. Craxi and most of Socialist political leaderswere indicted for corruption, and resigned.EVENTS IN 1993[explains survey done where 5% want full drug legalization, 10% wouldallow cannabis in tobacco shops/ cocaine and heroin via doctors, 36%would allow cannabis in tobacco shops/ cocaine available under medicalprescription, heroin available under strict medical control in publicmedical institutions.]Another meaningful event in 1993 was the case of V. Muccioli.Mr. Vincenzo Muccioli is the manager of the San Patriganano TherapeuticCommunity.  This community (now counting as much as 2000 inmates) isconsidered the biggest in Europe; it is ruled with strictly repressiveprinciples, and base on a typical "war on drugs" ideology:  drugs areevil, and people are defenseless.  Mr. Muccioli never allowed his TC tobe inspected by public health institutions, and it never let knowfigures about its real functionality.  Nevertheless, Mr. Muccioli hasbeen supported by most politicans and mass media, and considered like asort of myth by most of public opinion.In 1984 Mr. Muccioli had been indiceted for putting some addicts inchains; he was finally acquitted, under the pressure of the politiciansand of the public opinion.In the late 80s, Mr Muccioli has been continuously consulted by Italianpolticians in the elaboration of the drgulaw.  In fact, the wholephilosophy of the 162/90 law was based on the assumption that acom;ulsory resort to therapeutic community is the only answer to theproblem of drug addiction, and the apparent success of mr Muccioli wasconsidered as the unquestionabel proof of this assumption.In April 1989, the corpse of Mr Roberto Maranzana, inmate in the SanPatriganano TC, was found in a garbage disposal near Neaples (600 kmsouth from the community);  he was apparently killed, and his death wasattributed to a drug market dispute.In March 1993, some former inmates of the community confessed that MrMaranzana had been killed in a sort of punishment section of thecommunity by another inmate, committed as a guard; the victim had beentortured and beaten to death for two days, and his corpse was carriedaway with a community-owned car.  Mr Muccioli initially pretended toignore the fact, then he admitted that he knew about the crime somemonths later, but he didn't inform the police because he didn't want toscare the inmates of the community;  it was hard to explain, ghough,how a car with a corpse could leave a community wihich is severelyguarded night and day; finally, Mr Muccioli stated that the killerstold that Mr Maranzana runned away and he himself gave them the car inorder to run after him.  Moreover, the mdical examiner stated that MrMaranzana had been injected heroin while he was in the community.The Muccioli scandal boomed one month before the referendum, and ittriggered a debate about the real functionality of the TCs.THE REFERENDUMThe referendum about the law 162/90 was proposed by the CORA(Coordinamento Radicale Antiproibizionista), and was supported byPrtito Radicale, Rete, PDS (former Communist Party), RifondazioneComunista, Green Party.  On the opposite side, the main parties wereChristian democrats and extreme right MSI.The referendum campaign had a low media coverage, due to the fact thaton the same date took place seven more referendums, some of whom hadhigher political priority.[explains how Italian law works, details of changes will have to be madeby parlament.  Essentially boils down to cancelling ADD, drug use wouldnot be criminal act, drug treatment would be done in private by generalpractitioners instead of TCs.]The referendum was won by 55.3 vs 44.7 percent.  Altogether, the sum ofthe electors that approved the changes of the law was higher than thesum of the voters of the parties that officially supported it.  Thiscould simply mean that the "war on drugs" in Italy is not any more awinning political issue.=========================================================================Patience, persistence, truth,		work: dvader@hemp-imi.hep.anl.govDr. mike				home: mrosing@igc.org