How To Pass A Drug Test - Just Choose Your Level.
Specific Drug Test Information.
Urine or Hair Drug Testing Products. Choose "More Info" for special
package pricing.
|
Urine Drug Test |
Hair Drug Test |
|
+

New & Improved
XXtra Clean
Free PreCleanse
($10 Value) |
+

New & Improved
Ready Clean
Free PreCleanse
($10 Value) |

PreCleanse
6 Herbal Capsules |

RU Clean
6 Panel Home Test |

Ultra
Clean
Simple To use |
|
For Heavy Users
 |
For Casual Users
 |
Boost Cleansing
 |
Test Yourself
 |
Hair Shampoo
 |
|
List $59.90
Now $44.95
Save $15 or 25%
|
List $44.90
Now $29.95
Save $15 or 33%
|
List $9.95
Now $8.95
Save $1 or 10%
|
List $19.95
Now $14.95
Save $5 or 25%
|
List $39.95
Now $29.95
Save $10 or 25%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
REAL SOLUTIONS OR BAND-AIDS?
When I stepped on this column's soap box a few months
ago, many people thanked me for asking questions about the effectiveness of the
war on drugs. But they all cautioned not to expect any quick fix. Savvy
observers of our state legislature and veterans of previous efforts to develop a
rational societal response to drug addiction all said that the 2001 legislature
won't touch the issue.
Since then, some remarkable things have been happening.
My previous columns challenged lawyers and judges to get involved. I was
delighted that several hundred, including dozens of judges, prosecuting
attorneys, and law enforcement officers, have stepped forward. The feedback has
been so strong and so uniform that I began wondering if there is anyone who
thinks the present laws are working. The closest I've come to identifying such a
person may be a Seattle attorney (who will remain anonymous) who sent me an
email stating "[c]hanging law may not be the most appropriate response to the
problem. The laws may be fine. Based on my own research, it appears that diet
could be the reason for some of the problems."
Is the "Hundreth Monkey Phenomenon" at
work?
The so-called "hundredth monkey phenomenon" refers to a
sudden, spontaneous, and mysterious leap of consciousness achieved when an
allegedly "critical mass" in public attitudes and behavior is reached. What has
been happening in King County is not happening in a vacuum. In the past month
alone, the spectrum of new voices for change has run from departing President
Bill Clinton, calling for decriminalization of marijuana possession and
reconsideration of mandatory federal sentencing, to New York's Republican
Governor George Pataki, calling for substantial reductions of sentences for new
drug law offenders and similar reductions of the sentences of those currently
incarcerated for non-violent drug offenses. Even departing White House Drug
Czar, General Barry MaCaffrey, has been decrying the phrase "war on drugs" and
urging recognition of the fact that drug addiction is a medical problem for
which we need better prevention strategies and treatment for those who become
addicted. In popular culture, Steven Soderbergh's movie "Traffic", where Michael
Douglas plays the U.S. Drug Czar, has already been named the New York Film
Critics' Best Picture of the Year.
The legislature may be listening
Many who at first advised us to work toward new proposals
for the 2002 legislature now tell us that senators and representatives on both
sides of the aisle in the 2001 legislature are considering ameliorative
legislation. Most legislators seem keenly aware that California voters
overwhelmingly supported Proposition 36, a statewide initiative that prescribes
treatment rather than jail or prison time for a defendant's first two nonviolent
drug-possession convictions. Sadly, popular initiatives in our state have made
it more difficult for our legislature to find money for the kind of drug
treatment programs most legislators know we need. To head off a Proposition 36
type initiative, several Washington legislators have begun preparing legislation
along similar lines. To his great credit, King County Prosecuting Attorney Norm
Maleng has also been working to build a consensus among prosecutors and law
enforcement officials across the state to support reduction in mandatory
sentences, expansion of drug courts, and especially to provide effective
treatment programs for those found to have drug dependence. I am told that the
Sentencing Guidelines Commission is also gearing up to comment on possible
ameliorative legislation, even though its mandate was not to report until next
December, 2001.
Smart on Crime is not Soft on Crime
Those seeking real solutions have usually been written
off as "soft on crime." For the first time, we see political leaders who are
willing to risk that label. New Mexico's governor, Gary Johnson, was the first.
Minnesota's governor, Jesse Ventura, followed. Now Governor Pataki in New York.
John Dunne, one of the architects of New York's "tough" drug laws, a former
assistant attorney general under President George Bush, has led the Campaign for
Effective Criminal Justice to modify the very legislation he helped to secure.
Although he thinks Governor Pataki's proposed changes are still too punitive, he
comments that "The important thing...is that the governor stood up and said,
"Come, follow me. This is not soft on crime, this is smart on crime.'"
Our goals and
organizational structure
Our goal from the beginning has been to look for the best
long term approach to reducing the negative impact on society of substance
abuse. Organizing and directing the KCBA effort is our Drug Law Study/Action
Group Steering Committee, composed of KCBA Executive Director Alice Paine, First
Vice President Ralph Maimon, Second Vice President Caroline Davis, former KCBA
presidents Steve De Forest, Peter Greenfield, Mary Alice Theiler, and Dan
Gottlieb, the former Executive Director of the Washington State Sentencing
Guidelines Commission, Roger Goodman, WSBA Governor Ken Davidson, who attends as
the WSBA's liaison, and myself.
Coming soon: short term palliatives
While seeking to make informed choices about long-term
options, we are also working to identify short-term actions that would lessen
the devastation to individuals and families, and the cost to the taxpayers, of
lengthy jail or prison terms. To that end, former KCBA president Dan Gottlieb
dan@goandfish.com is chairing a "Short Term Options Group", working with our
Criminal Law Section and Legislation Committee, to promote and respond to any
legislation advanced in the current session of the legislature.
Needed: Realistic Long Term Solutions
To identify the best long term options, the Steering
Committee has created three task forces:
-
The Task Force on Effective Drug Abuse Prevention,
chaired by former KCBA President Steve De Forest sdeforest@riddellwilliams.com,
will gather, evaluate and summarize available information about why people
abuse drugs and what strategies from Washington, other states, and other
countries seem to work best to discourage non-medical drug abuse.
-
The Task Force on Effective Drug Addiction
Treatment, chaired by former KCBA President Peter Greenfield
peter.greenfield@columbialegal.org, will gather, evaluate and summarize
available information about the most effective strategies from Washington,
other states, and other countries in treating drug addiction and the costs
and difficulties of such strategies.
-
The Task Force on Use of Criminal Sanctions,
chaired by former KCBA President Mary Alice Theiler tddmmat@aol.com, will
gather, evaluate and summarize available information about the effectiveness
and cost of attempting to discourage non-medical drug use through imposition
of criminal sanctions.
Based on the findings of our task force reports, we
will be open to "thinking outside the box" about what we would do if we
could devise a system to reduce the harmful consequences of drug use and
addiction, based on solid facts about prevention and treatment and the
experience of the war on drugs on the limits of of the criminal sanction.
Urine Drug Test Screening Information and Drug Detection
Times.
How to pass a drug test is the question more and
more people are faced with each and every day. If this is the major concern in your life, you have come to the
right place. ATC products will shield you from detection of
controlled substances, prescription and non-prescription preparations, as well as other
things you might not want people to know about like tobacco usage.
For More Information on our products to
pass
a drug test check out pass drug
test
ing or
drug detection times.
Return
to Drug Test News Menu
|