Tuesday, December 07, 2010

FOR THOSE WHO BELIEVE THAT POT IS LESS DANGEROUS THAN ALCOHOL

The legalization of pot will put more stoned drivers on the road. And that applies to the legalization of medical marijuana as well.

By the way, in ‘Mexican Version of Boy Scouts’ (12-6-10) I should have mentioned that 14-year-old ‘El Ponchis’ was stoned on marijuana when he beheaded his victims and strung their headless bodies from highway overpasses. Pot – harmless indeed.

POLICE: DRIVER STONED IN CRASH KILLING 8 ITALIAN CYCLISTS
By Nicole Winfield

The Associated Press
December 5, 2010

ROME — A speeding car plowed head-on into a group of cyclists in southern Italy on Sunday morning, killing eight of them, officials said. The driver had been smoking marijuana, police said.

Bent, mangled bikes were strewn about the scene, and the sheet-draped corpses dotted the two-lane road near Lamezia Terme, in the Calabrian "toe" of boot-shaped Italy where the accident occurred.

In addition to the eight cyclists killed, four people were injured: two cyclists and the driver and a young boy in the car with him, said Maria Dolores Rucci, commander of the road police in nearby Catanzaro.

The ANSA news agency said the driver, who was only slightly injured, was placed under arrest on charges of multiple homicide. A police spokesman who declined to give his name said the man, a Moroccan national, had tested positive for marijuana.

A preliminary investigation showed the speeding car ran headfirst into the group of 10 cyclists who were riding in the opposite direction on state road 18, according to Italy's highway authority.

ANSA said the driver was trying to pass another car when he hit the group. Visibility was good at the time, reports said.

The road, closed by authorities for most of the day, reopened Sunday evening.

It is common in Italy to see groups of amateur cyclists taking to small state roads on weekends, and ANSA said the group hit Sunday was affiliated with a local Lamezia Terme gym.

As a result of the crash, Italian cycling officials complained about safety problems for cyclists who have to share roads with cars.

The head of Italy's cycling federation, Renato Di Rocco, denounced the violent "massacre" of the cyclists and sent his condolences to their families.

The mayor of Lamezia Terme, Gianni Speranza, announced a day of mourning for the dead, ANSA said.

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