Talking drug policy, Sen. Paul hints he used marijuana in his youth

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Paul, who announced plans this week to seek re-election to the Senate in 2016 and is actively exploring whether to run for president, said he wasnt a choir boy when asked by Louisville television station WHAS if he had used marijuana while in college.

Lets just say I wasnt a choir boy when I was in college and that I can recognize that kids make mistakes, and I can say that I made mistakes when I was a kid, Paul said in an interview broadcast Friday night.

The recreational use of marijuana is legal in two states and voters in two more plus the District of Columbia have approved measures to join them. Paul told a group of law students at Northern Kentucky University last month he would not support lifting the federal ban on marijuana use, but said he did not want the federal government to try and overturn state laws that have made the drug legal.

Paul told WHAS he has focused on reducing criminal penalties for some nonviolent drug offenses, which he said have been administered unfairly and disproportionally impact the nations minorities.

He noted that the past three presidents either admitted or skirted around the issue of using illegal drugs in their youth.

If they had been poor or lived in poverty or lived in one of our big cities where there are a lot of (police) patrols, theres a good chance none of them would have ever excelled, Paul said. So I have a great deal of personal sympathy for people who have made mistakes as a young person.

Paul said in the interview a decision on whether to run for president was still months away. However, he said any potential presidential campaign would include Jesse Benton, his 2010 Senate campaign manager, who resigned from Sen. Mitch McConnells re-election campaign earlier this year after an Iowa state senator pleaded guilty to federal charges stemming from Pauls fathers 2012 presidential campaign.

Benton, who served as former Rep. Ron Pauls campaign manager in 2012, has denied any wrongdoing and has not been charged. In that case, former Iowa state Sen. Kent Sorensen allegedly accepted thousands of dollars to switch his support to Ron Paul before the 2012 Iowa caucuses and lied to federal investigators about the money.

Jesse is married to my niece and was a big help in the Kentucky election here in 2010 and a big help for Sen. McConnell. Yes, hell help us, Rand Paul said, adding he did not think Benton did anything wrong.

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Talking drug policy, Sen. Paul hints he used marijuana in his youth

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