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News Release |
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February 25, 1999
U.N. Calls For Medical Marijuana Research, Maintains
Hardline
On Recreational Use
February, 25, 1999, New York, NY:
The United States should begin scientific trials to determine marijuana's medicinal
value, a United Nations report recommended this week.
The U.N. "renews its call for additional
scientific research to be carried out on ... the use of cannabis for certain medical
purposes," states the report, released Tuesday by the International Drug Control
Board. The 13-member board oversees U.N. drug treaties.
The Board's request comes one week after
leaders of 17 national AIDS organizations demanded that White House officials allow
doctors to prescribe marijuana to people suffering from the disease.
NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St.
Pierre said that U.S. officials typically refuse to conduct medical marijuana research,
even when their own commissions recommended it. "Similar requests made by the
National Academy of Sciences and the National Institutes of Health Workshop on the Medical
Utility of Marijuana have gone unanswered," St. Pierre said.
The National Academy of Sciences is scheduled
to release an updated report on medical marijuana next month, he said.
The U.N. board remained unyielding on the use
of marijuana for recreational purposes. However, it concedes that, "The abuse
of cannabis has become widespread in virtually all countries of the world ... in recent
decades," despite international efforts to prohibit the drug.
The report also said that new technologies like
the Internet pose a significant threat to drug prohibition. "Governments ...
should work in close cooperation with the Internet industry, community organizations,
families and educators to set up a framework that will ensure that such emerging
technologies are not misused for the proliferation of drug abuse," it said.
For more information, please contact Allen
St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. Excerpts of the report are
available online from: http://www.marijuananews.com.
Body Shop Owner Sends White House Hemp, Congratulations
February 25, 1999, Washington, D.C.:
Body Shop International Founder Anita Roddick sent President William Clinton
several hemp goods last week, and urged him to support legal distinctions between hemp and
marijuana.
"Don't go wobbly with
misinformation," Roddick plead. "Hemp is a good product and not a drug.
Across the planet people use it for food, clothing, fuel and lotions to make people more
comfortable in their own skin."
The Body Shop distributes several hemp-based
skin care products including lip conditioner, hand oil, soap, and body lotion.
Roddick sent her appeal to Clinton after learning that Air Force One stewards
offered the President hemp beer while returning from Mexico.
"Congratulations on breaking the hemp
barrier on Air Force One," she wrote.
A spokesman for the Office of National Drug
Control Policy (ONDCP) announced that officials will no longer serve the beverage, Hemp
Golden Beer, aboard Air Force One. Despite the beer's legality, the spokesman called
it an "inappropriate" drink to have on the President's plane.
Ironically, the Air Force, which operates Air
Force One, recently prohibited all personnel from ingesting any food or nutritional
products containing hemp because military drug tests can not distinguish between the legal
products and marijuana.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751 or NORML board member Don
Wirtshafter of The Ohio Hempery @ (740) 662-4367.
South Dakota Governor Proposes Mandatory Jail Time For Pot Offenses
February 25, 1999, Pierre, SD:
Gov. William Janklowe has introduced legislation that would impose mandatory jail
sentences for all marijuana offenders, including children.
NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq.
criticized the proposal. "Marijuana smokers work hard, raise families, and
contribute to their communities," he said. "They are not part of the crime
problem and we should not treat them like criminals. This proposal would needlessly
wreck the lives, careers, and families of thousands of otherwise law abiding citizens who
smoke marijuana."
Stroup continued, "In addition, there is
no evidence that making the possession of small amounts of marijuana punishable by
mandatory jail time will do anything to reduce use, particularly among adolescents."
He noted that the only federal study ever to compare marijuana use patterns among
decriminalized states and those that still arrest marijuana smokers determined that,
"Decriminalization has had virtually no effect on either marijuana use or on related
attitudes about marijuana use among young people."
He concluded, "Rather than imposing harsh
and mandatory jail sentences for minor marijuana offenders, we should develop a policy
that distinguishes between use and abuse, and which reflects the importance we have always
attached in this country to the right of the individual to be free from the overreaching
power of the state."
Senate Bill 210 states that any individual
convicted of a marijuana violation shall serve ten days in jail. Janklowe's initial
proposal mandated a 30 day sentence for all offenders, but the Senate Affairs Committee
amended the measure before passing it 5 to 3 last week. The Senate approved it days
later and the bill now awaits action by the House.
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202)
483-8751.
South Carolina Mulls Making Sale Of Urine A Felony Offense
February 25, 1999, Columbia, SC:
Legislation proposed by Sen. David Thomas (R-Greenville) seeks to crack down on
individuals who attempt to skirt a drug test by using someone else's urine. General
Bill 277 makes "selling or purchasing urine with intent to defraud a drug screening
test a felony" punishable by up to five years in jail.
"Legislators must not have much to do if
they have time to consider this measure," NORML's R. Keith Stroup said.
"Consider the irony here. Failing a drug test is not a crime, but trying
to pass it would be a felony under this measure. This proposal illustrates the
disproportionality of the 'war on drugs.'"
Kenneth Curtis, owner of Privacy Protection
Services, a Marietta-based company that markets urine substitution kits, surmises that the
measure is in response to the ability of products like his to thwart a urine test.
"Lawmakers are trying to shoot the messenger here," he said.
"This situation is an example of law enforcement encroachment into what is now
mostly a private sector testing business. People should be concerned about
government officials that would support over stepping into private sector testing."
Thomas argues that his legislation is necessary
because "the safety of the public is at stake here." His measure awaits
action by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202)
483-8751. Kenneth Curtis of Privacy Protection Services may be contacted @ (864)
836-4341.
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