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News Release |
1001
Connecticut Ave, NW - Ste 710 - Washington, DC 20036 |
September 30, 1999
DEA Seizes Hemp Seed Products; Threatens Hemp Industry
Sept. 30,
1999, Detroit, MI: Based on a new interpretation of the Controlled
Substances Act, the Drug Enforcement Administration has directed U.S. Customs to
stop the importation of all hemp seed products into the United States. The
first seizure was a 53,000 pound load of sterilized seed headed to a
multi-billion dollar broker of birdseed.
The shipper was Kenex, Ltd., of Pain
Court, Ontario, Canada's largest producer of hemp food and fiber products.
Based on this seizure, Customs has now recalled 14 other loads of hemp products
that Kenex shipped in the past six months to U.S. distributors, thus requiring
distributors to return their stocks to the border. Jean Laprise, president
of Kenex, has been threatened with criminal penalties and $500,000 in civil
fines if a full recall is not achieved.
Leaders of the hemp industry met last
week in Canada to discuss a unified strategy for ending this new embargo.
A court case is being prepared for filing this coming week. A web site and
internet campaign are also being designed. All participants at the meeting
agreed this is a life or death issue for the emerging hemp industry.
The timing of the DEA action was
particularly onerous in view of the upcoming Natural Products Expo scheduled for
Oct. 21-24 in Baltimore MD. At least 200 new hemp foods from Canadian and
domestic producers were scheduled to be premiered at this show. The
government's action leaves entrepreneurs in the dark as to whether these
products are controlled substances, and therefore whether sellers will face
criminal penalties.
"The DEA's action reverses over
60 years of precedent," said Don Wirtshafter, Esq., of the Ohio Hempery.
The sterilized seeds of the Cannabis
plant are specifically exempted from the Controlled Substances Act. Until
now, the DEA has never claimed they are prohibitited by the act.
"The seeds coming in from Canada
are extremely clean, with over 100 times less THC than anything that has entered
the country from China previously," said Wirtshafter. "So why
are they now kicking the legs out from this emerging industry? Is this
because the Drug Czar said hemp would never be economical but we were just about
to prove him wrong?"
For more information, please
contact Don Wirtshafter, Esq., of the Ohio Hempery at (740) 662-4367 or Tom
Dean, Esq., NORML Foundation Litigation Director at (202) 483-8751.
Clinton Vetoes DC Appropriations Bill Including A Ban On Medical Marijuana
Sept. 30,
1999, Washington, DC: Citing the rights of DC residents to make
"their own decisions about local matters," President Bill Clinton
earlier this week vetoed the DC Appropriations Bill which included a
congressional ban on medical marijuana.
Last November, DC residents
overwhelmingly approved an initiative legalizing medical marijuana.
Congress initially blocked the counting of the ballots until a U.S. District
Court judge ordered the vote be counted, released, and certified.
Sixty-nine percent of DC voters approved the initiative.
Under the terms of the law granting
partial home rule to the District, Congress has 30 work days to override the
initiative, or it becomes law. The Republican controlled Congress is
expected to promptly approve an override. A bill to accomplish that has
already been introduced by Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA), who sponsored the earlier
legislation prohibiting the vote from being counted.
The House Appropriations Subcommittee
for the District of Columbia, chaired by anti-marijuana zealot Rep. Ernest
Istook (R-OK), held hearings yesterday on the impact of the initiative on law
enforcement.
As expected, the Republicans stacked
the hearing with several law enforcement officials who oppose medical marijuana
use, while the Democrats were only permitted to invite one witness. Rep.
James Moran (D-VA), ranking Democrat on the subcommittee, invited Keith B.
Vines, Esq., Assistant District Attorney for the city and county of San
Francisco. Vines has lived both sides of the debate, as he not only
prosecutes drug cases, but suffers from AIDS wasting syndrome and has used
marijuana for medical reasons.
Vines testified, "The voters in
the District recognize what every nationwide poll has shown -- that Americans
recognize that seriously ill persons deserve every medicine, including the
politically unpopular as well as the dangerous ones, if those medications will
improve the quality of their lives."
"Please understand that people
like me need marijuana to stay alive and to get healthy, not to get high,"
Vines said. "Don't let me and people like me be collateral damage in
the war on drugs."
For more information, please
contact Keith Stroup, NORML Executive Director at (202) 483-5500 and Wayne
Turner, Act Up DC, the proponents of the DC medical marijuana initiative, at
(202) 547-9404.
Man Found Guilty Of Marijuana Trafficking, Receives One Cent Fine
Sept. 30,
1999, Bowling Green, KY: Sometimes the punishment does fit the crime.
A man charged with trafficking less
than eight ounces of marijuana (a misdemeanor in Kentucky) at General Motor's
Corvette assembly plant was handed down a fine of one penny by a Warren County
Court jury.
Steven D. Eichholz was arrested in
the May 1998 undercover drug sweep at the GM Plant. On Sept. 17 he was
found guilty of trafficking marijuana, but was given a symbolic fine of one
cent.
The jury reprimanded the auto maker
on the juror form for what they called GM's "underhanded and
nonprofessional" methods of policing its employees.
The undercover operation occurred
when Aset Corp., a private security company hired by GM, placed an attractive
woman undercover in the plant. During the workday she would make
occasional comments about wanting to "have a joint."
Seventeen GM workers in all were
arrested in the five-month drug sweep, many of whom have already pled guilty.
Now, Warren County Attorney Mike
Caudill is asking that drug charges against seven other employees caught in the
same drug sting be dismissed because of "fundamental fairness and private
law enforcement" that did not understand "evidence integrity or
constitutional rights."
"It's heartening to see a jury
dispense a penalty that fits the crime," said Allen St. Pierre, NORML
Foundation Executive Director. "If more citizens would legally
challenge their marijuana arrests rather than cop a plea bargain, more citizen
jurors will hear how invasive and excessive the war on marijuana smokers has
become."
For more information, please
contact Allen St. Pierre, NORML Foundation Executive Director at (202) 483-8751.
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