I received the following message from Don Wirtschafer of the Ohio Hempery,
and thought it deserved more attention. This message is a bit long, but it
is important and this will soon become a very big issue.

Don travelled to Nicaragua to testify on behalf of the Canadian hemp
farmers who had their 100 hectares of hemp burned to the ground by US DEA
agents, and who are now charged with widespread cultivation of marijuana.
They face the real possibility of spending time in a Nicaraguan jail for
legally growing 100 hectares of low-THC hemp grown from legally imported
Chinese hemp seed.

-Dana Larsen

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Date: Wed, 06 Jan 1999 13:59:48 -0500
From: Don Wirtshafter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

A story is breaking in Nicaragua that should reach the world stage soon.  I
just returned from trying to turn around an ugly situation, but left
without visible results.  I hope some fair treatment in the U.S. and
Canadian media can do some good.

The story starts with a group of Canadian investors who wanted to do some
good for Nicaragua.  Bankers, builders and merchants got together and
incorporated Hemp Agro International with offices in Vancouver, Toronto and
Managua.   Their website (http://www.hempagro.com) describes their project
and development they hoped to bring to the tropics.

Nicaragua stagnates in the aftermath of series of natural disasters and a
U.S. financed civil war.  If there was ever a place to demonstrate
industrial hemp's utility for sustainable economic development, Nicaragua
is it.  Hemp Agro planted 100 acres of Chinese hempseed and hired a
full-time professional botanist to supervise a crop improvement program.
The company envisioned growing a series of hempseed crops, pressing the
seeds for oil, making products from hemp oil and utilizing the stalks for
particleboard.  The project was dependent on their developing an improved
tropical variety of seed hemp, something not being attempted anywhere else
in the world.

The project took on additional significance in the aftermath of Hurricane
Mitch.  Tens of thousands of homes need to be replaced.  The relief
agencies had a choice, cut down thousands of acres of trees for building
materials or accelerate the building of the hempstalk particleboard mill.
Most of the traditional crops suffered heavy damage during the storm, Hemp
Agro's crop withstood the winds and rain.  Fifty employees were busy
harvesting bags full of hemp seed and building a mountain of hemp stalks.

That's when a U.S. DEA agent went ballistic.  One day before Christmas, he
caused an army of black hooded soldiers to move in and occupy the field.
The men each posed for their picture in front of the large signboard that
marked the "Hemp Agro Nicaragua, S.A. Research and Development Site."

See:
http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1998/diciembre/24-diciembre-1998/
nacional/nacional10.html

(This and the following links are in Spanish.  For those who do not speak
Spanish, paste these URL's into
http://babelfish.altavista.com/cgi-bin/translate?  for a rough translation
into English.)

Then they began the long task of gathering the crop in piles and setting
them on fire.

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1998/diciembre/26-diciembre-1998/

Dr. Paul Wylie, the Canadian horticulturist who was hired by the group to
supervise the project, was feeling pretty satisfied with his work in
Nicaragua.  His employees were busy harvesting their first crop of seeds.
He had learned quite a bit about growing hemp in the tropics.

Christmas was approaching and the harvesting would have to stop for the
holidays.  Dr. Wylie was in a taxi on his way back from the bank with the
payroll for his 50 workers.  A black car tried to force them off the road.
A couple of motorcycles approached.  Both Wylie and his driver thought they
were being robbed.  The driver started to head up on the curb to get away
when bullets began tearing up the cab.   Wylie and the driver were
terrified until their attackers finally identified themselves as police.
Wylie thought his troubles were over, but they were just beginning.

Wylie was arrested and taken to the brig.  The same prison that former
dictator, Anastasio Somoza, used for his worst political enemies.  A
perfect movie set for an 1850's western, except it's an historic military
base.  Perched on the rim of the volcano, it's got an incredible view.
Only the prisoners can't see a thing, they are kept in dungeons underground.

In Nicaragua, you are considered guilty until proven innocent.  Forget the
right to counsel, forget the right to remain silent, this is not America.
In the aftermath of his arrest, ten days of hearings took place on the
case, only Wylie had no right to attendor help his attorneys prepare.  He
was locked up tight.  Bail or bond were not available.  Without an
explanation of the charges, Wylie could not even figure out what he was
being accused of.  Thankfully, his wife was able to bring him food every
day.  Without family support like this, prisoners starve.

Because of my expertise in hemp and my legal credentials, I was asked to
hurry down to Nicaragua and help the local attorneys the investors hired to
bring reason to the situation.  I was determined to prove to myself and the
court that this really was industrial hemp and not marijuana that was being
grown.  I also wanted to visit Dr. Wylie and see if I could raise his
spirits.

It took a court order to visit a prisoner in the brig, even for attorneys
and translators.  Armed with a court order that took days to obtain, the
guards still only allowed us a short, 15 minute visit.  It was barely
enough time for introductions, and no time to get to the details of the
case.  Still, Wylie was able to briefly describe his research methodology.

This was the George Washington Carver method of crop improvement. Start
with seeds from as close to the original source as possible.  This way you
get the most genetic diversity.  Plant a million plants.  From these, find
the thousand specimens that best match your breeding objectives.  From
these prime plants, plant a million seeds.  Plant the seeds from the best
1000 plants for five years and you will see spectacular improvements in the
breeding of that crop.  It was an ambitious attempt to create a tropical
variety of low THC industrial hemp, but the U.S. DEA got in the way.  Our
drug warriors refuse to recognize a difference between hemp and marijuana.
The U.S. employed DEA agent looked at the plant in a microscope and saw the
glandular trichromes characteristic of Cannabis.  He concluded therefore it
must be marijuana, never considering that hemp also has these
characteristic parts.

Nicaragua is in a vulnerable position.  It needs a massive influx of
foreign aid to begin its recovery from the civil war and Hurricane Mitch.
Pressure from the U.S. diplomats forced the government to act quickly.  One
government minister after another came to court to kowtowing to the foreign
imperialists.  Politicians who praised the project a week before began
denying that they gave approval or claimed that the investors lied to get
their permits. Ten days of hearings were held over the New Year's holiday.
The tide turned from whether a crime had been committed to which government
heads would roll for allowing this scandal to develop.

The scandal has occupied the front page in Managua's three papers since it
broke the day before Christmas.  As the tide turned against the defendants,
the papers got more vicious.

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1998/diciembre/30-diciembre-1998/
nacional/nacional10.html

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1998/diciembre/30-diciembre-1998/
nacional/nacional5.html

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1998/diciembre/31-diciembre-1998/
nacional/nacional1.html

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1999/enero/02-enero-1999/nacional/
nacional11.html

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1999/enero/02-enero-1999/nacional/
nacional10.html

Monday's paper featured one story about the trial

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1999/enero/04-enero-1999/nacional/
nacional7.html

and another entitled "They Sell Crack in the Schools" about a government
report that ended up describing the 100 acre bust.

http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/archivo/1999/enero/04-enero-1999/nacional/
nacional1.html

Each of the Canadians investors in the project are now charged with major
drug crimes.  They are subject to arrest in Canada and extradition to
Nicaragua under the reciprocal provisions of the treaties intended to bring
narcotrafficantes north for trial in the U.S. or Canada.  We are not
describing a typical bunch of criminals.   Hemp Agro International was
founded by established Canadian citizens who wanted to do some good for the
world.  As part of their many applications for permits from various
Nicaragua Agencies, the group provided the authorities with paperwork
certifying they each had clean criminal records in Canada.

 Most had never thought about ever finding themselves in a criminal court.

One problem confuses the issue for all involved.  For the position of local
manager, the investors chose to hire an historic figure, Oscar Danilo
Blandon (sp?).  Blandon is a central character in the C.I.A. drug running
scandal that was so well exposed by Gary Webb in the San Jose Mercury News
and in his recent book Dark Alliance.  Blandon was one of the founders of
the Contra party and remains well connected with the power structure in
Nicaragua. But to finance the contra armies in the Reagan 1980's, Bland
imported tons of cocaine into America.  He served almost two years in a
federal prison.  Blandon holds an MBA, is bilingual and became quite
excited by the potential of what hemp can do for his country.  He proved a
natural choice for project manager.   But the tide turned.  When the
government and media branded this research plot as the "largest marijuana
bust in the history of Central America," Blandon's checkered history seemed
to be as proof that these gringos were up to no good.

The defense lawyers decided to put me on the stand to give expert testimony
about hemp.  It was a frustrating experience.   "We call it 'going to
Vietnam'" the attorneys told me in an effort to prepare me for the hearing.
"It's brutal, ugly and take no prisoners.   They were right.  The usual
civil behavior of attorneys that I am used to was not present there at all.
It was war.

We prepared more than 100 pages of journal articles translated into Spanish
for the court.   But because these were not originals, they were not
admissible.  Court was held in a cramped office lined by desks with old
manual typewriters.  It proceeded slowly because a secretary needed type a
live transcript.  In my case, since my Spanish was not up to speed, a
translator did his best to make meaning of my technical presentation,
phrase by phrase.  It crawled slowly.  When a question was posed to me, the
transcript would be made, the secretary would read it back as my translator
put it in English, I would answer pausing for the translation and the
typing.  It dragged on until 7:00 p.m. on New Years Day.

The courtroom was crowed with newspaper reporters and photographers who
would crowded in to snap close-ups of my face.  Nobody was introduced and I
was not allowed to ask any questions.   When I was done the lawyers
commenced arcane legal arguments centering on why I did not present an
embossed identification of myself as an attorney and botanist.    The judge
kept my bar card.   I am used to court, but this was something else. It was
an ambush.

I was able to describe for the court the differences between hemp and
marijuana.  I explained the difference in the way the crop was grown and
harvested.  The evidence was that the employees were beating the harvested
plants on a rail "like beans."  This was clearly seed hemp. I explained
that contrary to the assertion of the DEA, that international law gave
Nicaragua sovereignty to decide the question for itself. "Cannabis grown
for the purpose of industrial use" was excepted from the treaty provisions.
A limit on the level of THC in the crop was up to Nicaragua to define.
Switzerland, for example, has not set a limit.

I described the market for the seeds and why the oil was so special. I
explained that the test performed by the DEA incapable of descriminating
hemp and marijuana.  DEA agents were not violating the sovereignty of
Canada or Switzerland, yet they felt at home running roughshod over our
Central American neighbor.  I explained why the researchers had to go to
China for their seed, nothing close was available in Europe or America.=20
The low-THC European varieties were for a far different latitude and
climate and would not work in Nicaragua.  Besides, they are all so
protected by plant patents, registrations and restrictive contracts that
the seeds would have to be bought every year.   This means they would never
acclimate to the Nicaraguan growing conditions and would be too unreliable
to anchor an industry.  China has grown hemp for seed for thousands of
years.  The people of the region where the seeds originated do not even
have a concept of the use of the hemp plant as a drug.

I told the judge of the 22 web sites I found that sold marijuana seeds. The
minimum price offered was $5 per seed.  At 60,000 seeds per kilogram, a
kilo of seeds would be worth $300,000.  The 15,000-kilogram container
shipment from China would be 4.5 billion dollars if it were marijuana.  I
said it was impossible and crazy to assume that this much seed could be
marijuana.  Besides, I told the court, this particular shipment of seeds
was examined by the U.S. Customs while the container was being transshipped
in Long Beach, California.  The container was emptied for a DEA inspection.
Only hempseeds were found.   They released th shipment to go forward to its
destination in Nicaragua.

I described what a hemp economy could do for Nicaragua in terms of
employment and self-sufficiency.  I gave good references for the Canadian
defendants whom I had met.  I tried to help, but it felt like I was talking
to air.  Yesterday, the judge found probably cause to hold the defendants
up for charges.  Dr. Wylie will have to languish in jail while the
government works to extradite the other defendants from Canada and the U.S.
Once arrested and returned "to the scene of the crime", the defendants will
have no more rights than Dr. Wylie did upon his arrest.  Most of the
defendants were only inactive investors in the project.  They have never
set foot in Nicaragua.  Now they will have to hire attorneys, fight
extradition and suffer having their reputations smeared around the world.

Nicaragua seems adept at shooting itself in the foot on a regular basis.
What started out as an exciting project to bring a new industry to a place
it was truly needed, has now turned into an international scandal.  It's
not just the investors who are affected.  For Nicaragua to progress it will
need help from foreign industries and industrialists, foreign technology
and technologists.  When the story of how Dr. Paul Wylie was treated for
his efforts in Nicaragua is spread in the international community, it will
be hard to get others to commit to even visiting the country.  The real
losers are the local compasinos who stood to gain steady employment in the
project.  As it is, the government agents kept the $5000 payroll they
seized from Dr. Wylie.=20 The workers missed their Christmas pay.  There
are no winners in this story.  The toll will continue as long as our
government obscures the difference between hemp and marijuana and its
agents run roughshod over the rights of the people of Central America.


I am trying to get some help spreading the word on this story.  If the
government spreads it, it will be all about marijuana.  The word hemp will
not make it into the story.  I have to come out aggressively to get the
word to the media that there is a lot more behind this "bust" than meets
the eye.  Anyone with suggestions is welcome to write or call.


Don Wirtshafter, Ohio Hempery Inc.     Products the Earth Can Afford
Call or write for our free catalog:    Order Line 1-800-BUY-HEMP
7002 S.R. 329, Guysville, OH  45735    shop on line: http://www.hempery.com
tel (740) 662-4367                                         fax (740)
662-6446

<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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