-Caveat Lector-

from: http://www.drugsense.org/dsw/1999/ds99.n119.html#sec1
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.drugsense.org/dsw/1999/ds99.n119.html#sec1">Dr
ugSense Weekly, October 15, 1999 #119</A>


October 15, 1999 #119
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Table of Contents

* Breaking News

US NM: Espanola Students Oppose Legalization
US NY: Narcs Aren't Busting Chops - Or Pushers
US FL: Anti-Drug Commercials Must Get Real -- But So Must
Canada and US In Drug Debate
UK: Is Blair's 'Ineffective' Drugs Czar Facing Axe?


* Feature Article

    White Paper: General McCaffrey's History of Misinformation
    by Kevin Zeese - Common Sense for Drug Policy


* Weekly News in Review

Drug Policy-

COMMENT: (1)
(1) A Sane Drug Policy
COMMENT: (2-3)
(2) In The War on Drugs, Lawmakers Have Widened the Military's
        Power to Police American Citizens
(3) Dole Vows More Border Agents for Drug Fight
COMMENT: (4-5)
(4) Drug Testing for Self-Sufficiency
(5) Student Drug Testing

Law Enforcement & Prisons-

COMMENT: (6)
(6) Through the Looking Glass With the El Monte Police
COMMENT: (7)
(7) Seizing the Moment on Unfair Seizure Law
COMMENT: (8-9)
(8) New Tactic Goes Citywide After it Ends Drug Bazaars
(9) Chief Judge Appoints Panel to Review Handling of Drug

Cannabis & Hemp-

COMMENT: (10-11)
(10) Birdseed Latest Victim In Unending War Against Drugs
(11) Hemp Downer: DEA Seizure of Sterile Hemp Seeds Illegal
COMMENT: (12-13)
(12) Reefer Referendum
(13) Doctor Worm

International News-

COMMENT: (14-15)
(14) Now, State of Siege, Colombian Style
(15) What Next in The Colombia Drug War
COMMENT: (16-17)
(16) Canada: Rock OKs Pot Smoking for 14 Seriously Ill
(17) UK: Fresh Claims of Prison Brutality


* Hot Off The 'Net

    New DrugNews Archive Search Capabilities
    Governor Gary Johnson (R-NM) News Archive
    Governor Johnson for President in 2000?


* Quotes of the Week

    Institute of Medicine Principle Investigator John Benson, M.D
    Barry McCaffrey, Albuquerque Journal, 10/8/99




------------------------------------------------------------------------


FEATURE ARTICLE     (Top)

White Paper: General McCaffrey's History of Misinformation by Kevin Zeese -
Common Sense for Drug Policy

The Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Barry McCaffrey,
has been known to play 'fast and loose' with the facts, especially when it
comes to the success of his National Drug Control Strategy.  This year
General McCaffrey was publicly taken to task for inaccurately portraying the
impact of Netherland's drug policies, needle exchange and medical marijuana
by public health leaders, civil rights advocates and reform advocates.

While this White Paper details factually inaccurate statements, the drug czar
has been correct in calling for increased drug treatment and methadone
maintenance.  Common Sense applauds him for dealing with these issues based
on the facts and is willing to work with ONDCP in developing more effective
drug control strategies.  However, to have meaningful dialogue, it is
imperative that our public officials have an accurate, fact-based discussion.

Common Sense provides a free online factbook on the drug war, available at:
http://www.csdp.org/factbook/ and is available for comment at 703-354-5684.

McCaffrey

"Each year drug use exacts $110 billion in social costs, contributes to
52,000 drug-related deaths .  . . ." Letter from Barry McCaffrey to Governor
Gary Johnson, September 16, 1999.

"Each year, approximately 50,000 Americans die from drug-related causes."
Testimony of Barry R.  McCaffrey Director, Office of National Drug Control
Policy, "Building a More Effective Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities
Program" Before the House Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Youth and
Families, August 3, 1999

The Facts

The study Director McCaffrey used to estimate a $110 billion social cost
states that sixty percent (60%) of those costs are due to drug-related law
enforcement, incarceration and crime.  These are the costs created by our
National Drug Control Strategy and our policy of strict prohibition and
incarceration.  Only 3% of drug costs were from victims of drug-related
crime, and less than 40% of the $110 billion social costs actually are due to
the health impact of drugs.

General McCaffrey's failure to fully disclose the elements of this figure are
just one example of how the ONDCP director seeks to distort the public's
perception of drug policy.Source: The Economic Costs of Alcohol and Drug
Abuse in the United States 1992.According to SAMHSA, the federal government's
premiere substance abuse agency, about 20,000 people die each year from
drug-related causes.

"Drug-related" includes much more than deaths from drug overdoses: it
includes both illegal and illicit use of legal drugs, suicide, homicide,
motor vehicle injury, HIV, pneumonia, hepatitis, endocarditis, infant deaths,
and overdoses.  Many of these deaths are due to the illegality of the drugs
involved.  The 52,000 figure McCaffrey refers to comes from "CSR Inc.,
unpublished research prepared for ONDCP, 1999" which ONDCP has thus far
refused to release for public scrutiny.  Considering that the SAMHSA figure
of 20,000 already includes deaths which are already only tenuously related to
drug use, it is difficult to accept that this number could be revised upward
so greatly.  More importantly, if this data is not suitable for public
review, how can it be suitable for presentation as fact to Congress, Governor
Johnson, or journalists?

McCaffrey

"We're making progress in reducing illegal drug use and its consequences."
Letter from Barry McCaffrey to Governor Gary Johnson, September 16, 1999.

The Facts

The only evidence of "success" comes from voluntary surveys conducted by the
federal government.  Indeed, 20% of those selected for the National Household
Survey do not participate.  Furthermore, the Survey excludes all 1.8 million
persons who are currently behind bars, many of whom are imprisoned for drugs,
but now do not show up on national statistics.

It is hard to tell how accurate the results are or what impact increased drug
war advertising has on survey responses.  Second, throughout most of the
1990s, these surveys have shown adolescent drug use increasing (until last
year when they showed a leveling off of youth use).

Third, the health and social consequences associated with drugs; overdose
deaths, mentions of drugs in hospital emergency rooms and spread of disease,
particularly AIDS, have worsened since 1978.  Saying that the nation has made
progress on the consequences of drug use is simply untrue.

Similarly, the problems associated with the drug market; international drug
cartels, street gangs, police corruption and the purity of drugs available
have all worsened.  For instance, the price of heroin has fallen from $1,200
per pure gram to $317 per pure gram, while average purity of street-level
heroin has increased from less than 5% to 25% since 1981.  The price of
cocaine is half of what it was in 1981 and the average purity has risen from
40% to more than 70%.

Declining prices and increasing purity are hard evidence of a substantially
increased supply of these drugs - this is not evidence of a successful drug
strategy.Sources: National Drug Control Strategy, National Household Survey
on Drug Abuse; Monitoring the Future Survey; Annual Medical Examiner Data;
Drug Abuse Warning Network.

McCaffrey

"In the view of the nation's scientific and medical community, marijuana has
a high potential for abuse and no generally accepted therapeutic value."
Barry McCaffrey, July 22, 1997.

The Facts

"Federal authorities should rescind their prohibition of the medicinal use of
marijuana for seriously ill patients and allow physicians to decide which
patients to treat." Editorial, New England Journal of Medicine, January 30,
1997.

McCaffrey

"Marijuana is also a gateway drug." Barry McCaffrey, July 22, 1997.

The Facts

For every 112 marijuana users, there is only one regular user of cocaine and
less than one heroin addict.  Source: U.S. Government, National Household
Survey on Drug Abuse, 1996.

"There is no conclusive evidence that the drug effects of marijuana are
causally linked to the subsequent abuse of other illicit drugs." Source:
Janet E.  Joy, Stanley J. Watson, Jr., and John A Benson, Jr.
(1999).  Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base. Division of
Neuroscience and Behavioral Research, Institute of Medicine. Washington, DC:
National Academy Press.

McCaffrey

"The murder rate in Holland is double that in the United States.  That's
drugs." Barry McCaffrey, July 23, 1998.

The Facts

The Dutch homicide rate in 1995 was one-fourth that of the United States (1.8
vs.  8.0). Source: FBI, Uniform Crime Reports and Dutch Bureau of Statistics

McCaffrey

"The Dutch approach to drugs hasn't worked." Barry McCaffrey, July 23, 1998

The Facts

All categories of drug use in Holland are lower than in the US.  While 32.9%
of people in the US have used marijuana, only 15.5% of people in
Holland have done so; 5.1% in the US have used marijuana in the last month;
only 2.5% in Holland have done so.  For cocaine, 10.5% in the US have tried
it, compared to 2.1% in Holland, while .7% have used cocaine in the last
month in the US and .2% have done so in Holland.Sources: National Household
Survey 1997 SAMHSA, Office of applied studies Washington DC.; M.  Abraham, P.
Cohen, M. De Winter: Licit and Illicit drug use in the Netherlands, Center
for Drug Research, University of Amsterdam.

McCaffrey

"The jury is still out on Needle exchange." Barry McCaffrey, August 16, 1996
"These programs are magnets for all social ills, pulling in crime, violence,
addicts, prostitution, dealers, and gangs and driving out hope and
opportunity." Barry McCaffrey, April 24, 1998.

The Facts

"A meticulous scientific review has now proven that needle exchange programs
can reduce the transmission of HIV and save lives without losing ground in
the battle against illegal drugs." Donna Shalala, Secretary of HHS April 20,
1998

Prepared by Common Sense for Drug Policy.
Contact Kevin B.  Zeese, 703-354-5694
http://www.csdp.org/

------------------------------------------------------------------------

WEEKLY NEWS IN REVIEW     (Top)

A look at drug war trends as reflected by a selection of items sent to the
MAP archive during the previous Tuesday to Tuesday interval.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Domestic News- Policy

------------------------------------------------------------------------


COMMENT: (1)     (Top)

A well written editorial in the Progressive took a very accurate measure of
the drug war as (irresponsible) public policy:

(1) A SANE DRUG POLICY     (Top)

'The drug war is doing more harm than good.  We are spending billions of
dollars on a policy that is not working.'

-- Kenneth Sharpe, co-author of 'Drug War Politics: The Price of Denial'

George W.  Bush's little problem with putting to rest allegations of past
cocaine use does not concern us much.  But what does concern us a great deal
is the destructiveness of U.S.  drug policy.

[snip]

The war on drugs is a war on minorities.  While illegal drug use does not
vary much by race, incarceration for illegal drug use sure does. This
crackdown on minority drug users explains much of the growth in the prison
population.  ...

Why this racial discrepancy? "Law enforcement pays more attention to blacks
than whites," says Vincent Schiraldi, director of the Justice Policy
Institute in Washington, D.C.  "Blacks can't get cabs but they get police
cars.  Our juvenile jails are a sea of black and Latino faces.  Minorities
are being put behind bars for things that would be unthinkable if they were
white, middle class kids.

[snip]

Pubdate: October 1999
Source: Progressive (WI)
Copyright: 1999 Progressive Inc.
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fax: 608-257-3373
Website: http://www.progressive.org
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1099/a06.html

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COMMENT: (2-3)     (Top)

One of many abominations of the drug war is its breach of traditional (and
Constitutional) exclusion of the military from civilian policing.  A
thoughtful article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reviews relevant history.

Militarization of the drug war clearly didn't trouble Elizabeth Dole when she
delivered an anti-drug polemic during a stop along the Mexican border.

(2) IN THE WAR ON DRUGS, LAWMAKERS HAVE WIDENED THE MILITARY'S POWER     (Top)

The military's role in the siege of the Branch Davidians was no aberration --
it was government policy.

In a series of decisions over the past two decades, presidents and Congress
have consciously expanded the role of the military in the "war on drugs."

[snip]

The involvement of the military in the drug war began in 1981 when Congress
passed the Military Cooperation with Law Enforcement Officials Act that
allowed the military to assist police in enforcing drug laws. In 1986, Reagan
issued a directive designating drugs as a threat to national security and
encouraging a tight-knit relationship between the military and the police.

[snip]

Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999
Source: St.  Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
Copyright: 1999 Post Dispatch
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.stlnet.com/
Forum: http://www.stlnet.com/postnet/index.nsf/forums
Author: William H .  Freivogel, Post-Dispatch
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1099/a06.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(3) DOLE VOWS MORE BORDER AGENTS FOR DRUG FIGHT     (Top)

BORDERFIELD STATE PARK, Calif.  -- With the U.S.-Mexico border as her
backdrop, Elizabeth Dole vowed Thursday to more than double the number of
border patrol agents if elected president, not as a way to fight illegal
immigration but to block the flow of drugs from Latin America to the United
States.

Mrs.  Dole, who is seeking the Republican nomination for president, promised
a renewed commitment to the war on drugs, bringing into the fight two
agencies, the U.S.  Border Patrol and the National Guard, whose primary
mission has not traditionally focused on fighting drug trafficking.

[snip]

Pubdate: Fri, 08 Oct 1999
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/
Author: Diana Jean Schemo
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1099/a06.html

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COMMENT: (4-5)     (Top)

The Tampa Tribune praised a Michigan Program for drug testing applicants for
public housing with coerced "treatment" of positives. In a rationalization
worthy of Tony Blair, they saw the practice as affirming the civil rights of
the poor.

In Wisconsin, school officials didn't seem to realize that testing
effectively for pot and ineffectively for alcohol will result in more
drinking- already the leading problem according to their students.  Go figure.

(4) DRUG TESTING FOR SELF-SUFFICIENCY     (Top)

Despite a lawsuit seeking to stop it, a pilot program mandating drug tests
for welfare recipients began in Michigan on Oct.  1.

The program, overseen by the state Family Independence Agency, is designed to
help those on the dole get ready for the rules of the workplace, as well as
to make sure the state isn't subsidizing drug use.  Those who test positive
will be offered treatment and will be denied benefits only if they refuse to
be tested or treated.

[snip]

The Michigan program and others that are sure to follow may possibly be ruled
unconstitutional.  So far the U.S. Supreme Court has been reluctant to
sanction drug-testing programs where public safety is not at stake, but that
shouldn't stop states from going through with policies they can clearly see
are for the public good.

The Michigan drug-testing program is progressive, not punitive.  It is
designed to help people turn their lives around.  It will help them break the
bonds of dependency - chemical and otherwise - to eventually lead independent
lives.  And that is the most fundamental right a civilized society can offer.

[snip]

Pubdate: Tues, 10/12 1999
Source: Tampa Tribune (FL)
Copyright: 1999, The Tribune Co.
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.tampatrib.com/
Forum: http://tampabayonline.net/interact/welcome.htm
Section: Editorial
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1113/a02.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(5) STUDENT DRUG TESTING     (Top)

Stoughton Considers A Touchy Subject

Supporters of required random testing see it as a deterrent, but some
students think it would be unfair.

STOUGHTON -- The hallways of Stoughton High School look like most any high
school.  Students on the verge of adulthood lope from classroom to classroom,
talking about their next test, their after-school job or their prospects for
a weekend date.

Then there is the occasional hangover to worry about.

"There are kids who do other (drugs), ...  (but) "Drinking is the huge
problem."

[snip]

The test, if implemented, would likely test for drugs such as marijuana,
according to school officials.  It could also test for substances such as
alcohol and nicotine.

[snip]

"The drug of choice is alcohol ...  he said. "I'm skeptical that a random
drug-testing program would have a big impact on student alcohol use.  ...
You're not going to screen on Monday for something that happened on Saturday."

[snip]

Pubdate: Thu, 07 Oct 1999
Source: Wisconsin State Journal (WI)
Copyright: 1999 Madison Newspapers, Inc.
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.madison.com/wsj/
Author: Phil McDade, Suburban reporter
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1094/a04.html

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Law Enforcement & Prisons
---------

COMMENT: (6)     (Top)

Patt Morrison's piece maintained the heat on the El Monte Police Department-
although it probably went right over their head.

(6) THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS WITH THE EL MONTE POLICE     (Top)

Imagine the man on the witness stand is accused of killing another man, and
has pleaded not guilty, contending that he acted in fear of his own life.
The prosecutor asks: "Sir, you told several versions of what happened that
night."

[snip]

Which one, which ones, would you have the jury believe?" Stop imagining.

Now we are in the court of public opinion, hearing similar accounts about the
El Monte police SWAT team.  The dead man is Mario Paz, the 65-year-old man
killed in his underwear when SWAT shot off the locks and burst in an hour
before midnight on Aug.  9, looking for drug evidence that wasn't there.  And
you, the public, are the jury. Which version would you be inclined to accept?
Or would you side with Lewis Carroll's Looking-Glass Queen, who has sometimes
"believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast"?

[snip]

Pubdate: Fri, 8 Oct 1999
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 1999 Los Angeles Times
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Address: Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Patt Morrison, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1099/a07.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMMENT: (7)     (Top)

The OCR is usually good for one or more penetrating analyses of drug policy;
this week they updated Henry Hyde's asset forfeiture reform and urged no
changes by the Senate; they also weighed in on Colombia (see International).

(7) SEIZING THE MOMENT ON UNFAIR SEIZURE LAW     (Top)

One of America's most essential liberties is the right to protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures, which is enshrined in the Fourth
Amendment.  Unfortunately, a 1984 federal law allowed almost unlimited
seizures of people's property without compensation and even without a finding
of guilt in a court of law.

[snip]

California Sen.  Dianne Feinstein's office told us that she is supporting a
bill to be introduced next week by Republican Jeff Sessions of Georgia, her
fellow member of the Judiciary Committee, because it doesn't go as far as the
Hyde bill and has the support of law enforcement organizations.

[snip]

We fail to see what in the Hyde proposal could aid real criminals. Sen.
Feinstein needs to check with state Sen. Burton on what the feelings on this
bill are in her party...

HR 1658 should be passed unaltered by the Senate.  Americans once again
deserve to have restored their Fourth Amendment right to protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures.

Pubdate: Mon, 04 Oct 1999
Source: Orange County Register (CA)
Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.ocregister.com/
Section: Local News,page 6
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1094/a02.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMMENT: (8-9)     (Top)

The NYPD, clearly untroubled by past drug corruption scandals confidently
predicted that a new strategy will permanently reduce drug trade in the
city.  A more certain prediction is increase in the city's police budget.

Meanwhile, the NY Supreme Court Chief Justice appointed a panel to look at
reducing drug prison terms; it's clear that any reductions will entail more
coerced "treatment" backed by criminal sanctions.

(8) NEW TACTIC GOES CITYWIDE AFTER IT ENDS DRUG BAZAARS     (Top)

A two-year-old effort to rid the Lower East Side of its street-corner drug
bazaars has worked so well that senior police officials say they want to
expand it to every precinct in the city.

The two-pronged strategy would involve establishing a permanent anti-drug
unit in each precinct and retraining officers to go after not only
street-level dealers but also the organizations that supply them.

[snip]

Police officials said the number of narcotics officers was being increased to
3,000, and Chief Kammerdener said that by the end of the year, their
retraining at the Police Academy would be complete and they would be
stationed in every precinct.

[snip]

Pubdate: 03 Oct, 1999
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/
Author: Jayson Blair
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1088/a07.html

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(9) CHIEF JUDGE APPOINTS PANEL TO REVIEW HANDLING OF DRUG CASES     (Top)

In outlining the state court system's priorities at the start of the new
millennium, Chief Judge Judith S.  Kaye announced yesterday the appointment
of a commission to examine how to better handle drug cases.

[snip]

The new commission, headed by a former U.S.  Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, Robert B.  Fiske Jr., will have an explicit mandate to
explore ways of adding new Drug Treatment Courts to the staple of 15 such
courts in operation.  Sentencing in these courts is held in abeyance as long
as a defendant successfully attends a treatment program.

[snip]

Pubdate: Thur, 07 Oct 1999
Source: New York Law Journal (NY)
Copyright: 1999 NLP IP Company
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Address: 345 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10010
Fax: (212) 696-4287
Feedback: http://www.nylj.com/contact.html
Website: http://www.nylj.com/
Author: Daniel Wise
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1107/a01.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cannabis & Hemp-

------------------------------------------------------------------------


COMMENT: (10-11)     (Top)

The power play of the month is the DEA's illegal attempt to wreck a
burgeoning North American hemp industry; for years DEA lobbyists told state
legislatures hemp has no economic future; now they're attempting to make
those predictions come true.  What remains to be seen is whether they get
away with it.

Don't look for any help from Canada.

An amplification from Denver explains the applicability of "illegal;" not
that such niceties have ever deterred the DEA.

(10) BIRDSEED LATEST VICTIM IN UNENDING WAR AGAINST DRUGS     (Top)

The U.S.  Drug Enforcement Administration has opened a new front in its
ever-expanding war against drugs, and the news is not good for your pet
parakeet.

On Aug.  9, the U.S. Customs Service seized nearly 20 tons of birdseed at the
U.S.-Canadian border and continues to hold the contraband in a Detroit
warehouse.  The reason? The shipment by Kenex Ltd., a Canadian company,
consisted entirely of sterilized seeds gleaned from its harvest of industrial
hemp.

[snip]

Perhaps the real reason for the DEA's action is the current resurgence of
interest in industrial hemp, which is occurring on a global scale at the same
time AIDS and cancer activists have fought for the right to use higher-THC
varieties as medication.

[snip]

Just as it has fought the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes, the DEA
must consider industrial hemp a threat to its hard-line stance against
marijuana.  That may explain why it urged Nicaraguan officials to burn the
first commercial seed and fiber crop of another Canadian company, Agro Hemp,
which had spent five years in Nicaragua developing a tropical strain of
industrial hemp.

Although a Nicaraguan court failed to find Agro Hemp guilty of wrongdoing,
its botanist has languished in a Managua jail for nearly a year.

It's enough to make a canary sing the blues.

Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999
Source: Auburn Journal
Copyright: 1999 Auburn Journal
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Address: 1030 High St., Auburn, CA 95603
Website: http://www.auburnjournal.com/
Author: Patrick McCartney, Journal City Editor
Note: Our NewsHawk writes: Pat McCartney is a City Editor, in a
zero-tolerance county.  McCartney shows great skill and patience in educating
his audience without offending their local values.  He can be reached at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] .
Please: see our ALERT "DEA Tries To Kill North American Hemp Industry":
http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0130.html
Also: http://www.hempembargo.com/
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1104/a09.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(11) HEMP DOWNER: DEA SEIZURE OF STERILE HEMP SEEDS ILLEGAL     (Top)

The seizure of 39,000 pounds of sterilized Canadian hemp seed at the Detroit
International Airport eight weeks ago has several severely bummed-out
Colorado companies jonesing for an explanation.

The sterilized seed, which was produced by Kenex, Inc.  of Ontario, Canada,
was seized in Detroit on Aug.  9 by U.S. Customs agents acting on orders from
the U.S.  Drug Enforcement Agency. According to the DEA, the seed was found
to contain minute amounts of THC, which is classified as an illegal drug
under the federal Controlled Substances Act.

[snip]

"What the DEA did with the Canadian seed is completely illegal," said
Kathleen Chippi, co-owner of the Boulder Hemp Company.  "We weren't using any
of the Kenex seed, so we haven't been subpoenaed or had anything confiscated
yet, but our concern is that the DEA is accountable to no one."

[snip]

Pubdate: Sat, 09 Oct 1999
Source: Colorado Daily (CO)
Copyright: 1999 Colorado Daily
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.codaily.com/
Author: Brian Hansen
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1103/a02.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMMENT: (12-13)     (Top)

The focus for medical cannabis supporters shifts to Maine which will consider
an initiative on Nov.  2. Judging from these reports, there is considerable
support tempered by a large element of fear.

(12) REEFER REFERENDUM     (Top)

Is Marijuana Good Medicine? And Is The Ballot Box The Best Place To Decide
That Question?

It was 1990.  A house on Sherman Street in Portland's Parkside neighborhood.
A drug deal was about to go down. "Betty" (the real names of those involved
have been changed at their request) waited in the car while her husband,
"Rick," went inside...

"Everybody involved knew it was illegal.  But it's like a starving person
stealing an apple.  We loved [Virginia] and we wanted to give her a shot."

[snip]

Before she smoked marijuana, Virginia had "no interest in food," Betty said.
"After smoking, she was interested enough to eat whatever she wanted." The
nausea vanished, her appetite returned and the weight loss stopped.  Today,
Virginia is alive and healthy. She doesn't smoke pot or use other illegal
drugs.  But she doesn't dare to speak out about the medical benefits she
believes she received from marijuana because some family members hold jobs
that could be jeopardized if it became known she had once smoked dope.

[snip]

Although it's not hard to find folks who've used pot
to treat the side effects of chemo, wasting syndrome from AIDS and other
illnesses, the campaign to legalize medical marijuana in Maine is sadly
lacking in spokespeople with firsthand knowledge of the issue.  With one
exception, those who say they've been helped by the drug refuse to allow
their names or photos to be used for fear of the backlash.

[snip]

Pubdate: Thu, 07 Oct 1999
Source: Casco Bay Weekly (ME)
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.cascobayweekly.com
Author: Al Diamon
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1096/a08.html

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(13) DOCTOR WORM     (Top)

There are doctors in Maine who believe legalizing marijuana for medical
purposes is good medicine.  But try to find one with the courage to say that
publicly.  Asking pro-pot physicians to openly endorse the referendum
question on the Nov.  2 ballot seems to cause cases of the shakes reminiscent
of the camera work in "The Blair Witch Project." It's enough to give the
average doctor motion sickness.

[snip]

Pubdate: Thu, 07 Oct 1999
Source: Casco Bay Weekly (ME)
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.cascobayweekly.com
Author: Al Diamon
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1097/a01.html

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International News

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COMMENT: (14-15)     (Top)

With both major parties clearly committed to further pursuit of folly in
Colombia, the dimensions of the necessary emergency aid package became the
major issue.  Typically, the Orange County Register was one of the few to
comment on the wishful thinking involved.

(14) NOW, STATE OF SIEGE, COLOMBIAN STYLE     (Top)

WASHINGTON -- A Latin American country slides toward chaos.  Leftist
guerrillas attack the government, right-wing death squads attack guerrilla
sympathizers, peace talks falter.  The economy spirals downward, scattering
thousands of refugees, and fears of instability sweep through the region.
The United States hurries to the rescue with hundreds of millions of dollars
in aid.

With the Colombian Government facing its most serious crisis in years,
Clinton Administration officials confirmed last week that they are putting
together a package of military and economic assistance that could reach
dimensions not seen in the hemisphere since the cold war. They are also
trying to reassure anyone who will listen that Colombia today really looks
nothing like El Salvador once did.

[snip]

Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/
Author: Tim Golden
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1111/a05.html

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(15) WHAT NEXT IN THE COLOMBIA DRUG WAR     (Top)

The most disturbing aspect of the current crisis in Colombia is the extent to
which the U.S.  war on drugs has strengthened the most violent and ruthless
elements in Colombia and given them every reason to continue their war-like
ways.  Unless some way is found to ameliorate, or even eliminate, the
disruptive effects of the way the war on drugs has been carried out in
Colombia, sending more money and more aid is likely only to increase the
killing and the suffering.

[snip]

Pubdate: Tuesday,October 12,1999
Source: Orange County Register (CA)
Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.ocregister.com/
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1113/a07.html

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COMMENT: (16-17)     (Top)

Elsewhere, Canada continued its impossible straddle of the medical cannabis
issue while prison conditions in the UK moved in a more recognizably American
direction- one consistent with the Labour Government's "tough on drugs"
posturing.

(16) CANADA: ROCK OKS POT SMOKING FOR 14 SERIOUSLY ILL     (Top)

Ottawa -- Another 14 Canadians are free to smoke marijuana for medicinal
purposes today even as the government takes an epileptic to court for
suppressing his seizures with therapeutic pot.

Pubdate: Wednesday, October 6, 1999
Source: Calgary Herald (Canada)
Copyright: 1999 Calgary Herald
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Address: P.O.  Box 2400, Stn. M, Calgary, Alberta T2P 0W8
Fax: (403) 235-7379
Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/
Forum: http://forums.canada.com/~calgary
Author: Bruce Cheadle; Canadian Press
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1092/a09.html

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(17) UK: FRESH CLAIMS OF PRISON BRUTALITY     (Top)

Last Monday Paul Boateng swept into Brixton Prison on an urgent visit. The
prisons minister was not there for a photo-opportunity but to heed a
desperate plea for help.  This had come from the governor of the high
security jail, in South London, after an alarming spate of suicide attempts.

Once Mr Boateng had left, one prisoner sat down in his cell and wrote an
impassioned letter to a close friend.

[snip]

His account confirms that drug use is endemic and that prisoners spend much
of their time locked inside their cells.  And he confirms the rumours that 30
prisoners have tried to kill or mutilate themselves.

[snip]

Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999
Source: Independent on Sunday (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Address: 1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5DL
Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/sindy/sindy.html
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1106/a07.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------

HOT OFF THE 'NET     (Top)
------------------------------------------------------------------------


New DrugNews Archive Search Capabilities

Matt Elrod has once again worked his magic on the news archive.  The entire
archive has been put into a relational database.  You can now search by
author, title, source, area, and date range and sort your results three ways
from Sunday.  You can view your results in three different levels of detail
including excerpts.  From each article you can see more from the same author,
source and area.

You now have the ability to filter out LTEs, hone in on opinion pieces or
news articles, include or exclude specific areas.

We will be providing a bit of explanatory documentation and links for those
unfamiliar with database capabilities but Matt has, as usual, made an
incredibly complex search capability quite intuitive and simple for even
beginning users.

Matt welcomes comments on the new archive at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
He has already made many refinements based on user feedback and has more
improvements on his "to do" list.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Governor Gary Johnson (R-NM) News Archive

An archive of news articles documenting the exceptional media coverage
garnered by Governor Johnson has been created utilizing the newly enhanced
DrugNews archive.  The URL below will provide any interested party with all
articles covering Governor Johnson.

http://www.mapinc.org/johnson.htm

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Governor Johnson for President in 2000?

There has been a committee established to draft Gov.  Johnson to run for the
office of President.

The address is http://www.garyjohnson2000.org/

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------------------------------------------------

QUOTES OF THE WEEK     (Top)
------------------------------------------------------------------------


"We concluded that there are some limited circumstances in which we recommend
smoking marijuana for medical uses."

-- Institute of Medicine Principle Investigator John Benson, M.D., at IOM's
3/17/99 news conference

"Smoked dope is not medicine .  . . I think it's a crock."

-- Barry McCaffrey, Albuquerque Journal, 10/8/99

------------------------------------------------------------------------

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News/COMMENTS-Editor: Tom O'Connell ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
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We wish to thank all our contributors, editors, NewsHawks and letter writing
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NOTICE:

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.  Section 107, this material is distributed
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See http://www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm for info on contributing clippings.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

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DrugSense provides many services to at no charge BUT THEY ARE NOT FREE TO
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We incur many costs in creating our many and varied services.  If you are
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Back Issues: 1997 1998 1999



Your Email Address
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