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Volume I, Issue No. 1
November 11, 1992 through February 18, 1993
Compiled by Paul Stanford
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CONTENTS:
Judge to Decide on Probation
Termination (SAN DIEGO, 11/10/92)
Dutch Premier Slams French Minister
for Drugs Comments (THE HAGUE, 12/05/92)
Designer Cannabis Gives Dutch
Officials a Headache (AMSTERDAM, 12/09/92)
Corrections Investigating Drug
Overdose (CHESTER IL, 12/10/92)
Federal Agents Arrest Wrong Person
(LOGAN OH, 12/13/92)
Dutch Police Swoop on Drug-Peddling Coffee
Shops (AMSTERDAM, 12/16/92)
Pinckney Man Sent to Prison for 7 Years
for Growing Marijuana (DETRIOT, 01/07/93)
Tugboat Union Head, Daughter Charged
with Selling Pot (NEW YORK, 01/28/93)
Anti-Oregano (LITTLE ROCK
AR, 01/28/93)
Man Indicted on Drug Charges
(PITTSBURGH, 01/28/93)
Chesterton Man Arrested on Marijuana
Charges (INDIANAPOLIS, 02/05/92)
Marijuana-Birds
WASHINGTON, 02/06/93)
For Ex-Defendant, the Nightmare
Continues (02/07/93)
As Rasta Culture Spreads, Faith May Be
Waning (KINGSTON, 02/08/93)
Parish Apologizes for Marijuana
Charges (SAN ANTONIO, 02/13/93)
Drug Forfeiture
(MORGAN HILL CA, 02/13/93)
Australian Farmers Given a Legal
Taste of Cannabis (SYDNEY, 02/16/93)
British Farmers to Grow Cannabis --
Legally (LONDON, 02/18/93)
Valentine Day Massacre
(NEW YORK, 02/18/93)
Canada Called Hothouse for Gourmet
Marijuana (VANCOUVER, 02/18/93)
City Official Arrested
(SAN FRANCISCO, 02/18/93)
Court Upholds Ban on Marijuana Medicinal
Use (WASHINGTON, 02/18/93)
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JUDGE TO
DECIDE ON PROBATION TERMINATION
UPwe 11/10/92 2213
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -- A judge said Wednesday he will
consider terminating the probation of a man infected with the AIDS virus
who cultivated and used marijuana to stop nausea and other symptoms of the
deadly disease.
Samuel Skipper, 39, of
La Mesa, pleaded guilty in 1991 to cultivating marijuana and was placed on
three years probation. Skipper said he and his male lover had AIDS and used
the drug for treatment.
As a condition of his
probation, he was ordered not to use marijuana.
But Skipper continued
to use the drug and was charged again with marijuana cultivation. He was
acquitted October 15 marijuana cultivation charges after he used the "medical
necessity" defense.
Skipper's attorney told
San Diego Municipal Court Judge Charles Rogers that Skipper should be allowed to
cultivate marijuana since the jury accepted his explanation that he needs the
drug.
"All Mr. Skipper wants
is to be left alone," argued Juliana Humphrey. "This is a very unique
situation."
Deputy District Attorney
David Williams told the judge not to terminate the remaining year of probation.
The judge will make his
decision on December 10.

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DUTCH PREMIER
SLAMS FRENCH MINISTER FOR DRUGS COMMENTS
RTec 12/05/92 0958
THE HAGUE (Reuter) -- Dutch Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers
condemned as "infamous" and "scandalous" a French minister's charge that the
Netherlands was too lax on drug abuse, Dutch media said on Saturday.
The Dutch government
plans to lodge a formal protest with France at the comments made by
Interior Minister Paul Quiles in London earlier this week, a foreign
ministry spokesman said.
Quiles was reported
as saying that the Netherlands' lenient approach to drug abuse was blocking
a European Community plan for a new Europe-wide police force. He accused
the Dutch of obstructing the scheme by refusing to allow its first
phase, a Drugs Unit, to be based in Strasbourg, France.
"That was a
scandalous remark," Lubbers was quoted as saying by the Dutch
ANP News Agency. It was "unacceptable, untrue and infamous" and
"impermissible language among member states."
The Netherlands
and Italy have submitted The Hague and Rome as potential headquarters
sites for the project, known as Europol, which will work along the
lines of the Interpol international police organisation.
"The problems in
France are far worse than here," Lubbers was quoted as saying by Dutch
daily Trouw. "The number of deaths from drugs is far higher in France
than here...We are at least equally active and effective."
Both hard and soft
drug use is illegal in the Netherlands, but small-scale drug use is
tolerated in a belief that it is easier to control if kept visible.
Soft drugs like
marijuana are openly sold in so-called "coffee shops" throughout the country
and the heroin substitute methadone is distributed free to addicts from
special buses.

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DESIGNER
CANNABIS GIVES DUTCH OFFICIALS A HEADACHE
By Ben Hirschler
RTw 12/09/92 2144
AMSTERDAM (Reuter) -- In thousands of glasshouses
around the Netherlands a new crop is ripening.
Home-grown "designer"
cannabis, carefully cultivated for maximum potency, is estimated to be the
country's sixth biggest crop after tomatoes -- and output is growing fast.
Known as Nederwiet
(Dutch weed), it is replacing imported cannabis as the drug of preference
among discerning smokers in Dutch "coffee shops," where soft drugs are sold
openly.
It is proving a major
embarrassment to the Dutch government, already under fire from neighbouring
countries who say its lax policy will let criminals flood the European
Community with drugs when internal borders are opened in January.
Dutch growers counter
that they are actually driving crime out of the drugs trade since their
superior home-grown product is grabbing market share from foreign drug
barons.
"It's taken a long
time to convince people that Dutch marijuana is a top quality product but
the message has finally got through," said Alan Dronkers, whose Amsterdam-based
seed firm has seen sales more than double in the last two years.
"The Colombians and
other drug traffickers have lost a market. They can't sell their stuff
anymore," he said.
His company produces
a glossy catalogue offering 19 different hybrid varieties -- each selected
for indoor, outdoor or glasshouse use -- the fruit of 15 years cross-breeding
of plants from around the world.
Most popular are
the "skunkweeds," so named because of their strong smell. First produced in
the United States in the 1970s, they have since been carefully cultivated
to a potency many times that of conventional varieties.
According to police
figures, Dutch marijuana now contains nine to 27 percent of the active
ingredient tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), compared with 0.5 to 14 percent in
imported drugs.
Health workers say
the super-strong cannabis can be a shock to the system but there is no
evidence it is any more dangerous than other types of marijuana.
"There have been some
passing intoxications but we have seen no serious accidents," said Giel van
Brussel, head of the drugs unit at the Amsterdam city health authority.
"Those who suffer may
experience a period of anxiety and the feeling that it was too strong, but
it only lasts a few hours. It's a mild problem," he added.
The National Criminal
Intelligence Service (CRI), however, believes designer cannabis is a potential
goldmine for the mob, and fears it is only a matter of time before drug
cartels turn the Netherlands into a major drug exporter. There have already
been reports of Nederwiet entering Britain.
"We've been warning
all along that it will be a major export product. If you allow it to be
produced, people will grow it and export it," said the CRI's Ernst Moeksis.
He says there are
already ominous signs that production is being scaled up as bigger operators
move in.
"It's become much,
much more professional in the last few years," Moeksis said.
In 1990 police
dismantled five substantial cannabis nurseries. Last year the number of sites
jumped to 54, producing crops with an estimated street value of 204 million
guilders ($116 million). That 1991 total has already been surpassed this
year -- and police admit this is only the tip of the iceberg.
Although all drugs
are technically illegal in the Netherlands, possessing or producing up to
28 grammes of cannabis for personal use was reduced from a crime to a
misdemeanour 15 years ago.
Furthermore, growers
routinely escape prosecution by claiming their crops are for legitimate
agricultural use, such as the production of birdseed or fibre for making
rope.
Controversy over the
relaxed Dutch policy was ignited again last week in a public spat with France
over the location of a planned new Europe-wide police force, to be known as
Europol.
French Interior
Minister Paul Quiles, lobbying hard for Europol to be based outside Strasbourg,
accused the Dutch of pursuing a lenient drugs policy which would undermine
Europol efforts to tackle drugs trafficking.
Dutch Prime Minister
Ruud Lubbers, who wants Europol to be based in The Hague, said the allegation
was "scandalous."
At the same time the
Dutch have shown signs of bending in the gale of recent criticism. Justice
Minister Ernst Hirsch-Ballin hinted at a tougher Dutch stance in future --
at least on Nederwiet.
"More intensive police
attention must be paid to large-scale Nederwiet cultivation. The Netherlands
really cannot permit itself to become the laughing-stock of Europe in this
already precarious policy area," Hirsch-Ballin said recently.
Officials say no firm
decisions have yet been taken, but the government is studying a CRI proposal
for a licensing system requiring growers to prove that their cannabis is
destined for approved agricultural outlets.
"Licences are one
possibility. We have to take some measures, but what they will be is still
an open question," said Justice Ministry spokesman Victor Holtus.

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CORRECTIONS INVESTIGATING DRUG OVERDOSE
REUTER MJM KG SJ UPce 12/10/92 1558
CHESTER, Ill. (UPI) -- Illinois Corrections officials
want to know how a Menard Correctional Center inmate who died of an apparent
drug overdose last month managed to smuggle a syringe into the maximum-security
prison.
DOC investigators are
examining the Nov. 29 death of Michael LeCrone, 34, a convicted killer who
was serving an 80-year sentence for a Champaign County murder and other
crimes.
Passing inmates found
LeCrone dead on the floor of his one-man cell in the Southern Illinois prison.
Randolph County Coroner Neil Birchler said the dead inmate had a makeshift
tourniquet tied around his arm and there were needle tracks on his hands and
feet indicating he was a longtime intravenous drug abuser.
Also found in LeCrone's
cell were a syringe and several rubber bags containing a white powder believed
to be cocaine or heroin. Birchler believes LeCrone died of a drug overdose
but won't make an official ruling until lab tests confirm the identity of
the drug.
Corrections officials
acknowledge pills, cocaine, marijuana and other drugs often are smuggled into
the state prison system, sometimes by guards and other times by visitors or
prison workers.
But intravenous drugs
are rare and deaths from overdoses are almost unheard of, said Michael Mahoney
of the prison watchdog group the John Howard Association.
State law makes it
illegal for any Illinoisan, in prison or out, to possess a hypodermic syringe
without a prescription unless they are a health-care provider.
DOC policy also bans
needles in prisoners' cells and says all inmates must go to prison infirmaries
to receive injections.
The state's most
publicized prison drug overdose was in 1987, when a Pontiac Correctional
Center inmate choked to death on a packet of cocaine as he tried to hide the
drugs from guards who were moving him to another cell.
Prison gangs blamed
guards for the inmate's death and killed Pontiac Superintendent Robert Taylor
in retaliation for the incident. The gang leader who ordered the assassination
and two inmates who carried it out were sentenced to death for the crime.

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FEDERAL AGENTS
ARREST WRONG PERSON
UPma 12/13/92 0715
LOGAN, Ohio (UPI) -- The mother of five children
said her arrest on major drug charges, which turned out to be a case of
mistaken identity, was "the most humiliating experience" of her life.
U.S. marshals from
Columbus arrested Sandra Kranz at her home in Logan, believing she was a
person identified as Lisa Marilyn Allen, who is sought by federal officials
in Portland, Ore., on eight counts of trafficking in marijuana.
Kranz, who said she
doesn't smoke and hasn't had a drink in three years, said she was in bed
when the marshals came to her home Friday and told her that she was Allen.
"I told them I waem
my ID," Kranz said.
She said marshals
insisted she was Allen and told her she could tell her story in court.
Kranz said she had
to leave her two daughters, 22 months and 2 months, with her 17-year-old
son.
When she reached U.S.
District Court in Columbus, about 40 miles north of Logan, she was placed
in a fourth-floor holding cell.
Kranz said she told
her story to Stephen K. O'Leary, who handles retrial services for the U.S.
District Court.
"If it weren't for him,
I would have been there through the weekend and who knows how much longer,"
Kranz said. "He listened to my story, my denial and my story from birth
through today."
Kranz said marshals
never informed her of her rights or allowed her to make telephone calls.
"It was like I was
a major criminal and I had no rights," Kranz said.
Kranz said she got
a free lunch but had to arrange her own ride home.
"I held up well under
the situation and pressure, but after I got on the phone I broke down and
cried," Kranz said.
The charge against
Allen involved two marijuana shipments from Thailand, one of 8 tons and
one of 7 tons, for distribution on the East Coast, authorities said.

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DUTCH
POLICE SWOOP ON DRUG-PEDDLING COFFEE SHOPS
RTw 12/16/92 1131
AMSTERDAM (Reuter) -- Amsterdam police swooped on
the city's infamous "coffee shops," arrested 193 people and seized 10 kg
(20 lbs) of hard drugs, a police spokesman said on Wednesday.
More than 600 of the
marijuana-selling coffee shops have sprung up over the Dutch capital in the
last 15 years with the tacit acceptance of the authorities.
But police suspect
that half of the shops are also centres for an illicit trade in hard drugs,
firearms and stolen goods.
Tuesday's raid on 21
coffee shops led to the arrest of 48 people for possessing hard drugs and
firearms. A further 145 people were detained on suspicion of being illegal
aliens.
Police Commissioner
Foeke Wagenaar told a news conference that police would continue their
crackdown. "We are determined to continue along this path, on a smaller scale
but with great tenacity," he said.
All drugs are
technically illegal under Dutch law, but 15 years ago possession of up to 28
grams (one ounce) of cannabis for personal use was reduced from a crime to
a misdemeanour.
REUTER HDJ CAB PAE

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PINCKNEY MAN
SENT TO PRISON FOR 7 YEARS FOR GROWING MARIJUANA
UPce 01/07/93 1633
DETROIT (UPI) -- U.S. District Judge Nancy Edmunds
slapped a Pinckney man with a 7-year prison term and a $3,000 fine Thursday
for cultivating more than 900 marijuana plants at a farmhouse in Addison.
George M. Dudek, 30,
pleaded guilty to the charge on Oct. 6. In addition to the prison time and
fine, Edmunds imposed a 4-yer period of supervised release.
Assistant U.S. Attorney
Terrence Berg, who prosecuted the case, said agents with the Drug Enforcement
Administration seized more than 900 marijuna plants when they raided the
farmhouse on Jan. 7, 1992.
Hydroponic growing
equipment and technical literature on marijuana cultivation also were seized,
he said.
Dudek pleaded guilty
to one count of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.

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TUGBOAT UNION
HEAD, DAUGHTER CHARGED WITH SELLING POT
UPne 01/28/93 1803
NEW YORK (UPI) -- The 77-year-old president of a
local tugboat union and his daughter were arrested Thursday on charges of
conspiring to buy more than a ton of marijuana from an undercover drug agent,
federal prosecutors said.
Abe Klein, president
of AFL-CIO local 333, the United Marine Division, representing tugboat workers
on Staten Island, and his daughter, Sheryl, 43, both of Staten Island, were
charged with drug trafficking.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney
Otto Obermaier said the two were indicted Jan. 7 along with a third individual
known as "Ben" who currently is a fugitive. The three were charged with
conspiring to distribute and possess with intent to distribute 2,200 pounds of
marijuana since 1989.
Prosecutors said
the Kleins allegedly negotiated to buy several thousand pounds of marijuana
on a regular basis from an undercover Drug Enforcement Administration agent.
The trio allegedly
obtained a one-pound sample of the pot from the agent as part of the sale
negotiations.
Klein and his daughter
were scheduled to be arraigned Feb. 4. in U.S. District Court.
If convicted, both
face a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison and a maximum term of life
in prison, as well as more than $4 million in fines.

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ANTI-OREGANO
APn 01/28/93 1224
Copyright, 1993. The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- Cooking Italian could
endanger your freedom in Arkansas. A bill introduced in the legislature
could make possession of oregano illegal, and punishable by up to 10 years
in prison.
The bill in the state
House of Representatives would make it a felony to create, deliver or possess
"counterfeit" marijuana.
Under the proposal,
coupled with definitions in current law, a person could be arrested if the
"counterfeit substance" looks like marijuana and is packaged in a manner
normally used for delivery of the drug -- usually a plastic bag.
Dried, crumbled oregano
leaves look much like marijuana, and the flavorful herb has occasionally been
passed off as the costlier marijuana.
And oregano is sold
in bulk at health food stores, where customers package it in plastic bags.
"That's insane," Gary
Eklund, owner of Beans and Grains and Things in Little Rock, said of the
proposed legislation.
Supporters of the bill
contend that an arrest would occur only if someone were trying to sell oregano
as marijuana.
But Deputy Attorney
General Jack Gillean said that such a representation wouldn't be required.
"If the police found
someone who was involved in the (drug) trade and they happen to be in
possession of oregano packaged that way, clearly conditions would be met,"
Gillean said. "He is going to have to convince police he is making a big pot
of spaghetti or something."
Sensible application
of the law would depend on the common sense of police and prosecutors, Gillean
said.
Conviction could bring
a sentence of three to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

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MAN INDICTED
ON DRUG CHARGES
UPma 01/28/93 0806
PITTSBURGH (UPI) -- An Allegheny County man has been
indicted by a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh on a charge involving narcotics
violations.
Robert Hazlett, 44, of
Natrona Heights, was named Wednesday in the one-count indictment.
Hazlett is charged with
possession with the intent to distribute marijuana plants.
If convicted, Hazlett
faces a possible sentence of not less than 10 years in prison to a maximum of
life and a fine up to $4 million.

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CHESTERTON
MAN ARRESTED ON MARIJUANA CHARGES
UPce 02/05/93 1643
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -- A 25-year-old was arrested
Friday on charges he was growing more than 100 marijuana plants at
Bloomington.
The federal grand
jury indictment of Joseph Lee Hunt, currently of Chesterton, came down Jan. 5,
but the information was not released until his arrest.
U.S. Attorney Debroah
Daniels said a tip from Hunt's Bloomington landlord led to the investigation
and indictment of the man.
If convicted, Hunt
faces a possible prison term of 40 years.

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MARIJUANA-BIRDS
By Scott Lindlaw, Associated Press Writer
APn 02/06/93 0109
Copyright, 1993. The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- This marijuana is for the birds.
All 608 tons of it.
That's the amount of
marijuana seeds imported last year -- all of it legal -- to feed pet birds.
Packers say the seeds
are high in protein and fat and make for shiny feathers.
"It is not used to
excite the birds," said Kathy Schneider, technical service coordinator for
Kaytee Products in Chilton, Wis., which packages marijuana seed. "It is a
nutritional source."
The Drug Enforcement
Agency allows six U.S. companies to import marijuana seeds that end up as
feed for parakeets, parrots, cockatiels and pigeons.
Pigeon owners favor
feeding their birds the seeds before shows because they improve appearance,
Schneider said.
The seeds aren't the
kind that would intoxicate a bird, let alone a human. But to discourage
would-be pot gardeners, the DEA makes sure the life is baked out of them in
a heat treatment before they hit U.S. shores.
Under DEA rules, the
seeds must be "non-viable," or incapable of producing marijuana plants, when
they arrive in this country. If tests show they are viable, they get another
heat treatment.
Schneider said a few
seeds will bloom into plants even after the treatment, but won't mature or
bear seeds.
Most of the seeds are
imported from Hong Kong and mainland China, said Joel Fries, deputy chief of
the drug operations section of DEA's Office of Diversion Control.
Why not let the seed
companies grow marijuana and harvest the seeds? That would be illegal, Fries
said.
So would using seeds confiscated in drug busts, because the seeds are often
viable.
"Anyway, we destroy the
stuff as fast as we can and it's hard to store," he said.

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FOR
EX-DEFENDANT, THE NIGHTMARE CONTINUES
By Courtland Milloy
WP 02/07/93
Harry Davis had been in bed that morning a year ago when he heard a knock
on his apartment door in Fort Washington. He got up, put on his pants and
opened the door. Fifteen police officers, carrying assault weapons and dressed
in black garb that looked like some kind of ninja outfits, stormed in,
knocked Davis to the floor and held him there with a shotgun to his head.
"They run through the
house and pull my girlfriend out of bed with no clothes on, and then they
spread her legs out like she was hiding something up in her,"Davis said.
"I'm wearing pants and no shirt and she's naked, and they open the windows.
It's winter. We're freezing. Then they proceed to destroy the place."
Davis was arrested in
a crackdown on the "P Street Crew," an alleged cocaine distribution ring
operating in Northwest Washington. Last week, U.S. District Court Judge
Stanley Sporkin dismissed the case against him.
"The evidence did not
have him in any actual drug transaction," said Justin Williams, an assistant
U.S. attorney in charge of the case. "All I can say is that there is nothing
further pending against him."
Except harsh
recollections of the United States mocking its constitutional ideals.
During the raid on
Davis's apartment, police tore out the walls and crushed family photographs
in their frames. They confiscated his automobile and seized his car-leasing
business.
When the charges were
dropped, Davis asked for his car and was told that it had been forfeited back
to the bank because he had not kept up his monthly payments.
He was told that his
business papers would be returned, if government clerks could find them. But
he would not be compensated for the damage to his apartment and personal
belongings.
Police had charged
that Davis, 49, used his business to launder $100 million in drug money.
Inside his apartment, they found $8,000 in deposits from customers who had
leased cars from him. There were no drugs, no guns or any evidence of the
dirty millions that he was supposed to have washed.
Nevertheless,
then-Attorney General William Barr held a spectacular news conference at
the Justice Department and announced that 450 law enforcement officials
from as far away as New York had smashed the notorious P Street Crew. Davis
was implicated as the mastermind and portrayed on television every night
for nearly a week as yet another so-called black coke kingpin in handcuffs.
The law does not always
respond this way. In 1989, Anne Arundel County police seized seven pounds of
cocaine, more than 60 pounds of marijuana, five pounds of hashish, $70,000
in cash and numerous weapons from the home of two National Security Agency
psychologists. They did not destroy the house, nor confiscate property.
In fact, police were
careful to allege that the drug operation was run by the couple's 21- year-old
son. The parents were not charged.
To add insult to Davis's
injury, police then transported him and the other 17 P Street defendants
across state lines to have their cases tried in Virginia, where juries are
whiter and reputedly harsher on black defendants. U.S. District Court Judge
Albert V. Bryan saw their arrival for what it was, a charade, and he ordered
the defendants returned to D.C.
Before his arrest,
Davis had worked part time as an amateur boxing referee and trainer at a gym
in suburban Maryland. There he met some of the youths who also were arrested
and later plea bargained for three-year sentences in the P Street case.
Davis said he had tried
to help one of the youths "get his act together" by giving him a job as an
office cleaner and messenger in his car-leasing company. According to Davis's
attorney, the relationship was distorted by an informer who was bargaining
with police in a desperate bid to keep himself out of prison.
After being released
on bond, Davis found work as a car salesman.
"A customer recognized
me as `that man from the P Street Crew,' " Davis recalled. "My employer checked
my record and found this `felony arrest.' "
He was fired.
During court
proceedings dismissing the drug charges last week, prosecutors reserved the
right to refile charges against Davis.
"I'm still a suspect?"
Davis asked.
"It's not a word we
would be using," Williams said later.
Judge Sporkin had said
that refiling charges against Davis would be "unwise."
But the request by
prosecutors had the effect of leaving Davis's innocence in question. That
the government had acted immorally, however, was beyond the shadow of
a doubt.
"What about my
reputation? I have done nothing wrong," Davis said in court. "You break into
my home, humiliate my friend, destroy my business and after investigating me
for a year, just drop the charges. What can you say to me?"
"You're free," the
judge told him. "Next case."

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AS RASTA
CULTURE SPREADS, FAITH MAY BE WANING
By John Otis
UPn 02/08/93 0016
KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI) -- Ridiculed for their
beliefs, feared for their matted, ropy dreadlocks, and jailed for smoking
marijuana, Jamaica's Rastafarians used to be social misfits.
These days, however,
members of the religious sect have become doctors, teachers and lawyers.
Rastafarian-tinged reggae music blares out of boomboxes around the globe.
In Kingston, dreadlocks are more common than neckties.
Yet even as Rastafarian
culture goes mainstream, many observers say the religion's original tenets
are being left behind.
"The faith has become
very diluted. For many, it is just a hair style," said Flo O'Connor, a human
rights activist who has worked on behalf of Rastafarians.
The movement began
when Marcus Garvey, a Jamaican back-to-Africa advocate, forecast the crowning
of a black king in Africa. Garvey's statement resonated in Jamaica, a former
slave colony where 78 percent of the population is black.
When Haile Selassie I
was named Emperor of Ethiopia in 1930, thousands of Kingston slum dwellers
declared him the black savior. They became known as Rastafarians, after
Selassie's baptismal name, Ras Tafari Makonnen.
Many Rastafarians let
their hair grow into long, unruly tresses and considered marijuana a sacred
herb. They called Jamaica "Babylon," or hell on earth, and pledged to return
to Africa.
Police considered the
movement subversive, and they jailed hundreds of Rastas on drug and vagrancy
charges. Yet with its tenets of self-sufficiency and black pride, the faith
caught on and helped propel the island's black power movement in the 1960s.
"They persuaded the
society to look in the mirror and confront their blackness. They gave the
black struggle tremendous impetus and pushed it along," said Rex Nettleford,
a professor at the University of the West Indies in Kingston who has written
a history of the movement.
Through the music of
reggae stars like Bob Marley -- a devout Rastafarian -- the faith took hold
in the United States, England, Japan and Africa. Abroad, more people recognize
the red, green and gold Rastafarian banner than the Jamaican flag.
Still, those who believe
in Selassie's divinity are a tiny minority compared with the legions who
have plugged into the faith's cultural trappings.
Jamaica's image as a
Rasta paradise is so pervasive that self-styled "rent-a-dreads" hang out at
the tourist resorts offering marijuana-laced tours of the local nightlife.
Tony Soyemi, a reggae producer, said he has run into snags cutting deals with
U.S. record company officials because he wears short hair.
"The first thing they
say is, 'He ain't got dreadlocks,"' Soyemi said with a laugh.
Mutabaruka, a
Rastafarian poet, observes, "You see Rasta flashin' them dreadlocks on MTV.
You see Rasta all over the place. But when you start telling people Haile
Selassie is God, they don't want to hear that."
Because the movement
lacks structure and a defined hierarchy, no one knows just how many true
Rastafarians exist in Jamaica or elsewhere, said Abraham Peddie, chairman of
the Rastafarian community in Washington, D.C.
Meanwhile, violence
and famine in Ethiopia have led many Rastas to view the pilgrimage back to
Africa as more of a metaphor than a goal, and Selassie, overthrown by Marxist
rebels in 1974, is viewed by many Jamaicans as a hapless autocrat.
In years past, many
Rastas lived in tightly knit communes on the outskirts of Kingston. Elders
exercised a moral authority, and those who strayed from the code of conduct
had their dreadlocks shorn off.
But Jamaica has an
oral tradition, and the elders rarely put anything on paper, O'Connor said.
Furthermore, as Rastas moved up the economic ladder, many moved out of the
communes.
"Most people don't
know the roots," said Minnie Phillips, a Rastafarian who runs an Ethiopian
restaurant in Kingston. "Our forefathers were more spiritual. They weren't
interested in money. They did not mix with society."
Peddie denies the faith
is waning. Even so, he wants to revitalize the original teachings by
publishing a series of Rasta texts written in the 1930s, as well as a new
manuscript called "The Rastafarian Bible."
But for now, pop culture
-- the music, the attitude, and the aura surrounding the sect -- remains the
most effective way of spreading the faith, according to Sandra Alcott, a
Rastafarian lawyer.
"It helps open the
door," Alcott said. "We have to take advantage of the magnetism."

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PARISH
APOLOGIZES FOR MARIJUANA CHARGES
UPne 02/13/93 1911
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (UPI) -- Boston Celtics center
Robert Parish on Saturday apologized to his team and his fans for allegedly
having possession of marijuana at his Weston, Mass. home.
Parish, playing with
the Celtics on the road in San Antonio, read a statement in which he apologized
to his team for what he called a "stupid mistake."
"I made a mistake, and
I've embarrassed family and friends of mine," Parish said.
Parish, 39, and a female
companion, Heather Graves, 24, of Atlanta, face arraignment on March 3 in
Waltham District Court, on one count each of possession of marijuana.
If convicted, Parish
could face a maximum of six months in prison, and-or a $500 fine.
Officials say they
doubt the nine-time NBA All-Star will be sentenced to jail, because it is
his first offense.
A 2-ounce package of
marijuana addressed to Parish was found at a Federal Express office in San
Francisco Wednesday by federal Drug Enforcement Administration agents.
The unopened package
was flown to Massachusetts where another drug-sniffing police dog confirmed
the contents before a warrant was obtained to open it. The package was then
delivered to Graves at Parish's home early Thursday afternoon.
Police returned to the
house about 10 minutes later with a search warrant and found the package
inside, along with another 3 ounces of marijuana, a spokesman for the
Middlesex County District Attorney said.

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DRUG
FORFEITURE
By John Enders, Associated Press Writer
APn 02/13/93 1206
Copyright, 1993. The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
MORGAN HILL, Calif. (AP) -- When Carl and Mary
Shelden sold their home and agreed to carry a $160,000 note, they had no
idea they were about to be trapped in a government web that would cost
them almost everything they owned.
In 1979, the Sheldens
made the mistake of selling their $289,000 house in Moraga, Calif., to a man
later convicted under a federal law that permits the government to seize his
property as the product of his ill-gotten gains.
The fact that the
Sheldens had nothing to do with the crimes and were the legal owners,
courtesy of the unpaid mortgage, meant nothing. After a 10-year court battle,
they are virtually bankrupt. They got back the house, but it was so badly
damaged that it made little difference.
"Everything we worked
for was in that house," said Carl Shelden, 52, a disabled shoe salesman.
"And this is the United States. We don't know whether we want to stay in
this country anymore."
The Sheldens are
not unique. Authorities across the nation are coming under fire from citizens
whose homes, cars, cash and other property were seized in America's War on
Drugs.
Prosecutors and law
enforcement officials insist the program, included in the Comprehensive
Crime Control Act of 1984, is helping them fight the drug war. They say the
seizures hurt dealers where it counts -- in the pocketbook.
"This is a very
powerful law enforcement weapon," said Cary Copeland, who heads the Executive
Office for Asset Forfeiture at the Justice Department in Washington, D.C. "We
think it is being operated well."
But alleged abuses
make big headlines. A small-town Southern sheriff seizes a Rolls-Royce from
a drug dealer and uses it as his personal car. Local police in Little Compton,
R.I., net $3.8 million in a drug bust and outfit their cars with $1,700 video
cameras and heat detection devices for a police force of seven. The owner of
a sailboat loses the craft after a crew member is caught with a small amount
of marijuana.
Since 1985, federal
authorities have confiscated almost $3 billion worth of cash and other
property under the 9-year-old federal Asset Forfeiture Program, according to
the U.S. Justice Department. Under federal civil forfeiture statutes, police
may seize money and property presumed to be connected to illegal drug
profits.
But a growing number
of critics, including citizens, defense attorneys and civil rights advocates
in California, Missouri, Florida and other states, say the law violates the
U.S. Constitution and a basic tenet of the criminal justice system.
They say people whose
assets are seized are treated as guilty and must prove themselves innocent to
get their property back.
"Once the American
public finds out what's been going on under their noses without them knowing
about it, they are going to be horrified," said Brenda Grantland, a San
Francisco attorney who spent 10 years defending forfeiture victims in
Washington, D.C.
Grantland serves as
counsel to a group called Forfeiture Endangers American Rights, or FEAR,
with chapters organizing in New Jersey, Virginia, California and
Massachusetts.
"They treated the
criminal better than they treated the innocent lienholder in this case," said
Grantland, who is representing the Sheldens in their damage suit against the
government.
Another case involved
Jorge Lovato Jr., a computer reseller in Morgan Hill, Calif., and Rey Sotelo,
a motorcycle shop owner in nearby Gilroy. Both have previous drug convictions,
once had ties to a suspected drug dealer and probably do not elicit much
sympathy from most people.
They say they, too,
have been victims of a law that is out of control.
In July, agents swept
down on Sotelo's home and both men's businesses, seizing company records and
a Harley-Davidson motorcyle for sale on consignment at Sotelo's bike shop.
They later seized $120,000 in cash from a safe-deposit box rented to
Lovato.
Police said they
suspected the money was illegal drug proceeds and the motorcycle was
stolen.
Neither Lovato nor
Sotelo was charged with a crime.
Lovato said he keeps
large amounts of cash available because he deals in cash purchases. He and
Sotelo both think police targeted them because of their former ties with the
key target in the raids -- a man with whom they were partners in a failed
export business.
Five months and
$10,000 in lawyers' fees later, Lovato got his money back.
"If you have a good
lawyer, you have the power to fight them," he said. Sotelo, too, is bitter.
"I'm not the most desirable person to look at," he said. "I have tattoos,
long hair and drive a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. After this ordeal, I believe
no one is safe in this country."
Lovato says publicity
surrounding the raid has hurt his business. And Sotelo claims the emotional
trauma caused his pregnant wife to miscarry the day after the raid. Both
threatened to sue the government.
According to Department
of Justice statistics, seizures have increased dramatically each year since
the forfeiture program began. In fiscal year 1991, the federal government
gave $289 million to local and state agencies under the program.
Although prosecutors
must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, civil forfeiture can occur when
there is probable cause to believe the property was connected to a crime --
a far less rigorous standard.
Christy A. McCampbell,
in charge of the regional office of the California Bureau of Narcotic
Enforcement, said the law is a great tool for law enforcement and most people
who claim to be innocent are not.
"We don't seize assets
unless we can connect the drug dealing to those amounts of either cash or
properties," she said. "If they can show the money was gained legitimately,
then the money is returned."
In the case of Lovato
and Sotelo, she said, "We had a lot of evidence connecting them all, but the
district attorney felt there was not a solid enough connection."
Attorney Dave Michael,
who specializes in getting forfeited property returned to its owners and who
represented Lovato last year, said the problem is the law.
"It completely shifts
the burden of proof," he said. "Law enforcement just runs willy-nilly."
This and other cases
are part of a wave of opposition to the law that appears to be sweeping the
nation.
Several legislatures
are considering changes to their state forfeiture laws, most of which are
modeled after the federal statute.
In September, a
hearing before the House Government Operations Committee, chaired by Rep.
John Conyers, D-Mich., heard testimony from a number of the law's victims.
Listening to their
stories, Conyers said last month that he was "outraged" and plans further
hearings in late February or early March and to eventually introduce legislation
to change the law.
"The cornerstone of our
system of justice is a presumption of innocence until one is proven guilty.
As far as I know this is the only part of our criminal justice system that
ignores the presumption of innocence," Conyers said. "The time has come to
change the law."

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AUSTRALIAN
FARMERS GIVEN A LEGAL TASTE OF CANNABIS
By Belinda Goldsmith
RTw 02/16/93 0148
Copyright, 1995 Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved. The following news report
may not be republished or redistributed, in whole or in part, without the
prior written consent of Reuters Ltd.
SYDNEY (Reuter) -- Farmers in South Australia are
being told to take a long, hard, legal stare at cannabis, which is being
touted as the most environmentally sound crop of the 1990s.
South Australia on
Thursday became the second of Australia's six states to give the green light
for trial plantings of industrial hemp, which is already grown in some other
countries.
South Australian Health
Minister Michael Armitage said the hemp was a close relative of the marijuana
plant but with low doses of the narcotic ingredient THC and is ideal for making
fibre for rope, clothing and paper.
"In due course these
trials may pave the way for new primary and processing industries in this state,"
Armitage said in a statement on Thursday.
Laws governing marijuana
vary between Australian states and territories from being totally illegal to
allowing a person to possess enough for personal use.
Hemp was widely used
around the world until the 1920s for a variety of purposes, including ship
sails, in medicines and as a fuel in lamps. Hemp lost much of its popularity
as the smoking value of the plant sparked anti-drug campaigns, which eventually
saw the plant outlawed in many countries, including Australia.
Now, Armitage said,
the South Australian government, following the lead of island state of Tasmania,
recognises the need for agricultural diversification where farmers have been
fighting one of the nation's worst droughts.
"It (hemp) competes
very favourably with cotton as a fibre producing up to three times more fibre
than cotton without the attendant requirement of intensive irrigation and pest
control programmes," Armitage said.
Hemp has been widely
hailed as the super crop of the 1990s as no pesticides or chemicals are used
in its growth and the amount of chemicals used in processing is cut by 80
percent.
Managing Director Marco
Bogaers of Australia's largest cannabis clothing company, Slaam Streetwear, said
the plants used to produce cannabis cloth are genetically altered to promote
long woody stems superior for making fibre and less foliage and seeds and,
importantly, less THC.
"The level of THC in the
cloth is extremely low, about 0.01 percent, and you'd have to smoke about five
pairs of jeans to feel any effect," Bogaers told Reuters on Thursday.
"But people have this
fear the plant is a drug and would be exploited if grown commercially," he
said.
Bogaers said cannabis
cloth is becoming increasingly popular in Australia, Britain and the United
States for jeans and tops.
He said the use of oil
from the plant's seeds in cosmetics, shampoo and even as a fuel was becoming
popular.
Slaam, which set up two
years ago with a cannabis leaf motif on its clothing, has an annual turnover
of A$2 million (US$1.5 million) and now exports to Japan and New Zealand.
Bogaers said Slaam imports
its cannabis cloth from Hungary and India with cloth also available from
Afghanistan and China, but is looking at investing in a plantation in
Vietnam.
"We use the fact it's
made of cannabis as a marketing ploy," Bogaers said, "and people come and smell
it and taste it.
"But really it's just
another fabric but stronger and about 15 percent more expensive than cotton."

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BRITISH
FARMERS TO GROW CANNABIS -- LEGALLY
RTw 02/18/93 0943
LONDON (Reuter) -- The British government said on
Thursday that its farmers could grow cannabis, as long as it was the variety
known as hemp, used to make rope and paper products.
The Home Office (interior
ministry) said this would bring Britain into line with other European Community
farmers who have been cultivating hemp, a member of the cannabis sativa family,
for more than 20 years.
Home Office minister
Michael Jack said in a statement that the crop would be subject to strict
licensing controls to minimise the risk of illegal cannibis cultivation.
He said strains which
met EC requirements -- those bred to contain low narcotic levels -- had been
grown in continental Europe for more than 20 years without any problems.
One British company has
already applied for permission to grow hemp. Farmers will even be able to claim
an EC grant of about 250 pounds ($360) an acre (nearly half a hectare).
REUTER SB PAE

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VALENTINE DAY
MASSACRE
By Richard Cohen
WP 02/18/93
NEW YORK -- On Feb. 14, 1929, several of Al Capone's
gang, some of them disguised as cops, wheeled into the Chicago garage used as
the headquarters of the rival Bugs Moran organization, simulated a police raid
and gunned down seven men with sub-machine guns as they faced the wall waiting
to be frisked. "I'm gonna send Moran a Valentine he will never forget," Capone
had said. Never mind Moran, it was America that did not forget. The Saint
Valentine's Day Massacre remains a staple of gangster lore.
But precisely 64 years
later -- on yet another Valentine's Day -- six people in the Bronx, all Hispanics,
were lined up face down on the floor and shot once in the head, execution style.
Three of the dead were adults, three were teenagers. In a way, this most recent
Saint Valentine's Day massacre was even more horrible than its Chicago predecessor.
It appears that the motive was drugs. It appears also that only one of the
victims was involved in the drug business. The others were innocent
bystanders.
"They probably just didn't
want to leave any witnesses," the brother of one victim told the New York
Times.
Maybe my knowledge of
American gangsters has been romanticized by Hollywood, but I doubt even Capone,
a sociopath if there ever was one, would have murdered five innocent bystanders.
Many victims of drug battles are innocent bystanders, including the teenage
girlfriend of one of the murder victims. Yet, this particular massacre was
hardly New York's worst. In 1984, 10 people were slain in Brooklyn's East New
York section. It was another holiday: Palm Sunday.
The repeal of Prohibition
largely put an end to bootlegging and the inter-gang warfare for its profits
-- an estimated $50 million a year to Capone alone. Now, the lucrative contraband
is drugs, and America has made the same mess of it that it once made of illegal
alcohol - by treating it as mostly a criminal problem. If anything, though, the
profits now are even greater, and the weaponry is both more lethal and more easily
available. The consequences of such a policy are all around us: an incredible
toll in lives lost and the corruption of our youth as they have become inured
to violence.
From time to time, someone
or some organization questions the logic of such a policy, and for a moment or
two the nation discussed de-criminalizing what are now illegal drugs. Either
that, or someone wonders if we are not placing too much emphasis on law enforcement
and interdiction and not enough on rehabilitation. Almost always, though, the
debate is brief, and the critics are dismissed as either kooks or cranks. But
whether the proposed prescription is decriminalization (at least, say, of
marijuana) or whether it's changing the funding mix so that education and
rehabilitation get more money, the debate is always short-lived. By framing
drug usage mostly in moral terms and invoking martial metaphors - War on Drugs,
for instance -- we have produced a debacle.
It's certainly not a
success. The availability and usage of drugs fluctuate -- and not, it seems,
in relation to any government policy. Worse, the American system of justice
has been corrupted by a national panic about drugs. Laws have been strengthened
to the point where they do violence to the spirit of the Constitution; Draconian
mandatory sentences are handed down for what, sometimes, are petty offenses;
property is seized before trial, as if the guilt of the suspect was already
determined, and politicians casually propose the death penalty for drug-related
crimes -- as if drug pushers were not already operating in an environment
where capital punishment, unencumbered by lengthy appeals, is commonplace.
But maybe the most
pernicious aspect of our national drug policy can be gleaned from two newspapers.
The Times played the story of the Bronx massacre on the front page. But it was
a local story and on a slow news day at that. The Washington Post, by contrast,
gave it all the prominence of a bus plunge in Bangladesh, six paragraphs on
page A10. The conclusion is inescapable: We have become so accustomed to a
truly horrific level of violence - especially in the inner city - that we pay
scant attention. (Imagine, though, if six white suburbanites had been
massacred.)
In comparison, the Saint
Valentine's Day Massacre outraged the nation. The federal government, spurred
by President Hoover, ultimately got Capone on tax evasion charges, and shortly
thereafter Prohibition was repealed. Since Prohibition, we have tolerated a
substantial alcohol-abuse problem, however most of us see it as a health, not
a moral or criminal, problem.
But the most recent Saint
Valentine's Day massacre has stirred little interest and no real outrage --
certainly no calls from politicians to reconsider our national drug policy or
even to wonder whether it has contributed to the incredible violence of our
inner cities. Instead, to the tune of about $12 billion a year, the federal
government wages a so-called war on drugs in which, as the Bronx massacre
shows, the victims too often are innocent bystanders and the greatest damage
has been done to our capacity for indignation.

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CANADA CALLED
HOTHOUSE FOR GOURMET MARIJUANA
By Jon Ferry
RTw 02/18/93 2207
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuter) -- It is widely
accepted that this Canadian port city has one of the most scenic mountain
backdrops of any in the world, but police say Vancouver has a high of another
sort -- the world's most potent marijuana.
They say the basements
and spare bedrooms of the community of 1.7 million house cannabis plants
genetically engineered to produce a gourmet drug, the Maui Wowee of the 1990s,
sought up and down North America's west coast.
Police say the average
commercial-grade marijuana grown out of doors contains between two and five per
cent of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in marijuana.
But the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police recently seized marijuana in an indoor Vancouver "grow house"
that had a THC content of 29 per cent. "It's a phenomenally high rate. I don't
know of any that has been higher anywhere in North America," says Staff Sergeant
Jack Dop, a 20-year veteran of the war against drugs.
Dop says buyers in San
Francisco have been trading two pounds (0.9 kg) of Canadian cannabis for one
pound (0.45 kg) of cocaine. "This is the first time that I've heard of people
trading cannabis for cocaine in a major way," he says.
Marijuana now is believed
to be British Columbia's biggest single cash crop and Dop says children as
young as 10 are using the powerful new drug, grown with sophisticated hydroponic
gardening methods.
"It's kind of a gateway
drug. There are 10-year-old kids who have access to it. Everybody just throws
C$5 (US$4) in for a gram of hydroponic," Dop says.
Dop says the growers
"breed" their plants meticulously. They discard the leaves and stalks, from which
cannabis used to be made, and retain the buds. They pick only female plants
which they improve through a cloning process.
The business is hard to
police because the artificial lights and beds do not require much space. "We've
even seen marijuana being grown in a covered-over trench in a backyard," he
says.
Sergeant Jens Linde of
the Vancouver city drug squad says police have found warehouses with thousands
of plants. "The Vancouver area is known as the hub of marijuana cultivation
in North America. The drug lab says the indoor pot is triple, quadruple, the
THC strength of even the old, good stuff like Maui Wowee," he says.
One former grower told
a local radio station she made C$50,000 (US$40,000) annually, tax-free, during
the four years she ran her basement plantation of 200 smaller plants.
Describing herself as a
well-educated, 50-year-old professional, the woman said most growers are not
involved in organised crime. "I wouldn't deal with people that, you know, have
guns or cheat or steal or lie or any of that," she said.
But Dop believes the
woman has seriously underestimated both her profits and the evil of the
marijuana trade. "They're criminals, they're not ageing hippies. They're not
just people growing some dope. Weapons are involved to protect your crop, to
try to collect debts that are owing," he says.
He says marijuana profits
are enormous. "You're looking at an average profit on maturity of C$1,000
(US$800) a plant and you can do it (grow a crop) every three or four months,"
he says.
Allowing for 10 per cent
of the plants to be spoiled, a grower with a 100-plant operation can earn more
than C$270,000 (US$215,000) a year, he says.
Criminologist Neil Boyd
agrees marijuana-growing is a big local industry. "There are literally just
thousands of people in the city of Vancouver who make their living from the
distribution and growing of marijuana," he says.
But the Simon Fraser
University professor disagrees the high-strength pot is as harmful as police
are making it out to be. "There is no evidence the damage is multiplied," he
says.
Boyd says enforcement
of anti-drug laws in North America is clouded in hypocrisy. A high percentage
of lawyers, judges and policemen have used marijuana and know it is benign.
"It's much less
dangerous than either alcohol and tobacco," he says.
Boyd says official
U.S. figures estimate 350,000 Americans die prematurely from tobacco and
150,000 from alcohol each year. Fewer than 100 die from marijuana.
He says that in the
Netherlands where marijuana has been decriminalised for years, casual use
has declined. Cannabis possession in Canada is still punishable by up to
seven years in jail and traffickers can receive life in prison.
In 1991, 27,000 Canadians
were charged with simple cannabis possession. "That's three-quarters of all
drug charges. So basically the war on drugs is fundamentally a war on
marijuana possession," he says.
Lincoln Clarkes, a
35-year-old Vancouver photographer, says he has smoked marijuana since he was 13.
"I grow it. I smoke it and I'm not afraid to say so. Marijuana is less harmful
than tobacco and Twinkies (pastry). I think a lot of people should actually
be smoking it. It would straighten them right up," he says.
Clarkes does not grow
his marijuana hydroponically, but has visited a hydroponic operation and agrees
the pot is incredibly strong. "One toke and it's there," he says.
REUTER JF ZM

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CITY OFFICIAL
ARRESTED
UPwe 02/18/93 2006
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -- Federal authorities arrested
the assistant general manager of San Francisco's Social Services Department
and two others Thursday for their alleged part in a conspiracy to import 40,000
pounds of marijuana from Southeast Asia.
A DEA spokesman identified
the city official as Michael Hancock, 52, who was taken into custody in his
City Hall office. The two others were identified as Glenn Boisselle, 42, and
Paul Leake, 43, both of San Frnacisco. The men face up to life in prison and a
$4 million fine.
The three were among 13
people named in a sealed indictment returned by a federal grand jury in San
Francisco last year.

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COURT UPHOLDS
BAN ON MARIJUANA MEDICINAL USE
RTw 02/18/93 1256
(Eds: Updates with news conference on potency)
WASHINGTON (Reuter) -- A federal appeals court Friday
upheld the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA) decision in refusing to make
marijuana legally available for medical purposes.
In a 3-0 decision written
by Judge James Buckley, the court rejected the challenge by three private groups
which had opposed the 1992 decision by the head of the federal drug enforcement
agency to keep marijuana from patients.
The groups -- the Alliance
for Cannabis Therapeutics, the Drug Policy Foundation and the National
Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws -- had argued that marijuana
should be reclassified to allow doctors to legally prescribe it.
The reform organisation
later held a news conference to contradict reports that the marijuana of the
1990s was more potent than that grown previously.
They said marijuana has
eased nausea in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, has lessened muscle
spasms caused by multiple sclerosis and has reduced eye pressure for glaucoma
patients.
The groups cited testimony
from a number of patients and physicians who said that marijuana can be used
safely and effectively.
The first request by the
groups to make marijuana available for medical purposes was filed in 1972, and
the case has produced four previous decisions by the appeals court.
Buckley in the 12-page
opinion rejected the argument that the DEA chief had been unfairly biased,
reflecting the agency's long history of anti-marijuana prejudice.
He said DEA's decision
did not appear unfair on the grounds that there was only anecdotal evidence
rather than rigorous scientific proof supporting the use of marijuana.
The DEA's decision
"recites the testimony of numerous experts that marijuana's medicinal value
has never been proven in sound scientific studies," he said.
David Fratello, a
spokesman for the Drug Policy Foundation, was unable to say if the ruling
would be appealed, but added, "This puts the ball into the Clinton
administration's court."
He noted the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration has announced it would review the issue and said,
"DEA is the wrong agency to make these sorts of decisions."
Later, Richard Cowan,
director of the National Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws told a
news conference that the reports of a more powerful marijuana result from
an alleged government propaganda campaign.
John Morgan, a medical
doctor and professor of pharmacology of the City College of New York, told the
news conference that marijuana potency has remained relatively stable.
Morgan produced a report
from the University of Mississippi that has conducted marijuana potency studies
for the U.S. government since the 1970s to dispute the potency contentions.
The study, Morgan said,
shows that of 20,000 samples of seized marijuana analysed since 1974, the average
potency level as measured by a chemical, delta-9-THC, found in marijuana has
been 2.93 percent.
The highest year for
potency was 1984 at 3.96 percent and the latest full year, 1992, was 1.9
percent, Morgan said, displaying the study.

[End]
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"Why of course the people don't want war... It is the leaders...who determine
the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along...all you
have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for
lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in
any country. -- Hermann Goering
From: (MORRISR@ucs.indiana.edu)
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copyright © CRRH
website credits
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