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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF
MARIJUANA LAWS
1001 CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW
SUITE 1010
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
TEL 202-483-5500 * FAX 202-483-0057
E-MAIL natlnorml@aol.com
Internet http://www.norml.org/
... a weekly service for the media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
May 9, 1996
Federal Judge Speaks Out
Against Drug War
Endorses Program To Stop Arresting Marijuana Consumers
April 25, 1996,
Waterville, ME: A high-ranking federal judge criticized
America's current anti-drug efforts while speaking before
students at Colby College, reported The Associated Press.
Calling our drug war strategies a "losing battle,"
Chief Judge Juan Torruella of the First Circuit U.S. Court of
Appeals proposed that America seriously rethink its methods and
goals, and suggested that the establishment of a national pilot
program to alleviate marijuana-related prosecutions might be a
first step in the right direction.
At minimum, "a shift has to be
made in the funding for drug enforcement toward an intense
educational campaign," he said.
Torruella, who went on the federal
bench in 1975 and joined the appeals court in 1984, called for a
national debate on the drug issue. In addition, he said
that an independent national commission should be empaneled to
analyze alternative approaches to curbing drug use.
Currently, any legitimate debate on the issue is clouded by
political "rhetoric" and anti-drug
"hysteria," he claimed. Torruella likened this
attitude to the zealotry exhibited by anti-communists during the
McCarthy era.
Torruella was also critical of the
ways in which he felt drug prosecutors and law enforcement
officials have run rampant over the bill of rights.
"You can't have one Constitution for the good guys and
another Constitution for the bad guys," he said.
Torruella has served as chief judge
of the First Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals since 1994.
Federal Medical Marijuana Bill Attracts Additional Sponsors
May 1996,
Washington, DC: Three more members of Congress,
including one Republican and the House's only Independent, have
recently signed on to a federal bill (H.R. 2618) that would
permit physicians to prescribe marijuana as a therapeutic agent
for seriously ill patients. With the addition of the recent
signees, U.S. Reps. Bernard Sanders (I-VT), George Brown
(D-Calif.), and Brian Bilbray (R-Calif.), the total number of
co-sponsors now stands at sixteen.
"Slowly but surely, more and
more members of Congress are coming forward to show their support
for medical marijuana legislation," stated NORML
Deputy Director Allen St. Pierre. "This is a bill that
deserves full bi-partisan support and prompt federal
action."
The inclusion of Bilbray brings the
total number of Republican co-sponsors to three. Republican
support of this legislation is critical if the bill is to move
forward in a Republican controlled Congress.
Currently, H.R. 2618 is
simultaneously pending before two subcommittees: the House
Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Crime and the House Commerce
Committee, Subcommittee on Health and Environment. This
past March, NORML Executive Director Keith Stroup, Esq.
testified before the Subcommittee on Crime and encouraged
Chairman Bill McCullom (R-Fla.) -- a former two-time co-sponsor
of federal medical marijuana legislation himself -- to hold
additional hearings regarding medical marijuana.
H.R. 2618 was introduced in
Congress last fall by Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) to amend
federal law to allow seriously ill patients to have legal access
to marijuana for medicinal purposes. If passed, the bill
would allow doctors to prescribe marijuana to individuals
suffering from "glaucoma, AIDS wasting syndrome, muscle
spasms from certain spastic disorders including multiple
sclerosis, paraplegia, and quadriplegia, or the nausea associated
with cancer chemotherapy or radiology." Presently,
only eight patients are allowed to receive marijuana legally from
the federal government.
The effectiveness of medicinal
marijuana has been endorsed by a number of scientific and medical
associations including the American
Public Health Association, the Australian Commonwealth
Department of Human Services and Health, the National Academy of
Sciences, and the National
Nurses Society on Addiction.
For more information about H.R.
2618 or medical marijuana, please contact either Allen St. Pierre
or Paul Armentano of NORML @ (202) 483-5500.
Navajo Hemp Crop Under Fire From Feds
May 1, 1996,
Navajo Nation, AZ: Plans for a widescale planting of
industrial hemp on American Indian soil have met opposition from
federal officials who argue that any planting or harvesting of
hemp would violate federal law. Presently, Navajo Nation
President Albert Hale is awaiting a legal opinion from the
tribe's Justice Department before going forward with the
project. This past March, a ceremonial planting of
industrial hemp seeds by the Coalition for Hemp Awareness (CHA)
took place on Native American soil following the unanimous
passage of a resolution by the Nation to allow for hemp
cultivation to occur on sovereign soil.
Often described as
"marijuana's misunderstood cousin," industrial hemp is
from the same plant species (Cannabis sativa) that
produces marijuana. Unlike marijuana, however, industrial
hemp contains only minute traces of THC, the psychoactive
ingredient that gives marijuana its medicinal and euphoric
properties. Regardless, DEA spokeswoman Dana Seeley still
maintains that federal laws forbidding the cultivation of
marijuana also apply to hemp. "We are hopeful that
they will not [go forward with their plans]," she
said. Seeley noted that the DEA will continue to monitor
the situation closely and may take action if any large-scale test
plots of hemp are planted.
After decades of unemployment,
leaders of the Navajo Nation feel that hemp cultivation will
invigorate the local economy. The Navajo Nation Hemp
Project "is formulated to provide [a] bio-regional local
industry that will create jobs and enhance the agricultural
base," stated CHA spokeswoman Christie Bohling.
"With the many attributes and by-products of this natural
renewable resource, the Navajo Nation will become self-sufficient
in [its] ability to provide many of its own necessities."
Currently, industrial hemp is grown
legally throughout much of Europe and Asia and can be used to
produce a variety of products such as cosmetics, textiles, paper,
paints, plastics, and animal feed.
For more information regarding
the Navajo nation Hemp Project, please contact CHA @ P.O. Box
9068, Chandler Heights, AZ 85227. For further information
or for a copy of the Navajo nation resolution, please contact
either Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of NORML
@ (202) 483-5500.
Drug Czar Admits Most People Who Experiment
With Drugs
"Walk Away" Without Problems
May 1, 1996,
Washington, D.C.: During a recent speech at the
National Press Club, new Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey made several
remarks that cast doubt on the validity of the "gateway
theory."
McCaffrey stated that out of the 90
million Americans who have experimented with illegal drugs, only
3 million are current addicts. In addition, he stated that
the "overwhelming majority" of Americans who use
illegal drugs simply "walk away and sa[y] it's not for
me."
"In my mind, the Drug Czar is
simply acknowledging what we at NORML have already
known," said Allen St. Pierre. "Federal
statistics tell us time and time again that the bulk the
Americans who experiment with illicit drugs experiment solely
with marijuana and do not progress to harder drugs or run into
drug-related problems later in life."
-END-
MORE THAN 10 MILLION MARIJUANA ARRESTS SINCE 1965 ... ANOTHER EVERY 65 SECONDS!