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Restore-Digest Thursday, July
4 2002 Volume 2002 : Number 124
Today's Restore Hemp News Happy
4th! 15 year flashback to Abbie Hoffman's LTE
UK: MS Cannabis Trial At Ipswich Hospital CA: Pot Trial Lawyer Asks Judge To Throw Out Two Charges Canada: Grow Op Industry Leaving Police Behind pulling no punches this week at drugwar.com Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 10:02:36 -0700 Subject:Happy 4th! 15 year flashback to Abbie Hoffman's LTE Up TOC The Nation, November 21, 1987 Reefer Madness By Abbie Hoffman If there was anything unusual in Judge Douglas Ginsburg's rapid descent, it was probably the sight of White House conservatives scrambling to create a loophole in the national drug hysteria that would mitigate occasional marijuana use by a Supreme Court nominee. Never mind that President Reagan said last year that drug users are "as dangerous to our national security as any terrorist'; he tried dismissing Ginsburg's indiscretion as nothing more than "youthful fancy." There was nothing surprising about Reagan's expedient reversal. For six years, the only consistent thing about our national drug policy has been its inconsistency. Harsher penalties, urine testing, hysteria, budget cuts and the simplistic "Just Say No!' campaign (the equivalent of telling manic depressives to "just cheer up') have returned drug education and treatment to the Reefer Madness era. Since 1980 the President and Nancy Reagan, Attorney General Edwin Meese 3d and White House drug policy advisers such as Dr. Carlton Turner, have made numerous rash and absurd statements about drugs. Dr. Turner claimed that smoking marijuana leads to AIDS (the sequence: Pot leads to harder drugs, which lead to sharing needles, which leads to AIDS). Peter Bensinger, former head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, claimed that marijuana was harmful because it "contained dioxin.' The dioxin, of course, came from government spraying. Such statements are reminiscent of the 1920s, when the public was told that cocaine made blacks impervious to bullets. Truth has been the first casualty in this so-called war on drugs. When Reagan labeled drug abuse "an evil scourge' that has become the nation's number-one social problem, during the 1986 campaign, the nation had been whipped up into such a frenzy that polls showed the citizenry believed him. On October 27, 1986, Reagan got what he championed: the fifty-fifth Federal antidrug bill in eighty years. Congress authorized $3.96 billion to attack what Newsweek, with typical hyperbole, compared to "the plagues of medieval times.' (That plague wiped out two-thirds of the people in Europe. According to government statistics, in 1979 3,500 deaths were attributed to illicit drugs. No deaths, incidentally, were caused by marijuana.) Then, after the elections, Reagan cut $1 billion from his own war on drugs program and, in the harshest blow, recommended that no money be spent on drug rehabilitation and treatment in fiscal 1988. Like the Red Menace of the early 1950s, the current drug hysteria has led to a loyalty oath - this time, the urine test. Extrapolating from margin-of-error figures supplied by manufacturers of standard drug tests (5 percent) and instances of laboratory mishandling documented by the Centers for Disease Control (15 to 20 percent), one can easily agree with a Northwestern University report claiming a national error rate of up to 25 percent. That means roughly one of every four persons tested for controlled substances could wrongly be fired, not hired or denied promotion. But Reagan's not one to quibble about margins of error or unreasonable biochemical searches. Last year, when he announced the notorious drug-free workplace edict, he targeted Federal workers as an example for all labor. New applicants and tenured employees were forced to submit to urine tests. Of course, he wants to test all workers in America, which is rapidly occurring: In the private sector an estimated 35 million people were screened this year and the White House hopes to see 90 million being tested by 1990. It is time to rethink a complex problem like drug abuse and disregard the simplistic nonsense of the Reagan antidrug campaign, which has ignored scientific evidence and overridden fundamental values of privacy and due process. ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 10:05:53 -0700 Subject:UK: MS Cannabis Trial At Ipswich Hospital Up TOC Newshawk: Weedom For Peace Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 Source: Evening Star, The (UK) Copyright: 2002sEastern Counties Newspapers Group Ltd Contact: nigel.pickover@ecng.co.uk Website: http://www.eveningstar.co.uk/Content/news/news_home.asp Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1695 Author: Jessica Nicholls, Health Reporter MS CANNABIS TRIAL AT IPSWICH HOSPITAL A CONSULTANT at Ipswich Hospital is involved in groundbreaking new trials to see if cannabis really does relieve the symptoms of multiple sclerosis. Trials are being conducted nationally by the Medical Research Council into the use of cannabis as a prescribed drug. Sufferers of the disease have been campaigning for several years for the trials and some have even been taken to court for using the drug which they claim relieves the debilitating symptoms they suffer. But MS sufferer, Stephen Williams, of St Peters Road, Stowmarket, treated the news with some caution. He was diagnosed 16 years ago and said during that time his hopes had been raised too often only to be dashed when the treatment proved too expensive. The 52-year-old said: "The frustrating thing is being told that there is a major breakthrough but it has to go through five years of trials. "So you sit and wait patiently and then you find you can't have it after all because it is too expensive." Mr Williams has been closely following tests of cannabis and spoke out in the Evening Star in September for the cannabis law to be reformed so he could use it to relieve the pain wracking his body. He said: "I have been checking the website of a pharmaceutical company (which is running trials) and they said that in most incidences they have had good results. "Although there are still a lot of people that it does not help, it is helping more than they thought". "When I was first diagnosed in 1986 the doctors told me not to worry and that there would be a cure by the end of the century" that has been and gone. "I am wary of it but now it is in Ipswich I will ask my GP if I can get involved." Bob Wake from Stradbroke, near Eye, was diagnosed with MS 14 years ago. At that time he said he never believed medical research would advance this far. He said: "I never thought I would see this". "We always hoped that it would and various things have come up during that time". "When I was diagnosed I did not think there would be anything for me and cannabis may not be the one but at least we can try." Mr Wake, 67, is involved in the East Anglian Branch of the Multiple Sclerosis Society and often gives talks to both sufferers and non-sufferers. He said: "From what I know, cannabis does not seem to be doing much harm". "If you have MS you are willing to have a go at absolutely anything you don't know when you wake up each morning which part of you is never going to work again". "When I have been to meetings and talked to people they have said that as long as there would not be any terrible side effects they would try anything" even if there was only a one in a thousand chance it would work. "No two patients are the same and MS affects random sections of the brain. "One person could be helped in a different way to another." Dr Stephen Wroe is a consultant neurologist at Ipswich Hospital and he has been involved in the trials. He was unavailable to comment today but it is believed that around 23 patients are actually taking part. If the trials are successful the treatment could be in place as early as 2004. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 10:18:12 -0700 Subject:CA: Pot Trial Lawyer Asks Judge To Throw Out Two Charges Up TOC Newshawk: Jay Bergstrom Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Webpage: http://www.sacbee.com/content/news/story/3450669p-4478729c.html Copyright: 2002 The Sacramento Bee Contact: opinion@sacbee.com Website: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Author: Denny Walsh, Bee Staff Writer POT TRIAL LAWYER ASKS JUDGE TO THROW OUT TWO CHARGES The government wrapped up its case Wednesday in the marijuana-growing trial of Bryan James Epis, and his lawyer asked the judge to throw out half the charges due to "an utter lack of evidence." The 35-year-old Epis, who helped establish and supply a cannabis buyers' club in Chico, does not deny cultivating marijuana. But he insists he did not profit from the venture and sought only to help sick people with doctors' recommendations, in compliance with California's Compassionate Use Act. What he and his lawyer, J. Tony Serra, hotly dispute is that Epis agreed with others to hike his own production to more than 1,000 plants, a charge that carries a minimum of 10 years in prison upon conviction in federal court. The two counts in the indictment that embody that charge are what Serra asked U.S. District Judge Frank C. Damrell Jr. to dismiss at the close of the government's case. Damrell reserved ruling in the matter. The other two counts charge Epis with growing at least 100 plants. Conviction on that charge carries a minimum five-year term. Assistant U.S. attorney Samuel Wong argued that the evidence supports a 1,000-plant conspiracy. He reminded the judge that fingerprints of two other people were lifted from cultivation and processing equipment in Epis' Chico residence when it was searched June 25, 1997. A Jiffy Lube receipt written to one of those individuals also was found in the residence, Wong said. The prosecutor also argued that evidence shows Epis was assisted by another person. It further shows that Epis was sharing each harvest with at least two people, Wong said. Finally, Wong noted that a car belonging to David Kasakove, the operator of the buyers' club and one of the people whose prints were found at the house, was seen at Epis' residence three months before the search. Serra countered that, if there was enough evidence to place Kasakove in a 1,000-plant conspiracy, he would have been charged along with Epis. "There is no evidence of an express agreement," he said, adding that the material upon which Wong is relying is "fatally ambiguous." The prosecution is based on the fruits of the search and the testimony of two officers who were there -- U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Ronald Mancini and Michael Shane Redmond, then a Butte County sheriff's sergeant and now a state agent assigned to gambling investigations. The search team found a hydroponic grow operation in the basement, a processing room on the second floor, and 458 plants in various stages of development. Evidence that Epis was helping patients and that the growing operation post-dated passage of the state's medical marijuana initiative is not admissible under federal law. It is the first federal criminal case involving a cannabis buyers' club to reach a jury. The key document underlying Wong's theory that Epis was looking forward to big money as a major distributor is a computer-generated table of projected sales and expenses from March 21, 1997, to Jan. 1, 1998, that was found in the house. It estimates sales of smokable pot extracted from the plants' buds and baked goods made from the plants' leaves would yield a net weekly profit of $1,896,960 by the end of 1997. Thousands of plants would be required to generate profits of that magnitude, Redmond testified. He cited extra equipment and supplies found in the house that, but for the raid, could have been used to expand the grow. Serra told the jury in his opening statement that the computer document's data are not confined to Chico Medical Marijuana Caregivers, with which Epis was affiliated. Rather, he said, they reflect membership in medical marijuana organizations throughout California. The defense lawyer began presenting his case Wednesday afternoon. The trial will resume Monday. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 10:21:16 -0700 Subject:Canada: Grow Op Industry Leaving Police Behind Up TOC Newshawk: Canadian Media Awareness Project (http://www.mapinc.org/cmap/) Pubdate: Tue, 02 Jul 2002 Source: Elk Valley Miner, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 The Elk Valley Miner Contact: evminer@titanlink.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1237 Note: No known website. Contact data not verified Author: Paul Willcocks GROW OP INDUSTRY LEAVING POLICE BEHIND VICTORIA - Marijuana grow ops are popping up faster than police can hope to deal with them, according to a new report done for the RCMP by a university crime expert. The study which looked at almost 12,000 grow op reports from every area of the province over four years, found police can't cope with the burgeoning industry. The business is probably the province's fastest growing with the number of operations that police discover growing by an average 36 per cent a year, the report found. Operations are growing larger and more sophisticated, with the average size increasing at 40 per cent a year. Solicitor General Rich Coleman has called for tougher laws against grow ops. Coleman said less than one in five people, convicted of running grow ops in B.C. serves any jail time. But in Washington State almost half those convicted get a jail term of five years or more, he said. "They're sending a totally different message relative to their acceptance of this particular activity in their economy," said Coleman. Chuck Beyer of the B.C. Marijuana Party said the U.S. is the last place to look for an example. The U.S. has seven times as many citizens in jail as Canada on a per capita basis, he said, in part because of tough drug sentences. Canada would have to build seven times as many prisons and jail thousands of citizens to match the U.S. approach, he said. "And it's not working," Beyer said. "They haven't cut down drug use." The real answer is to legalize marijuana, he said. The study found the average seizure-166 live plants and 3.7 kg of marijuana-is worth somewhere between $100,000 and $130,000. Firearms were found in about six per cent of cases. During the four-year period, police seized 1.2 million plants and 8.6 tonnes of dried marijuana, worth between $500 million and $1 billion depending on prices. Darryl Plecas of the University College of the Fraser Valley was part of the study team. He said the flood of grow ops has overwhelmed police. Most cases that came to police attention resulted from public complaints or an accidental discovery while police were investigating an unrelated matter. "The high volume of marijuana cultivation activity in the province has actually hindered police capacity to respond, let alone engage in proactive enforcement activities," the report found. In 2000, police were too overloaded to take action on one-quarter of the reports of grow operations. Police only laid charges in about half of the 8,000 cases they found justified. In most of the rest they simply seized the plants and let the growers go. Out of some 12,000 reported cases, only 2,255 resulted in charges being laid. Only half those people were convicted. And among those convicted, only one in five went to jail with the average sentence of 4.5 months. The report found that most suspects in the cases reviewed had some prior criminal record, with an average of seven convictions. The report also highlighted a growing role for people of Vietnamese origin in the industry in the Lower Mainland. A report last year by the Organized Crime Agency of B.C. warned that increasing pressure on grow ops on the Lower Mainland was resulting in them moving out into smaller communities. Criminals were also shifting from grow ops to producing drugs like Ecstasy, the report found. The agency estimates there are 15,000 to 20,000 grow operations in the province and said organized crime groups have taken control of many of them. It estimated the industry's value of $6 billion, or 4.5 per cent of all economic activity in the province. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 10:25:30 -0700 Subject:pulling no punches this week at drugwar.com Up TOC Greetings fro New York City on the 4th of July. The editor of drugwar.com plans to sit and watch the fireworks from his rooftop in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, one of the best views of the fireworks displays, as well as once offering an unimpeded view of the World Trade Center Towers. For the editor, this day is a reflection of just which Americans the phrases "the land of the free" and "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" pertain to. Have taken a meager 18 week course in Civics in junior high school in Sarasota, Florida years ago, taught by one of the Ringling brothers' circus family performers, the Carl Walenda of the Flying Walendas, to be quite frank, the depth of real learning in this class about the US political system and how it really works was minimal, even had I been able to keep from dozing off less often and pay more attention to the incredibly boring and superficial presentation. so on to the news. Craig Morris has written a special commentary for Drugwar.com, entitled "Medicinal cannabis (in the UK) - Is drug-policy rational or a series of 'accidents of history'?" <http://www.drugwar.com/morris1.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/morris1.shtm "It is my opinion - and has been for some time now - that to continue denying such individuals access to cannabis on a legal basis is a question of human rights and that the issue ought to be pursued on such a basis legally," writes Morris, a Research Associate at the University of Greenwich in London. He is currently completing his doctoral thesis on the subject of medicinal cannabis use by chronically ill and disabled people. There is coverage of the One Blood project, a conceptual art piece geared towards reminding people that we human being are not really truly separated, that we really are of one blood, that if cut we bleep the same color red. <http://www.drugwar.com/poneblood.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/poneblood.shtm "One Blood is visual symbol of the unity of all human beings" say Claire Lemmel, the artist, and David Jones, her husband." Who Takes Responsibility for the Carnage an interview with Clifford Wallace Thornton, Jr. <http://www.drugwar.com/thorntoninterview.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/thorntoninterview.shtm Clifford Wallace Thornton, co-founder of Efficacy-online.org, (<http://www.efficacy-online.org>http://www.efficacy-online.org) is a man who someone of a prohibitionist mindset might expect to be rabidly pro-War on Some Drugs, considering the horrifying circumstances involving his mother and drugs he experienced mere weeks before graduating high school. After spending a good number of years holding the opinion that illegal drugs should be "eradicated from the face of the earth," he began to change his perspective. Because after diligently researching the War and its actual effects, and not only speaking with but listening intently to others who explained the all encompassing destruction resulting directly from the War on Some Drugs itself, Thornton has become an outspoken advocate, a full time activist, dedicated first to bringing the War into full public discourse and discussion, and ultimately an end to the War on Some Drugs itself. We'd like to remind you all once again to Cletus Nelson's brilliant report for drugwar.com, "Headshrinking the American Addict- Recovery in the 21st Century" with focuses on research by the National Institute for Drug Abuse into vaccinations designed to forever "cure" human beings from getting "high" on any assortment of substances both legal and non, <http://www.drugwar.com/cheadshrinking.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/cheadshrinking.shtm because in light of a new report, Cletus's article is especially disturbing. Considering the following: <http://www.drugwar.com/pprofile8herbs.shtm>Risk-Benefit Profile of Commonly Used Herbs - Legal & Otherwise (July 1, 2002) (<http://www.drugwar.com/pprofile8herbs.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/pprofile8herbs.shtm) While comparing 7 legal herbs, and one illegal herb, all generally accepted to be medically beneficial, Dr. Rick Bayer reports on recent findings that, "If the action of the cannabinoid is blocked with an antagonist drug, the newborn pups do not suckle and thus die. Therefore, not only is the internal cannabinoid system important for pain control but it also regulates important appetite areas in the brain that are essential for life in newborn mammals." This brings to mind , [as noted above] Cletus Nelson's recent article for drugwar.com, "<http://www.drugwar.com/cheadshrinking.shtm>Headshrinking the American Addict- Recovery in the 21st Century", which dealt with recent advances in vaccinations and antagonists designed to permanently block the ability of humans to get high. Scary stuff. We also have link in our newsbar to : A Terrorist Manifesto? <http://www.drugwar.com/pterroristmanifesto.shtm> http://www.drugwar.com/pterroristmanifesto.shtm Absolute Wealth Corrupts Absolutely <http://www.drugwar.com/pwealthcorrupt.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/pwealthcorrupt.shtm Student Drug Testing Implementation <http://www.drugwar.com/ppisstestpromo.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/ppisstestpromo.shtm Marines, Sailors Nabbed In Drug Bust <http://www.drugwar.com/ptroopdrugnabbed.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/ptroopdrugnabbed.shtm (Yes, these service men and woman are expected to die for the corporation's...uh, I mean, the Democrublcian Party send them to die in, but they cannot do drugs of their own choice of they risk prison for life. What in the hell is this reasoning, other than perhaps a fear that if too many troops who are supposed to kill other human beings might actually begin to question their programming if they use drugs. The Technology Secrets of Cocaine Inc. <http://www.business2.com/articles/mag/0,1640,41206,00.html> http://www.business2.com/articles/mag/0,1640,41206,00.html To be honest, while having linked to this article at drugwar.com, and not really doubting the major international drug trafficking cartels have plenty of money to buy technology and inside influence in all areas of society, most certainly not limited to those political, intelligence, military, and law enforcement branches in non-American countries A glaring point in case- drugs cannot not be kept from pouring in floods across US borders. What's to make anyone think corruption is somehow magically stopped at those same porous borders? So isn't it quite possible that many of these cartels, who in the past have been documented to actually be working with US intelligence services, ahve acquired mcuh of this high tech euqipment from US sources both public and covert? This is admittedly only specualtion, but the question has been raised in the mind of the editor of the Drugwar.com Risk-Benefit Profile of Commonly Used Herbs - Legal & Otherwise <http://www.drugwar.com/pprofile8herbs.shtm>http://www.drugwar.com/pprofile8herbs.shtm <http://www.drugwar.com/pprofile8herbs.shtm>Risk-Benefit Profile of Commonly Used Herbs - Legal & Otherwise (July 1, 2002) While comparing 7 legal herbs, and one illegal herb, all generally accepted to be medically beneficial, Dr. Rick Bayer reports on recent findings that, "If the action of the cannabinoid is blocked with an antagonist drug, the newborn pups do not suckle and thus die. Therefore, not only is the internal cannabinoid system important for pain control but it also regulates important appetite areas in the brain that are essential for life in newborn mammals." This brings to mind Cletus Nelson's recent article for drugwar.com, "<http://www.drugwar.com/cheadshrinking.shtm>Headshrinking the American Addict- Recovery in the 21st Century", which dealt with recent advances in vaccinations and antagonists designed to permanently block the ability of humans to get high. Scary stuff. There's also links to nuclear dangers, more misadventures of Matt McDaniel in his mission to help the Akha people not only preserve their heritage, but flat out survive, semi-covert US funding of paramilitaries who aren't called paramilitaries in Bolivia right now, the socialist origins of the Pledge of Allegiance, and one heck of a lot more. Last but not least, there's tons of room any and all to post their views, their calendars, their links, whatever they want pertaining to the War on Some Drugs in our spacious forum, so please feel free to stop by. Peace, will eventually arrive, Preston Peet Editor in Chief <http://www.drugwar.com>http://www.drugwar.com <mailto:ptpeet@nyc.rr.com>ptpeet@nyc.rr.com ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ End of Restore-Digest V2002 #124 ******************************** Today's Restore Hemp News Visit our sister site crrh.org
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