| For Immediate Release
January 22, 2002
Contact Adam Eidinger / Mintwood
Media at (202) 986-6186
DEA Does Homework on Hemp Foods
After New Rule Announced
Although February 6th Enforcement Looms,
Hemp Industry Pledges to Continue to Sell Hemp Foods
WASHINGTON, DC The Hemp
Industries Association (HIA), representing over
250 companies and small businesses, learned last week
that the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has hired
a Northern Virginia consulting firm to investigate the
size and scope of the hemp foods market which has been
doubling every year for the past five years and is presently
estimated to be over $5 million annually. ICF
Consulting contacted the HIA on behalf of the DEA
for the first time, more than three months after the
DEA announced a new rule that purports to ban hemp food
products containing any infinitesimal trace THC beginning
February 6th.
"It is very disappointing that the
DEA waited this long to research the rapidly expanding
hemp foods industry that is creating jobs and promoting
highly nutritious foods for healthier lifestyles,"
said David Bronner, Chairman of the Hemp Industries
Associations Food and Oil Committee. Industry
attempts to initiate a dialogue with the DEA were ignored
over the course of last year before the DEA issued its
"Interpretive
Rule" October 9. "This is the latest evidence
that the DEAs interpretation of the Controlled
Substances Act (CSA) is purely a political decision
not based on any real insight or awareness of the well-established
hemp foods industry, and purposely ignores the relevant
science and law which exempts non-viable hemp seed and
oil from the DEAs control, just as poppy seeds
are," says Bronner. According to the official Health
Canada detection protocol, most hemp seed and oil in
the U.S. market have undetectable THC, and hemp food
vendors and retailers intend to continue selling hemp
foods after February 6th.
Hemp seed has a well-balanced protein
content, a substantial amount of vitamin E, and the
highest content of essential fatty acids (EFAs) of any
oil in nature: EFAs are the good fats that, like vitamins,
the body does not produce and which doctors traditionally
have recommended eating fish and flax to obtain. Thus,
hemp seed and oil are increasingly incorporated as ingredients
in a myriad of natural foods to boost their nutritional
profile. U.S. companies are currently manufacturing
cereals, waffles, pretzels, chips, salad dressings,
bread and granola bars, among other products, that contain
hemp seed or oil.
Hemp seeds are harvested from industrial
hemp plants grown primarily in Canada and Europe under
strict regulatory regimes and have no potential psychoactive
"drug" effect and do not interfere with drug
testing even when unrealistic amounts are eaten on a
daily basis (see http://www.TestPledge.com).
Poppy seeds, commonly consumed on bagels, contain harmless
trace opiates (that have historically interfered with
workplace drug tests), and the DEA has sensibly not
attempted to override the Congressional exemption of
poppy seeds from the statutory definition of "opium
poppy" in the CSA even though natural opiates in
themselves are controlled elsewhere in the CSA.
Internal Department of Justice (DOJ) documents
obtained by Vote Hemp through the Freedom of Information
Act show that the DEA was instructed by the DOJ (of
which the DEA is part) in March of 2000 not to restrict
the import of hemp seed and oil: "Hemp products
intended for human consumption have THC at levels too
low to trigger a psychoactive effect and are not purchased,
sold or marketed with the intent of having a psychoactive
effect." The original
memo from John Roth, Chief of the Narcotic and Dangerous
Drug Section of the DOJ, to Donnie Marshall, Acting
Administrator of the DEA, is available upon request
(an identical letter was also sent to U.S. Customs by
Mr. Roth).
Patrick Goggin, a San Francisco-based
attorney who is local counsel for the industrys
legal team seeking relief on behalf of affected companies
in the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, says: "The
Roth memo shows the DEA knows hemp seed and oil is harmless,
but they are acting to the contrary. Weve filed
a motion to stay the new rule while our lawsuit is considered,
but the court has not yet issued a decision."
The 10-year-old global hemp market is
a thriving commercial success. Unfortunately, because
the DEAs Drug-War paranoia has confounded the
biologically-distinct non-psychoactive industrial hemp
varieties of cannabis with the psychoactive marijuana
varieties, the U.S. is the only major industrialized
nation to prohibit the growing of industrial hemp.
Visit www.VoteHemp.com to read court
documents and numerous scientific
studies concerning hemp foods. For more information,
or to arrange interviews with representatives of the
hemp industry, please call Adam Eidinger at 202-986-6186
or 202-744-2671 (cell).
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