| For Immediate Release
February 8, 2002
Contact Adam Eidinger / Mintwood
Media at (202) 986-6186
Hemp Food Stays in Stores
DEA Backs Down in Face of Imminent Court Action
ARLINGTON, VA —
The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) handed
a victory to the multimillion-dollar hemp food industry
last night when they told the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit that they will extend
the "grace period" for hemp food products
that contain "any THC." The extension reassures
retailers stocking and selling hemp food products that,
for the next 40 days, the DEA will not commence enforcement
action. Ultimately, the hemp food industry expects to
prevail against the DEA's attempt to ban hemp foods
because Congress exempted nutritious hemp seed and oil
from regulation (see 21
U.S.C. §802(16)), and the trace infinitesimal
THC in hemp seed and oil is not psychoactive and does
not interfere with workplace drug-testing (see http://www.TestPledge.com).
Lawyers representing the Hemp
Industries Association (HIA) and several major hemp
food companies went to court Wednesday when it was apparent
the DEA intended to enforce its October 9th "Interpretive
Rule" banning foods with "any THC."
The DEA told Whole Foods, the largest natural foods
supermarket chain in the U.S., to remove hemp food products
from store shelves even though there is no detectable
THC in the hemp seed and oil under the official Health
Canada protocol.
In a letter
sent yesterday to the Court of Appeals, Daniel Dormont,
Senior Attorney for the DEA, wrote, "It is my understanding
that the Court of Appeals wishes to know whether the
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) was planning to
commence enforcement action while the petitioners' motion
for a stay is pending, given that the grace period published
in the interim rule ended yesterday (February 6). In
view of the Court's inquiry, the DEA will extend the
grace period for an additional 40 days, through March
18, 2002. As we discussed, this should allow the Court
to rule on the motion prior to the expiration of the
grace period."
"We're pleased that the DEA backed
off from enforcement while the Court takes a hard look
at a rule we know is arbitrary and misguided,"
says Eric Steenstra, President of Vote Hemp.
Hemp manufacturers are pleased that hemp
foods will stay on store shelves and expect to ultimately
prevail in court. Environmental activist Woody Harrelson,
who has invested over $200,000 in developing a non-dairy
"hemp milk" through his company Tierra Madre,
said "The DEA is a rogue agency distorting the
law to destroy the livelihoods of hardworking Americans
who have built a natural and sustainable industry."
(Non-dairy milk is one of the largest and fastest-growing
segments of the natural food marketplace.)
Hemp seed has a well-balanced protein
content and the highest content of essential fatty acids
(EFA's) of any oil in nature: EFA's 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 non-psychoactive
industrial hemp plants grown in Canada and Europe, for
example, 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. 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.
On October 9, 2001, without any public
notice or comment, the DEA issued an "Interpretive
Rule" purporting to make hemp foods containing
non-psychoactive miniscule trace amounts of THC, the
active ingredient found in marijuana, immediately illegal
under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) of 1970. In
fact, the U.S. Congress exempted non-viable hemp seed
and oil from control under the CSA, 21 U.S.C. §802
(16), regardless of the presence of any trace miniscule
THC (just as poppy seeds are exempted from the CSA despite
containing trace opiates).
Internal Department of Justice (DOJ) documents
obtained 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).
The 10-year-old global hemp market is
a thriving commercial success. Unfortunately, because
the DEA's 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.
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