| For Immediate Release
Thursday, June 9, 2005
CONTACT: Adam Eidinger 202-986-6186
Lakota, Once Encouraged by
U.S. Government Treaty to Grow Hemp, Fight to Do So
Again
Hemp Industry Supports Tribe in 8th Circuit
Appeal
PINE RIDGE, SD —
This week, Vote Hemp and the Hemp Industries Association
(HIA) filed an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Eighth Circuit, supporting members of the Lakota
Nation in their attempt to grow industrial hemp on their
land. The brief illustrates how the U.S. government,
following the advice of a ‘hemp entrepreneur’
named David Myerle, used ‘agricultural pursuits,’
specifically industrial hemp, to entice the Lakota to
settle on the reservation in the mid-1800s.
Despite the fact that the Lakota were
growing hemp when they entered into treaties with the
U.S. government in 1851 and 1868, the federal government
filed a civil suit against Alexander White Plume, Percy
White Plume and others in the U.S. District Court in
South Dakota, seeking a permanent injunction to prevent
them from growing industrial hemp without permission
from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). (The
DEA tightly restricts non-psychoactive industrial hemp
farming in the U.S. as if it were the same as drug/medical
marijuana.) Late last December, the court granted the
government’s motion for summary judgment. Two
Kentucky hemp companies, Madison Hemp & Flax, 1806,
Inc. and Tierra Madre, LLC, also filed an appeal in
the case because they had contracts to purchase the
White Plume hemp crops.
“The District Court completely ignored
relevant Indian law, the treaties, the Constitution
and the significance of the Myerle Papers when they
granted the government’s motion for summary judgment,”
says David Frankel, attorney and Vote Hemp board member
who is working on the Lakota case. “Because federal
Indian law allows tribes to continue doing something
today that they were doing at the time they signed treaties
with the U.S. government, the Lakota have an excellent
chance at reversal,” adds Patrick Goggin, who
was the hemp industry’s local counsel in the landmark
case Hemp Industries Association v. Drug Enforcement
Administration.
Since the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council
passed an ordinance in 1998, allowing people to grow
low-THC industrial hemp on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation,
both Alexander and Percy White Plume have attempted
to grow industrial hemp there. After each attempt, the
DEA destroyed the industrial hemp crop after obtaining
a court order.
To read more about the White Plume case
and download the Vote Hemp and HIA amicus brief, please
click here.
For more information on industrial hemp,
please visit www.VoteHemp.com, the Web site of Vote
Hemp, a non-profit organization dedicated to the acceptance
of industrial hemp.
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