|
|
User's Guide to Marijuana News
Top Stories
Sponsored Links
Head Shop
Drug Test (Highest Quality Drug Test Kits and Cleansers)
How To Pass A Drug Test
Pass A Drug Test
Drug Testing Information
Home Remedies To Pass A Drug Test
Ways To Pass A Drug Test
Passing A Drug Test
|
|
DEA FINALLY CONFIRMS
THE EXISTENCE OF SUFFICIENT GROUNDS TO REMOVE MARIJUANA FROM HARD DRUGS SCHEDULE OF
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
Ed. Note: This is a very
important milestone and Jon Gettman, High Times and
Michael Kennedy are to be congratulated. However, we should keep in mind that the DEA
trashed the findings of its own Chief Administrative Law Judge, the late Francis Young,
when he recommended rescheduling marijuana. Moreover, Donna Shalala, the current Secretary of HHS,
regularly lies about actual data about marijuana in order to prove her fealty to the
party line. In short, our friends have the bureaucracy in a box, but this is an important
procedural victory, not a religious conversion. The lying will not stop, and someone was
arrested while you read these words, while many more suffer or live in fear. This is a
point to press, not a victory to rest on.
A Press Release from the Law Offices of Michael Kennedy
For Immediate Release
DEA REFERS MARIJUANA RESCHEDULING PETITION TO HHS
Introduction
Recent scientific evidence has forced the US Government through its Justice Department
agency, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), to commence legally binding procedures
that will likely result in the end of marijuana prohibition.
On December 19th, DEA formally asked the Department of Health and Human Services to
conduct "a scientific and medical evaluation of the available data and provide a
scheduling recommendation" for marijuana and other cannabinoid drugs. This DEA
request of HHS means that the DEA has for the first time made its own determination that
sufficient grounds exist to remove marijuana from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances
Act (CSA).Schedule I is supposed to be limited to hard drugs with addictive propensities
and with no legitimate medical usage.
The DEA request was made in response to an administrative petition filed July 10, 1995 by
Petitioners Jon Gettman and Trans High Corporation, publisher of High Times Magazine.
The Petition presents evidence and argument that marijuana and cannabinoids lack the
"high potential for abuse" required for Schedule I and Schedule II drugs under
the (CSA).
Trans-High Corporation, the publishers of High Times, joined with Mr. Gettman in mid-1995
to provide support for the petition during the administrative rule-making process.
Petitioners are represented by the Law Offices of Michael Kennedy, which today released a
copy of a letter from DEA notifying petitioners of the HHS referral.
Petitioners are represented by the Law Offices of Michael Kennedy in New York City, which
today released a copy of the letter from DEA notifying Petitioners of the HHS referral.
Background.
According to a July 27, 1995, letter from DEA Deputy Administrator Stephen Greene,
accepting the Petition for filing:
"The DEA shall determine within a reasonable period of time whether there are
sufficient grounds to justify removing marijuana . . . from Schedule I . (S)hould DEA
determine that there are sufficient grounds, then it must request a medical and scientific
recommendation from the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services."
Thus DEA can request the advice of HHS only after DEA's investigation confirms that
sufficient grounds exist to remove marijuana from Schedule I. According to the CSA the
findings and recommendations of HHS with regard to scientific and medical matters are
binding on DEA. DEA has never before voluntarily referred a marijuana rescheduling
petition to HHS for binding review.
The Gettman/High times Petition demonstrates that HHS has never produced a finding that
marijuana actually has the high potential for abuse similar to heroin or cocaine. A high
potential for abuse is required for Schedule I treatment. Further, the legislative history
of the CSA indicates that Congress only intended for marijuana to remain in Schedule I or
II if such a finding could be produced. This Petition challenges the government to produce
such a finding (where none exists) or be legally required to end marijuana prohibition by
removing marijuana from Schedule I.
Removal of marijuana from Schedule I will require the federal government to sanction legal
distribution of marijuana for medical uses, research and prescriptions and adopt a
regulatory rather than a prohibitory model for marijuana. The end of prohibition and the
advent of regulation will represent a radical change in the legal status of marijuana in
the United States.
The Petition argues that the discovery of the Cannabinoid Receptor System, which has
enabled scientists to explain the cause of marijuana's characteristic effects, and
provides a basis for making detailed distinctions among the biological effects of
marijuana and other drugs.These distinctions provide the scientific basis for
demonstrating that marijuana does not have the same high potential for abuse as other
Schedule I or II drugs.
DEA reversal of position.
The DEA to HHS referral represents a historic turn-around for DEA.
Gettman first asked DEA to refer marijuana to HHS for the appropriate scientific and
medical evaluation back in October of 1994. In March 1995, in a letter to Gettman's
congressman, DEA claimed that "unless a substance has an accepted medical use in the
United States, in can only be placed in Schedule I." By letter dated April 21, 1995,
DEA Administrator Thomas Constantine stated that DEA was:
"unaware of any new scientific studies of marijuana that would lead us to re-evaluate
its classification at this time . . . If Mr. Gettman has access to scientific data
concerning marijuana which he wishes to bring to our attention, we will be pleased to
consider it, should he care to share the documentation with us."
The Gettman/High Times Petition provided the specific scientific documentation that caused
the DEA to reverse itself and to acknowledge for the first time ever that a sufficient
scientific basis exists for reclassification of marijuana out of Schedule I.
Petitioners:
Jon Gettman
served as National Director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws
(NORML) from 1986 to 1989, and has provided articles
and columns for High Times since 1985. Gettman is currently working on his doctorate in
public policy and regional economic development at George Mason University in Fairfax,
Virginia.
Mr. Gettman issued the following statement:
"People are sent to jail every day because of mistaken assumptions about the abuse
potential of marijuana, assumptions that have never been scientifically proved. DEA's
recognition of this is a welcome and important step, and in many respects recognition of
the importance of the scientific work of individuals such as Allyn Howlett, William
Devane, Miles Herkenham,
Leo Hollister, Denise Kandel, Norman Zinberg, Lester Grinspoon and other scientists on
whose work my petition rests. But this is also recognition that in many respects marijuana
prohibition has been a cruel hoax on the American people. People think marijuana is in
Schedule I for scientific reasons, and that these reasons legitimize prohibition, arrests
and prison terms. DEA has just acknowledged that there is a lot of scientific knowledge
they haven't considered when they justify marijuana's Schedule I status. In other words,
DEA has presented a distorted picture of marijuana to government officials and to the
public. I hope our petition will contribute to resolving some of the confusion created by
these distortions."
High Times Magazine, by its Editor in Chief, Peter
Gorman, issued the
following statement:
"High Times is thrilled that the DEA has acknowledged that there was never sufficient
reason to place cannabis in Schedule I of the CSA, and proud that the petition originated
with Jon Gettman's two part series on "Marijuana and the Brain" which appeared
in our pages in March and July 1995. We hope that journalists from all media who have
covered the War on Drugs will recognize the importance of the DEA's admission regarding
the scheduling of cannabis -- which could potentially result in the end of prohibition of
this benign and medically helpful herb -- and will report it with the same vigor with
which they have reported other DEA findings. High Times looks forward to the results of
the Department of Health and human Services' investigation of the scientific and medical
data regarding cannabis with great anticipation."
|
|
|
Supported |
|
|
Topics |
|
Wed 09th 2008f Jul 2008
|
|
|
Site Navigation |
|
|