-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart


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     ARTICLE:  For the Birds: Hemp seed bust infuriates locals
      AUTHOR:  Janet Wells, Sonoma County Independent, Vol. 21, No.
19
        DATE:  Friday, 1 October 1999, at 10:15 a.m.



Kevin Roth, the executive chef at the Coup Restaurant in New York,
says, "Hemp seed-crusted tuna is our best selling dish. To say that
we�re serving a controlled substance is outlandish.�

Pubdate: Sept. 30-Oct. 6, 1999 - Sebastopol-based Nutiva, which brokers
and distributors imported hemp products used for a booming consumer
market, is reeling from a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency seizure of
a tractor-trailer full of Canadian hemp seed. In addition to the August
seizure of sterilized grain on its way to a U.S. Company that sells
bird seed blends, the DEA demanded that the Canadian supplier, Kenex,
recall previous hemp products or pay more than $500,000 in fines.

Sterilized hemp seed, says Nutiva president John Roulac, is heated
to 212 degrees for at least 15 minutes, so the seeds will not germinate.
"It's a legal product,� he says. "The 1937 tax act exempts sterilized
[hemp] seed, oil, or meal.�

While it is illegal to grow hemp in the United States because it contains
trace amounts of the federally controlled drug in marijuana, the DEA
has provided no legal basis for confiscation of the imported load,
says Roulac.

Despite support from legislators, including Virginia Strom-Martin,
whose bill to legalize industrial hemp recently was approved by the
California State Assembly, Roulac has had to lay off one employee
and cut back on hours in response to what he calls "intimidation�
of Canada's largest hemp processor.

"They are trying to cut off the raw material supply,� he says. "If
they can intimidate and shut down the biggest player, the other companies
will be intimidated.�

One of Roulac's customers, Kevin Roth, the executive chef at the Coup
Restaurant in New York, says, "Hemp seed-crusted tuna is our best
selling dish. To say that we're serving a controlled substance is
outlandish.�

U.S. Customs Department spokesman Dean Boyd says that customs inspectors
in Detroit called the DEA about the hemp seed after looking at the
shipment's paperwork, and were instructed to seize the load.

"By doing our job we've walked into a political minefield,� says a
beleaguered-sounding Boyd. "You wouldn't believe the calls we're getting
on this. Our role was based on the legal advice provided by the DEA.
We're obligated to hold it. It' costing us a lot to keep 39,000 pounds
of birdseed.�

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     ARTICLE:  Hemp Bar Company under Gun from DEA
      AUTHOR:  Matt Weiser, Press Democrat
        DATE:  Friday, 1 October 1999, at 10:27 a.m.



"This is coming right at a time when our sales are exploding,'' said
John Roulac, president of Nutiva. "You can't get high on hemp seeds.
People are buying our bar because it tastes great and because of the
nutritional benefits.''

Pubdate: Sep. 30, 1999 Sebastopol Firm Fighting Fed Order

 A Sebastopol company must forfeit its inventory of hemp-based food
products after it was found to contain traces of the active ingredient
in marijuana, federal drug enforcement agents said Wednesday.

Sebastopol-based Nutiva says it was on the verge of runaway success
with its new hemp-seed-based nutrition bar, a rival for the likes
of Powerbar and other snack foods. It had hoped to capitalize on growing
public interest in the health benefits of hemp, driven in part by
a burgeoning hemp products industry that is largely based in Sonoma
County.

But now the company is struggling to fend off the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency, which has recently focused on the growing trade in hemp seeds
for food and health products.

"This is coming right at a time when our sales are exploding,'' said
John Roulac, president of Nutiva. "You can't get high on hemp seeds.
People are buying our bar because it tastes great and because of the
nutritional benefits.''

The Nutiva bar is made in Canada using hemp seeds produced by Kenex
Ltd., an Ontario firm that bills itself as North America's leading
supplier of industrial hemp products.

On Aug. 9, a shipment of Kenex hemp goods was seized in Detroit by
U.S. Customs officials, who determined from shipping manifests that
the goods did not meet America's zero-tolerance policy for
tetrahydrocannabinol,
or THC, the euphoria producing active ingredient in marijuana, hemp's
botanical cousin.

THC is a controlled substance under U.S. law and is not allowed in
commercial products.

The Kenex shipment contained less than 10 parts per million of THC,
the allowable limit under Canadian law and an amount the industry
says could never produce a marijuana-like "high.'' Nutiva, the broker
and importer for Kenex products in the western United States, says
nutrition bars made from Kenex seeds are the top-selling hemp-food
product in America.

In addition to seizing the shipment, which was bound for other U.S.
customers, federal officials ordered Kenex to recall 17 earlier shipments
of hemp-seed products, including those marketed by Nutiva. The goods
must be returned to the Detroit customs office under penalty of a
$500,000 fine and possible criminal charges.

For decades, the DEA has allowed hemp seeds to be imported to the
United States as bird seed if shipments are sterilized so the seeds
cannot be germinated into a living plant. Bird breeders and owners
have long used hemp seeds as a health supplement for their pets.

Hemp seeds do not contain THC, but seeds often pick up the chemical
after coming in contact with leaves and stems during harvesting. Most
industrial hemp seed undergoes a rigorous cleaning and sterilization
process to remove remnants of THC. But Canadian rules permit trace
amounts of THC to remain on the seeds at the time of sale, leading
to the confusion that resulted in the action by DEA and Customs.

Several companies that import hemp seeds from other suppliers said
they've experienced no problems at the U.S. border.

"I think we were just recently aware that the shipments that were
coming through did have THC,'' said John Holmes, supervisory special
agent with U.S. Customs in Detroit. "At this point, if the hemp seed
has THC in it, then it is not allowable into the United States. It
is not permissible.'' The action is baffling to Roulac and Kenex officials,
who have been bringing hemp seed into the United States for months
without interruption.

"At this point the DEA has chosen to interpret the U.S. law a little
differently than it has in the past,'' said Jean Laprise, director
of Kenex. "It's basically crippled us. The majority of our business
is in the U.S.''

Hemp seed is rich in protein and Vitamin E. The shelled seeds are
about the size of sunflower seeds and taste similar. In addition to
its nutrition bars, Nutiva also markets raw hemp seed used in cooking.
It supplies hemp seed to 700 other businesses, including several restaurants
in Sonoma County.

Candi Penn, a member of the board of directors of the Hemp Industry
Association, based in Occidental, said the DEA action against Kenex
comes at a critical time for the industry.

"These products are absolutely legal,'' said Penn, who noted that
hemp has grown to a $100 million industry this year, from just $5
million in 1993. "It's a potential for jobs in America. It's baffling
to see that they even want to stop it. Federal rules are not keeping
pace with reality.''

Roulac said he is consulting an attorney as he decides how to respond
to the federal order. In the meantime, his products are staying put
in his Southern California warehouse.

"We are looking for another source of hemp seeds, but we could be
potentially liable,'' Roulac said. "We've been advised that they may
be charging us with importing a controlled substance.''

� 1998 The Press Democrat

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