--------------------------------------------------------------------<e|-
<FONT COLOR="#000099">"Forget What You�re Looking For. You�ll Find It Right Here!
*Magna Plus Visa Card* Everyone Is Approved � Easy!
No Up-Front Deposit. Finally Something That Is For Everyone."
</FONT><A HREF="http://click.egroups.com/1/8333/6/_/1406/_/966087333/"><B>Click 
Here!</B></A>
--------------------------------------------------------------------|e>-

Please send as far and wide as possible.

Thanks,

Robert Sterling
Editor, The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com
http://www.konformist.com/2000/drugwar/mcwilliams.htm


Peter McWilliams Said Murdered By The Feds

Peter McWilliams is an American hero.
Peter McWilliams is dead, murdered by the feds.
Eulogy by Paul Zimmerman
6-18-00
 
  
He died on Wednesday, June 14th, but I just learned of his death this morning 
as I sat down in front of my computer with my first cup of coffee. I logged 
onto my email account and I saw the subject line on an email: Peter 
McWilliams passed away. It was not unexpected but it still hit me like a 
sucker punch to the gut. 
  
Peter's death was not unexpected, but his manner of death is unexcusable. 
  
Peter was a best selling author and his 1996 book "Ain't Nobody's Business if 
You Do: The Absurdity of Consensual Crimes in Our Free Country" (Available 
thru Amazon) became an instant libertarian classic. Unfortunately, soon after 
Peter's book became a success he was hit with a fatal one-two punch; he was 
diagnosed with AIDS and cancer. 
  
Peter took charge of his health and sought the best treatment that he could. 
He was on a regimen of pills and elixirs that the medical profession has 
concocted in order to prolong the life of people who are dying of AIDS and 
cancer. Unfortunately the treatment, (it's not a cure,) is nearly as deadly 
as the disease itself. To counter-act the wasting syndrome which is so 
prevalent with AIDS and to counter-act the nausea which was a side effect of 
his therapy Peter turned to medical marijuana. Peter lived in California and 
the people of that state passed Proposition 215 which made it legal for 
doctors to prescribe marijuana and on his doctor's recommendation Peter 
started using medical marijuana to ease his pain. He soon found that it 
stopped the nausea which caused him to vomit up his food and medication. He 
was able to eat, keep his food down and he was able to work and sleep through 
the night. He stopped losing weight and got on with his life. 
  
Of course, the feds don't give a hoot in hell about the will of the people or 
the Constitution, especially the 10th Amendment. As soon as Proposition 215 
was passed, the Drug Czar, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, and his heartless minions 
started threatening doctors and patients who dared to seek relief from their 
suffering by using this beneficial herb. Doctors were threatened with 
imprisonment and the loss of their licenses. Patients, many of them 
paraplegics and the terminally ill, were arrested and harassed. 
  
Peter could not stand by and watch what was going on. He knew the relief that 
he'd found with marijuana and couldn't stand by doing nothing while the feds 
assaulted the sick and dying. 
  
On December 1, 1997 Peter took out a two-page ad in Variety which was highly 
critical of the DEA and the Drug Czar. Seventeen days later Peter's house was 
raided by DEA and IRS agents. His property was ransacked and his computers 
and research were confiscated, (that's the legal term for government theft.) 
I refer you to Peter's own webpage and his synopsis of what happened. 
  
This was just the beginning of the murderous harassment that Peter had to 
endure. On July 4, 1998 Peter gave a speech at the Libertarian Party's 
national convention and on July 23 the DEA came to his house and arrested 
him. He was charged with bogus federal conspiracy charges and taken to 
prison. For the first nine days he was denied all medication and nearly died. 
He was finally allowed his medication, but without his prescribed marijuana 
the medication would not stay down. The feds were tightening the noose. 
  
The feds requested and got his bond set at $250,000. After four weeks of 
incarceration and after his mother and brother put their houses up as bail, 
Peter was released. 
  
As a condition of his release Peter was denied the use of marijuana. Peter 
complied with the judge's order because he did not want to risk having his 
mother and brother lose their homes. Judge George King's order was in reality 
a death sentence. 
  
Peter finally went to trial but the feds denied him any defense. Neither he 
nor his attorney could mention Proposition 215, his medical condition or that 
he was using marijuana as prescribed by his physician in accordance with 
California law. He was forced to accept a plea bargain. 
  
Peter McWilliams died at home awaiting his sentencing. He was found dead in 
his bathroom. He'd choked to death on his own vomit. He died because the feds 
denied him the only medication that controlled his nausea and vomiting. They 
killed him as surely as if they'd cut his throat. 
  
Judge King, I'll never forget what you did to Peter. Gen. McCaffery, I'll 
never forget what you did to Peter. There were many more feds who were 
accessories to the murder of Peter McWilliams and I say this to all of them: 
I won't forget and I won't forgive. 
  
How many more lives will the feds take before we say enough is enough? How 
many more Ruby Ridges, Wacos and Peter McWilliams before we drown in the 
blood of the martyred? God forgive us for standing around while the innocent 
die and suffer. 
  
If the freedom movement awarded medals and citations I'd recommend Peter 
McWilliams for a Medal of Honor. He fought the good fight and even though he 
was dying, he never gave up. I'm not presumptuous enough or lucky enough to 
be able to call Peter McWilliams my friend, but we did exchange a few emails 
and I always found him to be a gentleman and an optimist. 
  
Peter, I hope you've now found the freedom and peace that was denied you here 
on earth. God bless you. 
  
Paul Zimmerman 
  
_____ 
  
  
The DEA Wishes Me a Nice Day By Peter McWilliams 
  
On December 17, 1997, I was working in my living room-office on my computer 
next to a fire -- sort of high-tech meets Abe Lincoln. It was not yet dawn, 
and I had been working most of the night. Leonard Cohen's "Famous Blue 
Raincoat" begins, "It's four in the morning, the end of December." It's a 
special time of night and a special time of year. The rest of the world has 
gone quite mad with Christmas, and I am left alone to get some work done. 
  
A hard pounding on the door accompanied by shouts of "Police! Open Up!" broke 
the silence, broke my reverie, and nearly broke down the door. I opened the 
door wearing standard writer's attire, a bathrobe, and was immediately 
handcuffed. I was taken outside while Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) 
agents ran through my house, guns drawn, commando-style. They were looking, I 
suppose, for the notorious, well-armed, highly trained Medical Marijuana 
Militia. To the DEA, I am the Godfather of the Medicine Cartel. Finding 
nothing, they took me back into my home, informed me I was not under arrest, 
and ordered me -- still in handcuffs -- to sit down. I was merely being 
"restrained," I was told, so the DEA could "enforce the search warrant." 
  
However, no search warrant was immediately produced. Over time, one page 
after another of the warrant was placed on a table nearby. I was never told 
the reasons a federal judge thought it important enough to override the 
Fourth Amendment of the Supreme Law of the Land and issue search warrants for 
my Los Angeles home of eleven years, my new home (two doors away), and the 
offices of my publishing company, Prelude Press, about a mile away. The 
reasons, I was told, were in an affidavit "under seal." 
  
In other words, I have no way of determining whether this is a "reasonable" 
search and seizure. The DEA agents could have written the judge, "We've never 
seen the inside of a writer's house before and we'd like to have a look. 
Also, those New York federal judges are very touchy about letting us go into 
New York publishing houses, so can we also have a look at Prelude Press here 
in L.A.?" 
  
Whatever the reason, I was in handcuffs, and the nine DEA agents and at least 
one IRS Special Agent put on rubber gloves and systematically went through 
every piece of paper in my house. (Were the rubber gloves because I have 
AIDS, or are they just careful about leaving fingerprints?) 
  
I should point out, as I promised them I would, that I was never "roughed 
up." The DEA agents were, at all times, polite, if not overtly friendly. 
During the three hours of their search, the DEA agents asked me tentative, 
curious questions about my books, as though we had just met at an 
autographing party. They admired my artwork, as though they were guests I had 
invited into my home. They called me by my first name, although I am old 
enough to be the parent of any of them. 
  
A DEA Special Agent (not just one of those worker-bee agents) made it a point 
to tell me that the DEA has a reputation for busting into people's homes, 
physically abusing them, and destroying property, all in the name of 
"reasonable search and seizure." This, he reminded me on more than one 
occasion, was not taking place during this search and seizure. I agreed, and 
promised to report that fact faithfully. I have now done so. 
  
Patriots 
  
I suppose the DEA considers this a step up, and I suppose I agree, but it was 
eerie to see bright (for the most part), friendly, young people 
systematically attempting to destroy my life. I do not use the word "destroy" 
lightly. DEA agents are trained to fight a war, the War on Drugs, and in that 
war I am the enemy -- a fact I readily admit. The DEA, therefore, fights me 
with the only tools it has -- going through my home, arresting me, putting me 
in jail for the rest of my life, asset-forfeiting everything I own, selling 
it, and using the money to hire more DEA agents to fight the War on Drugs. 
>From these young people's point of view, invading my home is an act of 
patriotism. 
  
In a DEA agent's mind, because I have spoken out against the War on Drugs, 
I'm not just an enemy, but a traitor. In 1993, I published Ain't Nobody's 
Business If You Do: The Absurdity of Consensual Crimes in Our Free Country. 
In this libertarian tome -- endorsed by a diverse group including Milton 
Friedman, Hugh Downs, Archbishop Tutu, and Sting -- I explored in some detail 
the War on Drugs' unconstitutionality, racism, anti-free market basis, 
deception, wastefulness, destructiveness, and un-winability. I see it as one 
of the darkest chapters in American history, and certainly the greatest evil 
in our country today. 
  
My view is at odds, obviously, with the last line of DEA Administrator Thomas 
Constantine's 1995 essay, "The Cruel Hoax of Legalization": "Legalizing drugs 
is not a viable answer or a rational policy; it is surrender." According to 
Administrator Constantine, I and "many proponents of drug legalization," are 
"wealthy members of the elite who live in the suburbs and have never seen the 
damage that drugs and violence have wrought on poor communities, and for whom 
legalization is an abstract concept." An abstract concep. Like life, liberty, 
and the pursuit of happiness. 
  
Given my outspoken opposition to the Drug War, I shouldn't be surprised that 
the DEA wanted to search my home. The Drug War is another Viet Nam. Most of 
the drug warriors know it, and they have no intention of losing this war and 
becoming the homeless people so many Viet Nam veterans have tragically 
become. Smart drug warriors. So, to the DEA, I'm part of the nation's enemy. 
And I must admit, by DEA standards, I have been pretty bad. 
  
But when I got sick, I got even worse. 
  
In mid-March 1996 I was diagnosed with both AIDS and cancer. (Beware the Ides 
of March, indeed.) I had not smoked marijuana or used any other illicit drug 
for decades prior to this (a decision I now regret). But since 1996 I owe my 
life to modern medical science and to one ancient herb. 
  
And so I became an outspoken advocate of medical marijuana. In 1996, before 
the passage of California Proposition 215 (the Medical Marijuana Act), I 
donated office space to a cannabis club so it could sell marijuana to the 
sick. I also started the Medical Marijuana Magazine on-line in February 1997; 
testified in favor of medical marijuana before the California Medical 
Examiners Board and the National Academy of Sciences; and appeared as a 
medical marijuana advocate in or on numerous media, including CNN, MSNBC, The 
Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, United Press International, CBS Radio 
Network, and dozens more. 
  
For a sick guy, I've been around. (Actually, I've been around, and that's how 
I got to be a sick guy, but that's another story.) Most disturbing to the 
DEA, I would guess, was my strong criticism of it in a two-page ad I placed 
in the December 1, 1997, Daily Variety. I denounced Administrator 
Constantine's threat to criminally investigate the creators of Murphy Brown 
for Murphy's fictional use of medical marijuana. Having made comments such 
as, "The DEA gives the phrase 'ambulance chasing' a whole new meaning," I'm 
surprised it took the DEA 17 days to find my house -- but, then, they are 
part of the government. 
  
Confiscation 
  
About two weeks before my DEA Christmas visitation, the Medical Marijuana 
Magazine on-line announced it would soon be posting portions of a book on 
medical marijuana that I've been working on, A Question of Compassion: An 
AIDS Cancer Patient Explores Medical Marijuana. My publishing company 
announced that books would ship in January. This brings us back to my 
computer and the DEA agents' almost immediate interest in it. 
  
My computer and its backup drives, which the DEA also took, contained my 
entire creative output -- most of it unpublished -- for the nearly two years 
since my diagnosis. My central project has been the above-mentioned book and 
a filmed documentary with the same title. Being a fair, balanced, objective 
view of medical marijuana in the United States, the book is scathingly 
critical of the DEA. 
  
So they took the computer, backup copies of my computer files, and most of my 
research materials on medical marijuana. William F. Buckley, Jr. said, "That 
is the equivalent of entering The New York Times and walking away with the 
printing machinery." If I don't get my computer and files back, it will take 
at least six months additional work to get back to where I was, and redoing 
creative work is disheartening at best. 
  
Not only am I in shock from having been invaded and seeing my "children" 
kidnapped (writers have an odd habit of becoming attached to their creative 
output), but every time I go for something -- from a peanut butter cup to a 
magazine -- it's not there. Something is there, but it's not what was there 
24 hours earlier. Everything reeks of nine different fragrances -- like the 
men's cologne department at Macy's. My address books were also taken -- not 
copied, taken. As you can imagine, all this is most disorienting, especially 
for a born-again marijuana addict like me. 
  
How the DEA Works 
  
A few random observations: While rummaging through my publishing company, a 
DEA agent told the publishing staff, "You guys had better start looking for 
new jobs. If the DEA doesn't take this place for marijuana, the IRS will. The 
government will own this place in six months." Such a statement does not just 
have a chilling effect on a publishing company; it is like putting an iceberg 
in front of the Titanic. The DEA took a microcassette tape from the recorder 
next to my bed. On the tape I had dictated a letter to President Clinton 
(dictating to President Clinton in bed seemed appropriate), asking him to 
rise above politics and show his compassion by making medical marijuana 
available to the sick. I may never get to mail that letter now, but I 
certainly hope the DEA agent who listens to it will transcribe it and send it 
to his or her boss's (Constantine) boss's (Reno) boss (Clinton). I have 
precisely three porn magazines in my house, hidden deep away in my sock 
drawer. (Who has enough socks to fill a whole drawer?) The magazines were 
removed from their stash and placed on top of random objects before 
photographing them. A jury, looking at these photographs, would think I have 
pornography all over the place. Frankly, I don't mind if a jury thinks this, 
because my view of pornography agrees completely with that of Oscar Levant: 
"It helps." When the DEA agents found a collection of Playboys at the offices 
of Prelude Press (the Playboy Forum is, in fact, one of the best 
anti-prohibition information sources around), I am told (as I was not there) 
that three of the male DEA agents spent a great deal of time 
testosteronistically pawing through and making typically sexist comments 
about portions of the magazine that have nothing to do with drugs -- but that 
are obviously addictive nonetheless. An invasion of nine people into the 
world of someone with a suppressed immune system is risky at best. DEA agents 
come into contact with criminals and other DEA agents from all sorts of 
international places with all sort of diseases. Some of these diseases don't 
infect their young federal bodies, but the agents pass them along. I think of 
certain strains of tuberculosis, deadly to people with AIDS and rampant in 
certain quarters -- quarters where I make it a point not to go, but quarters 
in which the DEA seems to thrive. Since my diagnosis, I have lived the life 
of a near hermit, especially during flu season, which is now. Thundering into 
my sterile home surrounded by the clean air of Laurel Canyon is the 
equivalent of germ warfare. At least two of the agents were sniffling or 
coughing. Six of them handled me in some way. I kept flashing back to the 
U.S. Cavalry passing out smallpox-infested blankets to shivering Native 
Americans. Have these people no sense of the struggle AIDS people's bodies 
have in fighting even ordinary illnesses, and the lengths some of us go to 
avoid unnecessary exposure to infection? (Na�ve American question, huh?) 
  
Prospects 
  
Philosophically, or at least stoically, one could say all this is part of my 
research into medical marijuana and those who oppose it -- especially into 
those who oppose it. The problem is that I'm not sure what I've learned. Two 
scenarios surface, each more frightening than the other. 
  
Scenario One: The DEA, angered by my criticism and fearful of more, decided 
to intimidate me -- and to have a free peek at my book in the bargain. 
  
Scenario Two: In July 1997, the DEA invaded the home of Todd McCormick, 
destroyed his marijuana research plants (one of which had been alive since 
1976), took his computer (which had notes for a book he is writing), and has 
not yet returned it. Perhaps the DEA -- caught in a blind, bureaucratic 
feeding frenzy -- is just now, five months later, getting around to 
investigating my connection as possible financier of Todd's "Medical 
Marijuana Mansion" or even -- gasp! -- that I grew some marijuana for myself. 
This means that in order to justify the arrest of Todd McCormick, a 
magnificent blunder, they are now coming after me, a magnificent blubber. 
  
Whichever scenario is correct, if the DEA and IRS have their way I may spend 
the rest of my life in a federal prison, all expenses paid (and deaths from 
AIDS-related illnesses can be very expensive, indeed). Truth be told, prison 
doesn't particularly frighten me. All I plan to do the rest of my life is 
create things -- write, mostly. I've been everywhere I want to go. It's my 
time of life for didactic pontificating. It is a phase writers go through 
immediately preceded by channel surfing and immediately followed by channel 
surfing. Or hemlock. 
  
If the DEA has seized my computer to silence me, it has failed, as I hope 
this article illustrates. The DEA's next oppressive move, then, would be to 
arrest me. 
  
(Some have cautioned me about assassination, which I find difficult to 
comprehend -- but then I thought my book was so safe I didn't even have a 
backup in a Public Storage locker somewhere. I should, I suppose, state that 
I am not in any way suicidal about this -- or anything else, for that matter. 
So if I should die before the DEA wakes and they claim my death was a 
suicide, don't you believe it. I plan to go about as quietly into that good 
night as Timothy Leary did. Still, as a na�ve American, this concern is far 
from my mind.) 
  
If the DEA intends to come after me as the financier of Todd McCormick's 
medical marijuana empire, the DEA knows full well I took credit for that 
immediately after Todd's arrest -- which made a lie of the DEA's claim that 
Todd purchased his "mansion" with "drug money." Yes, I gave him enough money 
to rent the ugliest house in Bel-Air and, yes, being Todd McCormick, he grew 
marijuana there. The money I gave him was an advance for a book on 
cultivating marijuana. 
  
Todd cannot use medical marijuana as a condition of his bail-release. He is 
drug-tested twice weekly. He cannot go to Amsterdam where he could legally 
find relief from the pain of cancer. Todd now faces life imprisonment -- a 
ten-year mandatory minimum -- and a $4 million fine, for cultivating medical 
marijuana, which is specifically permitted under the California Compassionate 
Use Act of 1996. 
  
The DEA, at the federal level, and California Attorney General Dan Lungren 
(with Governor Pete Wilson smiling his approval from on high) should have 
opposed Proposition 215 in court. In court they had the right -- and the 
responsibility, if they truly believed it a bad law -- to challenge the law 
and ask a judge to stay its enactment. They did not. Instead, the DEA is 
fighting its War on Drugs in the sickrooms of Todd, me, and countless others. 
  
Our government is not well. 
  
What our Patriots Are Doing Today 
  
As I write this, I feel myself in mortal combat with a gnarly monster. Then I 
remember the human faces of the kind people who tried to make me comfortable 
with small talk as they went through my belongings as neatly as they knew 
how. 
  
It reminds me, painfully, that the War on Drugs is a war fought by decent 
Americans against other decent Americans, and that these people rifling 
through my belongings really are America's best -- bright young people 
willing to die for their country in covert action. It takes a special kind of 
person for that, and every Republic must have a generous number of them in 
order to survive. 
  
But instead of our best and our brightest being trained to hunt down 
terrorist bombs or child abductors -- to mention but two useful examples -- 
our misguided government is using all that talent to harass and arrest 
Blacks, Hispanics, the poor, and the sick -- the casualties in the War on 
Drugs, the ones who, to quote Leonard Cohen again, "sank beneath your wisdom 
like a stone." It is the heart of the evil of a prohibition law in a free 
country. 
  
After all, picking on someone with AIDS and cancer is a little redundant, 
don't you think? 
  
On the way out, one of the DEA agents said, "Have a nice day." 
  
I believe the comment was sincere.


If you are interested in a free subscription to The Konformist Newswire, 
please visit http://www.eGroups.com/list/konformist/ and sign up. Or, e-mail 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject: "I NEED 2 KONFORM!!!" 
(Okay, you can use something else, but it's a kool catch phrase.)

Visit the Klub Konformist at Yahoo!: 
http://clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/klubkonformist






Reply via email to