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May 10, 2001
Bush's New DEA Chief No "Compassionate Conservative"
Arkansas Republican Backs Global Militarization of Drug War; Supports Federal
Ban on "Drug-Speech"; Opposes Medical Marijuana - Even for Research

    Washington, DC:
Arkansas Republican Asa Hutchinson - a drug war hawk who
supports jailing individuals who post information pertaining to drugs on the
Internet - was announced yesterday as Bush's pick to head the Drug
Enforcement Administration. Hutchinson's nomination follows the appointment
of John P. Walters - a fellow hard-liner who favors incarceration over
treatment for drug offenders - as the nation's Drug Czar.
    "When it comes to leading Bush's drug war, 'compassionate conservatives'
need not apply," criticized NORML Executive Director Keith Stroup.
    Hutchinson, who is currently serving his third term in Congress, is known
for his harsh views toward drugs and drug offenders. He advocates increased
funding for drug interdiction - arguing that "we have to have a commitment of
resources, yes enormous resources, in this country to win this war" - and has
criticized recent increases in federal spending on drug treatment programs.
"Elimination (of drugs and drug use) - not containment - should be our goal.
... We cannot win this war ... simply by putting money in demand reduction,"
he argues.
    Some of Hutchinson's other views on the drug war include:

HUTCHINSON SUPPORTS FURTHER MILITARIZATION OF U.S. DRUG WAR IN LATIN AMERICA
    Hutchinson is a vocal supporter of expanding the U.S. military presence
in Latin America under the guise of interdicting drugs, and was a staunch
proponent of last year's controversial 1.3 billion dollar military aid
package to Columbia, ostensibly to fund anti-drug efforts. The aid package
provided Columbia with 65 U.S. Black Hawk and Huey II helicopters, and
included funding for crop fumigation and Columbian army battalion training.
Hutchinson backed his decision on CNN's "Crossfire", maintaining "It's
incumbent upon us to assist our neighbors in really fighting our war."
    Critics of the funding package argue that the aid could have been better
spent on domestic drug treatment programs, noting that the cost of buying the
helicopters alone ($400 million) could have treated 200,000 addicts in the
U.S.

HUTCHINSON OPPOSES ANY USE OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA - INCLUDING RESEARCH ON ITS
THERAPEUTIC POTENTIAL

    Hutchinson vehemently opposes the use of medicinal marijuana by seriously
ill patients, even in those states that have legalized its use. In 1999, he
backed legislation preventing Washington DC from implementing a ballot
initiative legalizing medical marijuana - even though it had been approved by
70 percent of District voters.
    He also opposed funding a 1999 Institute of Medicine study on marijuana's
medical potential, arguing that such research may compromise the war on
drugs. "A study of marijuana's medicinal effectiveness ... is absolutely the
wrong way to go on this issue," he told Congress in 1997. "It sends the wrong
message to young people."
    The IOM study opposed by Hutchinson concluded: "Scientific data indicate
the potential therapeutic value of cannabinoid drugs ... for pain relief,
control of nausea and vomiting, and appetite stimulation. ... Except for the
harms associated with smoking, the adverse effects of marijuana use are
within the range tolerated for other medications."

HUTCHINSON BACKS TEN-YEAR PRISON TERMS FOR ANYONE POSTING DRUG INFORMATION ON
THE INTERNET

    Hutchinson angered free-speech advocates in 1999 by co-sponsoring
legislation (H.R. 2987) that sought to impose a ten-year felony sentence on
anyone who communicates, by any means, "information pertaining to the ...
manufacture of a controlled substance." (Sec. 421) Although purportedly aimed
at information pertaining to meth-manufacturing, the statute's purposely
vague wording would have applied to any website, magazine or book containing
information on a range of drug-related topics, including procuring medical
marijuana, sterilizing needles and hemp fiber cultivation.
    After media outcry against the measure, the language was eventually
eliminated from the bill (though it remained in the Senate's version).

HUTCHINSON SUPPORTS OVERRIDING FEDERAL LAW TO ALLOW FEDERAL FUNDS TO
INFLUENCE STATE ELECTIONS

    During Congressional hearings in 1999, Hutchinson criticized government
officials for failing to spend federal dollars to persuade voters to reject
state initiatives aimed at legalizing medical marijuana and reforming prison
sentencing. Upon learning that such behavior would be in violation of federal
law (Federal tax dollars may not be used to influence state elections.),
Hutchinson proposed Congress override the law so that federal monies could be
specifically used to influence voters in states with pending drug reform
initiatives. Hutchinson also urged federal officials, including the President
and Vice President, "go into those states (with pending initiatives) and say
this is bad for the country."
    It's possible that Hutchinson's views on this issue may be at odds with
President Bush, who also opposes the medical use of marijuana but backs
states' rights to decide the issue. "I believe each state can choose that
decision as they choose," he has said.


    For more information on the Hutchinson and Walters' nominations, please
contact Keith Stroup, Executive Director of NORML, at (202) 483-5500 or Allen
St. Pierre
, Executive Director of The NORML Foundation, at (202) 483-8751.










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