ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. � A federal judge has ruled that a Brazilian religious 
group that uses hallucinogenic tea in its ceremonies should get back a 
shipment of the substance seized by U.S. Customs agents.
U.S. District Judge James Parker found that church members' rights under 
the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act were being violated by 
withholding the tea.
Jeffrey Bronfman, president of O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao do 
Vegetal, or UDV, sued the U.S. Department of Justice after the Customs 
Bureau and the Drug Enforcement Agency seized 30 gallons of hoasca tea from 
his Santa Fe office in 1999. No one was arrested in the raid.
UDV used to hold ceremonies near Bronfman's home southeast of Santa Fe, 
where members consumed the tea that contains N.N. dimethyltryptamine, or 
DMT, a controlled substance.
The tea is brewed from plants found only in the Amazon River Basin. The 
religion originated in Brazil and its U.S. operations are based in Santa Fe.
In a 61-page opinion issued Aug. 12, Parker rejected religious-freedom and 
equal-protection claims raised by the church.
But he found that the government had failed to prove that the tea was 
dangerous.
Parker granted the UDV a preliminary injunction, but U.S. Justice 
Department lawyers could seek a stay while they appeal the case. It was not 
immediately clear whether government attorneys would appeal.
Both sides are to meet Sept. 3 in the federal court in Albuquerque to 
determine how the religious group would be compensated.
Related
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Religious Freedom Restoration Act. 08.06.02
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Two men argue that they have same right as tribal members to use drug 
during religious ceremonies
http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=16825

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