The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #100 - July 23, 1999
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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================

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. 100 ISSUES LATER...
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#100issues

2. DC Appropriations Bill Moves Forward -- Medical Marijuana
   Vote May Be Counted, Syringe Exchange May Be Re-funded
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#appropriations

3. Senate Holds First Hearing on Civil Forfeiture Reform
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#forfeitthesenate

4. Fuel to the Fire:  Drug Czar Proposes Billion More for
   Andean Drug War, Mostly Colombia
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#fuelfire

5. Florida Drug Czar Killer Fungus Plan Worries Experts
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#mycoherbicides

6. Speaker Lashes Out at Drug War at Mormon Symposium
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#mormonsymposium

7. News Briefs
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#newsbriefs

8. EDITORIAL:  And The Winner Is...
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/100.html#editorial

================

1. 100 ISSUES LATER...

On July 3, 1997, DRCNet launched The Week Online, the
nation's only weekly news magazine dedicated to original
coverage of the drug war and drug policy reform.  The
movement has come a long way in the short time since that
first issue; nine more reform-oriented voter initiatives
have been approved in the United States, harm reduction --
and drug policy reform generally -- continue to gain
mainstream acceptance around the globe, two US governors,
along with numerous prominent citizens and the editorial
boards of a growing number of the nation's largest
newspapers have called for a reexamination of the drug war;
African-American leaders have come to the fore to openly
oppose mandatory minimum sentencing, racial profiling, the
number of young Black males in prison and official foot-
dragging on syringe exchange -- drug war issues all; and
factions of the US government have displayed their concern
over the growing movement to end the drug war by redoubling
efforts to demonize, harass and slander the advocates of
reform.

Over the past two years, DRCNet has grown as well.  Back in
July of '97, DRCNet's staff consisted of Dave and Adam,
working out of a room in the offices of the Drug Policy
Foundation (to whom we are indebted for their continued
support).  Today we have a full-time staff of four, (Karynn
and Kris have both been here for over a year) with two part-
time -- but vitally important -- staff-members (Nissim and
Jane) and a growing internship program that has brought us
Taylor, Peter and Will.  We have been in our own office here
in Dupont Circle for more than a year and a half, and we
even have a laser printer!

The most important indicator of our growth, however, is you.
Issue #1 of The Week Online arrived by email to just over
2,000 subscribers.  Issue #100 has been sent out to a
subscription list of more than 11,000.  And many of you (you
know who you are) regularly re-post, re-print and forward
all or part of each issue to countless others.  We thank
you.

But the real reason for this work is far more important.  It
is the hundreds of thousands of Americans who sit today
behind bars for non-violent drug offenses.  It is America's
children, who have easy access to dangerous substances in
the unregulated black market.  It is the Constitution of the
United States, which has been chiseled away by years of
"drug war exceptions," and it is the future of this nation
and a world awash in a violent and insidiously corrupting
industry which buys off governments, finances despots and
terrorists, and makes a mockery of the rule of law and the
ideals of freedom, liberty and personal responsibility.

We thank you all for being part of the solution, and we hope
that in the time it takes to produce the next hundred issues
of The Week Online, you too will redouble your commitment to
ending America's longest war.  It is a war not on drugs but
on people, and families, and principles.  It is within our
power to end this war, and as the leading edge of the
growing resistance, it is our responsibility to do so.  The
future is truly in our hands.  Let us shape it wisely,
together.

 - The staff of DRCNet

================

2. DC Appropriations Bill Moves Forward -- Medical Marijuana
   Vote May Be Counted, Syringe Exchange May Be Re-funded

Taylor West, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Opponents of "social riders" attached by Congress to last
year's DC spending bill celebrated two victories this week
in the House Appropriations Committee.  During debate in the
committee over this year's DC Appropriations Act,
Representative James Moran (D-VA) successfully added two
amendments that reversed provisions in last year's spending
legislation.  Moran's first amendment allowed the
certification of Initiative 59, the medical marijuana vote
which has remained uncounted since it took place on November
3rd of last year.  The second amendment removed last year's
prohibition of local funding for syringe exchange.  Both
amendments must now survive debate on the House floor in
order to take effect.

With a vote of 24-13, the Appropriations Committee approved
Moran's amendment to remove last year's ban on the use of
city funds to certify the District's referendum vote on
medical marijuana.  The vote took place nearly nine months
ago, but Congressman Bob Barr (R-GA) pushed through a
measure in last year's spending bill that allowed no local
expenditure for officially counting the results.  The
estimated cost of executing that count is less than two
dollars.  In response, supporters of the initiative have
challenged the constitutionality of the amendment in federal
court; the case is pending.

If the vote certification amendment survives House floor
debate, the results of the referendum -- which exit polls
estimated at nearly 70% in favor of the medical use of
marijuana -- will finally be announced.  At that time, the
House, the Senate, and the Clinton administration will have
30 days in which to take action to block the implementation
of the initiative.  If a move to block is not approved by
all three bodies within 30 days, the initiative will become
law in the District.

Wayne Turner, director of ACTUP/DC and a leader of the
Initiative 59 campaign, was optimistic as he spoke to The
Week Online.  "It's very exciting for a couple of reasons.
First, I think this victory in the committee shows that this
is a winnable issue.  Many people doubted that.  Second,
we've been fighting this as an issue of democracy --
allowing the will of the people to be heard.  It is
heartening to see that some legislators, regardless of their
stance on medical marijuana, will stand by that democratic
principle.  Furthermore, we feel very confident about the
court case that is pending.  Regardless of how this
legislation turns out, we feel good about our chances."
Turner also praised Congressman Moran for following through
on his commitment to fight the social riders attached in
last year's appropriations.

Moran's second amendment would allow the nation's capital to
once again help fund a syringe exchange in the District.
The Whitman-Walker clinic, in conjunction with the DC
Department of Health, began operating a city-wide syringe
exchange program in 1996.  However, when last year's DC
Appropriations prohibited the use of city funds for syringe
exchange, Whitman-Walker was forced to end that program.
Since then, only Prevention Works!, a small organization
funded entirely by private grants, has provided syringe
exchange services to the District of Columbia, which has the
highest rate of new HIV infections in the nation.

Rob Stewart, Director of Communications at the Drug Policy
Foundation, welcomed the possibility of returning city
funding for syringe exchange.  "In an ideal world, there
would be sufficient private funds to keep syringe exchange
programs running, but Congress's unwillingness to confront
this crisis has only made it more of a public health
emergency.  Hopefully, both houses [of Congress] will allow
DC to spend its money as it sees fit -- a vital component of
'home rule.'"  The Drug Policy Foundation has been the chief
monetary supporter of Prevention Works!.

Representative Moran has committed himself to continue
pushing his amendments on the floor of the House.  Jim
McIntyre, Moran's press secretary, told the Week Online,
"Congressman Moran believes very strongly that Congress
should not be telling the District how to spend their
locally collected revenue.  The Republican leadership has
continued to insist on the addition of these social riders,
even though they do not involve any federal funds.
Congressman Moran is extremely pleased that his amendments
passed the full committee, and is optimistic that this
victory will help in the House debate."

The DC Appropriations Act is scheduled for debate in the
House on Thursday, July 29th.  Turner, who has also been
active in working for needle exchange in the District,
explained his view of the situation this way.  "I think many
Congress people are afraid of certain votes.  They're scared
off by the idea of voting for needles and marijuana.
However, by offering these amendments, we give them the
choice instead to vote for HIV prevention and democracy.
Who can oppose that?"

================

3. Senate Holds First Hearing on Civil Forfeiture Reform

Tyler Green, Drug Policy Foundation [EMAIL PROTECTED],
http://www.dpf.org

The Senate took a first step toward drafting its own civil
asset forfeiture reform legislation at a subcommittee
hearing Wednesday (7/21).

The Senate subcommittee which oversees criminal justice
matters held a hearing born out of the 375-48 passage of
Rep. Henry Hyde's (R-IL) Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act
in the House.  The subcommittee members expressed interest
in passing some kind of civil asset forfeiture reform
legislation, but it remains unclear how similar that
legislation would be to Hyde's bill.

"The Civil Asset Forfeiture Act would provide greater
safeguards for individuals whose property has been seized by
the government," said Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), the member
of the subcommittee most enthusiastic about reform.  "This
bipartisan legislation passed the House of Representatives
last month by an overwhelming majority and it deserves our
prompt consideration."

Most other senators on the panel agreed that some reform of
federal forfeiture law was necessary, but they weren't sure
how far to go.  Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-SC), who chairs the
subcommittee, said he didn't like the Hyde bill and was
concerned about a provision that would provide indigent
property owners with counsel.  Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY),
the ranking minority member, spoke passionately against
Hyde's bill, as did former federal prosecutor Sen. Jeff
Sessions (R-AL).

"I hope we don't overcorrect for a problem that doesn't
exist," Sessions said.  "I think this needs some tinkering
with, but does not need a major overhaul."

Sen. Joseph Biden (D-DE), who spoke against H.R. 1658 in his
opening remarks, came around to favoring some reforms during
one of the question-and-answer sessions.  Biden induced
representatives from the Department of Justice and other
federal law enforcement agencies to unanimously agree on the
need for reform in the areas of the burden of and standard
of proof, providing compensation for damage done to seized
property by federal agents, and the allowing of interest
charges.  Biden and the panel also found limited agreement
on the need to eliminate the 10% bond people must post to
get their property back, and on the appointment of counsel
for indigent property owners.

No Senate hearings on the issue are scheduled at this time,
but it seems likely the subcommittee will revisit the topic
again during the 106th Congress.

You can read about the Hyde bill at
<http://www.dpf.org/html/forfeiture.html>.  Learn more
about civil asset forfeiture on the web at
<http://www.fear.org>.

================

4. Fuel to the Fire:  Drug Czar Proposes Billion More for
   Andean Drug War, Mostly Colombia

Responding to what he called a "near-crisis," US drug czar
Barry McCaffrey has called for an additional $1 billion in
aid for the Latin American drug war, most of it for
Colombia.  McCaffrey has proposed that $570 million be spent
in Colombia: $360 million for crop eradication efforts, $130
million for air interdiction, $20 million on the judiciary
and legal system, and $60 million for police forces,
according to the Miami Herald, last Saturday, 7/17.  The
Colombian crisis, according to McCaffrey, is an increasing
level of coca cultivation and significant military victories
by rebel forces, who now control much of the southern part
of the country.  McCaffrey charged that the rebel guerrillas
are financing their activities through drug trafficking, and
called it "silly at this point" to differentiate between
anti-drug programs and the Colombian government's
counterinsurgency war against the guerrillas.

By all accounts, Colombia is in the grip of a crisis of deep
proportions.  The Marxist rebel forces, known as the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), control
perhaps 40 percent of the country outright.  The nation is
facing its worst economic recession since the 1930s.  And
nearly 1 1/2 million Colombians have become refugees in
their own country, forced to flee homes and towns from civil
conflict and political violence.

Current US policy, however, and the McCaffrey proposal, have
drawn criticism from organizations monitoring human rights
and Latin America policy.

Robin Kirk, a Colombia specialist at Human Rights Watch,
told the Week Online, "Obviously, Colombia's a mess, and
there has to be something done to forward peace.  I think
most people would agree that peace is really the only
option.  Colombia has tried war for decades, and it hasn't
worked.  To the contrary, things have gotten a lot worse,
and this is first time that they've really tried peace in a
profound way.  So we see this proposal by McCaffrey, which
was actually just picking up on a proposal made to the US
government by the Colombian defense minister and the head of
the armed forces, as premature."  The Colombian government
and the rebels have recently begun negotiations on a peace
settlement.

Meredith Tate, of the Washington Office on Latin America,
explained, "In terms of the impact in Colombia, it's going
to be disastrous for the prospects of peace in terms of
reaching a negotiated settlement with guerrilla groups, who
are going to see this as direct US intervention in the area.
It's going to further radicalize them, and it's going to
further the social conflict in the areas in which peasant
populations are involved in coca production, because there's
an increased military attack on this population, without any
economic alternatives."

Of particular concern to organizations working on Latin
American issues is the Colombian military's human rights
record.  "The Colombian army remains the most abusive in the
hemisphere, particularly in its relationship with the
paramilitary groups, which continue to commit most of the
human rights violations in the country," said Kirk.  The
right-wing paramilitaries are illegal private armies, that
have close ties to and receive substantial unofficial
support from the army at the local and regional levels.
While all three of these sides  -- army, guerrillas and
paramilitary groups -- are considered to be serious abusers
of human rights, the paramilitaries account for most of
Colombia's political killings.  Kirk continued, "We're
seeing an average of 3000 casualties a year, of civilians,
people who don't have anything to do directly with the
conflict, people who are teachers, or nurses, or bus
drivers, or truckers, or what have you.  We saw almost 200
massacres last year alone (massacre meaning the killing of
four people in one place at the same time).  We see rampant
impunity for the people who commit massacres or commit
violations, especially impunity for the military.  There's a
case right now, an army general who facilitated a
paramilitary massacre in 1997.  Instead of being jailed --
and he should have been -- he was promoted, and ended up in
command of one of the main divisions in the Colombian army."

The human rights violations create legal issues in US
funding as well.  US foreign counternarcotics funding is
subject to the Leahy Amendment, which requires that the aid
may only go to units that have not been implicated in human
rights abuses.  Only three of the six army units in the
southern part of Colombia, where most of the coca growing
takes place, have passed the Leahy requirements.  "So," Kirk
said, "we remain convinced that the army has to break those
ties with paramilitaries, before they can be eligible [under
Leahy] to receive an increase in US funding."  Kirk further
explained that the drug czar's proposal would be a radical
change in US policy, because for the first time a lot of the
money would go to the Colombian army, rather than the
counternarcotics police who receive most of the aid now.

Tate told the Week Online that the funding increase would be
"a tremendous waste of money, in that it's continuing the
escalation of aid for counternarcotics policies that have
proven themselves to be complete ineffective and basically a
total failure in achieving any actual counternarcotics
objectives."

Indeed, the documented failure of US anti-drug efforts in
Latin America has a history spanning decades.  From an
estimated 80,000 hectares in 1980, cultivation of coca, the
plant from which cocaine is derived, increased to over
215,000 hectares in 1989, and has fluctuated, but never gone
below 190,000 hectares ever since.  (The hectare is a unit
of land measurement from the metric system, equal to the
area of a square 100 meters on each side, or a little over 2
1/2 acres.)  Reductions in cultivation in some areas have
been subject to the "push down-pop up" effect, eliciting new
or increased cultivation elsewhere.  For example, recent
marked reductions in coca cultivation in Peru have been
canceled out by dramatic increases in cultivation in
Colombia.  (A chart showing the government estimates of
cultivation totals from 1980 to the present, for Colombia,
Bolivia and Peru, and in total, can be viewed online or
printed at <http://www.drcnet.org/wol/coca-growing.gif>.)

Report titles from the US General Accounting Office tell the
same story over and over across the years, for example:  US
Programs in Peru Face Serious Obstacles (10/91); Expanded
Military Surveillance Not Justified by Measurable Goals or
Results (10/93); Colombia is Implementing Anti-drug Efforts,
but Impact is Uncertain (10/93); Interdiction Efforts in
Central America Have Had Little Impact on the Flow of Drugs
(8/94); Drug Control: Long-Standing Problems Hinder US
International Efforts (2/97); Counternarcotics Efforts in
Colombia Face Continuing Challenges (2/98).

GAO testimony before Congress in March of last year
described the record and the current situation:  "Despite
long-standing efforts and expenditures of billions of
dollars, illegal drugs still flood the United States.
Although US counternarcotics efforts have resulted in the
arrest of major drug traffickers, the seizure of large
amounts of drugs, and the eradication of illicit drug crops,
they have not materially reduced the availability of drugs
in the United States" (see
http://www.gao.gov/AIndexFY98/abstracts/ns98116t.htm).

A press release from the Office of National Drug Control
Policy (ONDCP), dated today (7/23), states bluntly that
"over the last three years, drug control programs in the
Andes have reduced cocaine production by 29 percent."  The
figure presumably comes from data in the 1998 International
Narcotics Control Strategy report, which shows a 26 percent
decrease, or from a similar data set.  However, the authors
of the report, unlike the drug czar's office, took pains to
explain that the numbers represent potential maximum crop
yields, that they are "theoretical numbers" and subject to
much greater uncertainty than the cultivation area
estimates.  Furthermore, the numbers are based on an
assumption that Colombian coca has a lower alkaloid content
than Peruvian or Bolivian coca, and therefore a lower
cocaine production capacity; based on this assumption, the
shifting of coca cultivation from Peru to Colombia should
decrease the maximum cocaine yield, all other quantities
staying constant.  However, the ONDCP release also ignored a
GAO report issued last month which stated that "more potent
coca leaf is being grown in Colombia."  GAO estimates the
potency increase will lead to a 50 percent increase in
cocaine production in the next two years (see
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/ns99136.pdf).  Hence, ONDCP's
claimed production decrease is improbably and transitory at
best.  The report also states that there is now a "black
cocaine" coming out of Colombia, which is very difficult for
drug dogs and enforcers to detect.

Kirk explained how causing the coca cultivation to shift
from Peru to Colombia has not only been useless, but
actually harmful.  "Now there are more coca plants than ever
before, but they're in Colombia, and they're under the
control of the FARC.  And the FARC, since 1990, has been
taxing these plantations of coca, and has become
tremendously wealthy.  The cost of the drug war, then, has
included a dramatic escalation of Colombia's longstanding
civil conflict.  "In 1992, you had combat in some isolated
areas of Colombia, said Kirk.  "You had areas that were
considered controlled by one side or the other.  In 1999,
you can't go anywhere in Colombia without coming face to
face with the war.  It's throughout the country.  And in
fact, you have the whole southern part of the country under
the absolutely explicit control of the FARC."  The FARC has
been implicated in a sustained wave of kidnappings, and
recently has been holding public executions in a country
whose government has no death penalty.  "The thing about the
drug trade is that it has pumped so much money into this
war, that you have standing armies that are extremely well
equipped, that are well clothed, that are well fed, who are
able to fight indefinitely.  This war is run on the American
drug dollars, on the demand for drugs in the United States.
It's not that the war would not exist without that, but
certainly the war would not have reached the intensity that
it has."

Nevertheless, Kirk pointed out, it's not only the FARC that
is using drug money in the civil war.  "Everyone makes money
off of the drug trade in Colombia.  Paramilitaries make lots
of money.  Guerrillas make lots of money.  Colombia makes
lots of money off of the drug trade.  It's a booming
business.  And to say or to suggest that only the guerrillas
are profiting from this robust economy is ludicrous.  It's a
simplification that may sell well in the Beltway, but it has
nothing to do with reality."

Tate commented, "The real danger of Barry McCaffrey's remark
is that it completely delegitimizes the concerns and
interests of the peasant population, who live in that part
of the country."

Ian Vasquez, director of the Cato Institute's Project on
Global Economic Liberty, told the Week Online, "I think that
[drug prohibition] is one of the central issues in creating
the social breakdown that Colombia is experiencing right
now.  The guerrilla groups receive a large portion of their
estimated $700 million in income from the drug trade, which
represents profits that they would not otherwise receive, if
there were not prohibition.  So yes, it does create severe
problems for Colombia.  A large part of the country is
controlled by guerrillas, and the rest of the country
suffers from violence and corruption, which is associated
with drug policies.  In Colombia, it's gotten to the point
where it is difficult to separate the people involved in
drug trafficking and the guerrilla movement itself, so that
any involvement by the United States in trying to fight drug
trafficking in Colombia is inevitably going to be an
involvement in a counterinsurgency war.  And that's probably
something that has very little support among the US public."

Vasquez suggested that Colombia should concentrate its
efforts on the guerrilla problem, rather than on drug
trafficking.  "Once that's done, the two issues are
divorced, and one is easier to handle than the other.
Unfortunately, I think that the current drug policies
undermine the institutions of civil society in Colombia, and
those institutions obviously include the judiciary, the
legislative branch, the military, the media, and the
business sector.  All of them have been, in one way or the
other, affected by the drug war, whether it's through
corruption, or an increase in violence, or through
intimidation.  These are essential institutions that are
essential for a society to function."

The McCaffrey funding proposal is still in the talking
stages, and is expected to become the subject of
Congressional debate in the fall, as the appropriations
cycle is finalized.  Stay tuned to DRCNet for further
coverage of this issue.  Resources for further information:

Human Rights Watch backgrounder report, Human Rights and
Democracy in Latin America and the Caribbean, June 1999:
http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/americas/back0624.htm

Washington Office on Latin America's Guide for Citizen
Action on International Drug Control Policy:
http://www.wola.org/drugsguide.htm

Cato Institute: http://www.cato.org

General Accounting Office reports:
http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/GOVPUBS/gao/gaomen1.htm
and http://www.gao.gov

================

5. Florida Drug Czar Killer Fungus Plan Worries Experts

Earlier this year, DRCNet reported that Congress had given
the US Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) $23 million to research and develop fungi, or
"mycoherbicides," to wipe out illicit drug crops.  That plan
was championed by Florida Rep. Bill McCollum, who called
mycoherbicides a "silver bullet in the War on Drugs."  Now
Florida Governor Jeb Bush's "drug czar," Jim McDonough,
wants to use a strain of the fungus Fusarium oxysporum to
eradicate out the state's marijuana crop, despite warnings
from Florida's Department of Environmental Protection.

The St. Petersburg Times reported last week that DEP
Secretary David Struhs had written a letter to McDonough
which outlined his misgivings about setting the fungus loose
in Florida, noting among other things that "It is difficult,
if not impossible, to control the spread of Fusarium
species" and keep it from attacking other crops.  But when
McDonough's office asked for the DEP's support in testing
the fungus on quarantined state Department of Agriculture
lands, Struhs signed on.  DEP spokesman Jerry Brooks told
DRCNet, "We told McDonough's office that we definitely feel
like this can be safely researched in quarantined
facilities, and that our concerns can be addressed in the
research procedure."

Asked whether the DEP would monitor the research, Brooks
said no.  "It was really kind  of a bizarre thing for us to
be involved in -- drug policy is not really part of our
job," he said.  "I think it was a good thing that the
Governor's office recognized the need to make sure that
everybody's concerns were addressed.  But quite honestly, we
just raised the concerns that we thought might need to
addressed, and I think now, the real experts need to be the
ones that are involved."

It is not entirely clear, at this point, just who those
experts will be.  Florida Department of Agriculture
spokesman Terence McElroy told DRCNet that while that agency
had agreed to give the Office of Drug Control use of its
testing facilities on quarantined land in Gainesville, it
had no plans to oversee the project.  "We will provide the
facility, and if they need some technical assistance I'm
sure we'd be happy to do that," McElroy said.  "But as I
understand it, it's the Governor's drug policy office who's
primarily interested in this, and I would think they would
want to retain some control over it."

DRCNet spoke with Jeremy Bigwood, a mycologist who has
studied a fusarium outbreak that has destroyed thousands of
hectares of coca plants in Peru.  He said that even careful
laboratory study cannot guarantee how a fungus will behave
in the wild.  "The problem with those test patches is that
oftentimes things go very well.  But outside the lab, things
may go very wrong," he said.  "I think it's a very bad idea,
in short."

Bigwood provided DRCNet with excerpts from his own research
on fusarium oxysporum, including excerpts from ARS reports
which suggest that toxins derived from fusarium oxysporum
may be deadly to humans and other animals, not just plants
[ARS #59895, May 9, 1995].  In fact, the fusarium genus also
produces Fusariotoxin, or mycotoxin T-2, classified by NATO
as a biological warfare agent.  Bigwood's research stresses
that "Fusarium's toxicity to humans and mammals depends on
several factors including local environment... the
concentration of the application, as well as the strain of
fungus being applied."  However, it also notes that
"laboratory experiments have shown that fungi can produce
varying amounts of chemically different toxins... and it is
not unlikely that under certain conditions other novel
toxins can be produced by Fusarium oxysporum."

Of course, even if this mycoherbicide could be proven safe
for humans and other animals, and to work only against
marijuana, there is no evidence that once it is on the
loose, the fungus would recognize the limits of the state
border.  Moreover, an ARS spokeswoman told DRCNet in January
that it was unlikely that a strain of Fusarium that killed
marijuana plants would not destroy industrial hemp plants as
well.

The best place to learn about Jim McDonough's plan is from
the Office of Drug Control itself, but they're not talking -
- to us, anyway.  McDonough's spokesman, Tim Bottcher,
returned DRCNet's call only to say that his office had
"decided not to comment" on this story.  When pressed for a
reason, he told us that, "Well, we're aware that your
organization favors the reformation of drug laws, and we're
against that."

DRCNet will continue to monitor this story.

DRCNet's earlier coverage of mycoherbicides is online at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/076.html#fungi>.

On Tuesday (7/20), the St. Petersburg Times editorialized
against McDonough's plan.  The editorial is online at
<http://www.sptimes.com/Archive/072099/Opinion.shtml>.
Particularly if you live in Florida, please consider writing
a letter to the editor encouraging the media to continue
their careful investigation of this story.  Letters to the
editor can be e-mailed to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Other major newspapers in Florida can be e-mailed as well:
The Orlando Sentinel, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Tampa Tribune, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Miami Herald, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Governor Bush's Office of Drug Control has a web site at
<http://fcn.state.fl.us/eog/drug/control.html>.  Their
public information staff can be reached at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

================

6. Speaker Lashes Out at Drug War at Mormon Symposium

Dr. Steve Epperson, program coordinator of the Utah
Humanities Council, and a former curator at the Latter Day
Saints Church History and Art Museum, and former assistant
professor of history at Brigham Young University, on
Thursday (7/15) told attendees of the Sunstone Symposium in
Salt Lake City, Utah that the drug war is a "catastrophic
moral failure."

Urging all religious communities to "call this nation and
its leaders to their senses," Dr. Epperson characterized the
drug war as racist, class-biased, corrupting, contemptuous
of basic civil rights and detrimental to the health and
education of all citizens.

There is a "significant difference" said Dr. Epperson,
"between opposing drug use on spiritual and ethical grounds
and uncritically supporting a failed public policy."

The Sunstone Symposium is an annual event which features
commentary and critique of LDS doctrine and ideas, primarily
from within the church.

NOTE:  Dr. Epperson is on vacation this week and was
unavailable to speak with The Week Online.

You can visit the web site of the Utah Humanities Council at
<http://www.utahhumanities.org>.

The Salt Lake City Tribune published an editorial last month
critical of the drug war, archived online at
<http://utahonline.sltrib.com/1999/jun/06251999/opinion/opinion.htm>.

================

7. News Briefs

Jane Tseng, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 * On Saturday (7/17), Alton Fitzgerald White, star of the
Broadway musical "Ragtime," announced that he is considering
filing suit against the New York City police.  White was
wrongfully arrested outside of his Harlem apartment
building, strip-searched, and detained for five hours on
Friday after the police got a report of drug dealing in the
building.  White said he suspects that he and the three men
he was walking with were picked out because they are black.
White's detention caused him to miss that evening's
performance of "Ragtime", in which he plays a black man who
is accosted by a racist fireman in turn-of-the-century New
York.

 * On Friday (7/16), a Dutch court convicted the former
Surinam President Desi Bouterse of heading a cocaine
smuggling ring in South America.  The court sentenced
Bouterse to 16 years in jail and a $2.3 million fine.
Bouterse was convicted in absentia and remains at large and
politically powerful in the former Dutch colony.
Authorities claim that Bouterse headed the shipment of
around $24 million worth of drugs from South America to the
Netherlands.

 * A Calgary father expressed outrage after Tac-Team
officers raided a city home next to a daycare center where
his two year old daughter was playing outside.  Tim Florence
said that all the children at Jan-Pat Dayhomes were visibly
shaken and that the police should have notified the center
of the raid so that the children could have been taken
inside.  The police said that it was not possible to notify
the public of such situations.  One officer suggested that
some members of the team could go to the center and talk to
the children to explain what they had seen.  All of the
children are under 5 years old.

 * A man in California, sentenced under the "three strikes"
law to 25 years to life in prison for breaking into a church
to steal food lost his appeal this week.  Gregory Taylor is
currently being held in the same prison that housed mass
murderers such as Charles Mason.  The one dissenting judge
on the three judge panel that heard Taylor's appeal compared
The case to that of the character Jean Valjean in the Victor
Hugo novel Les Miserables who was imprisoned for stealing
bread.

Voters in California approved the "three strikes" law in
1994 after the highly publicized kidnapping and murder of
12-year old Polly Klaas by a paroled felon.  "Three strikes"
was intended to reduce crime by keeping repeat felons off
the streets.  The law requires a 25 years to life sentence
for individuals convicted of a third felony after committing
two "serious or violent" felonies.  The mandatory sentence
does not allow the judges to exercise their own discretion
and evaluate each case on a personal basis.  Aware that the
law would produce just this type of injustice, Polly Klaas'
family campaigned vigorously against the law prior to its
passage.

Taylor's previous convictions consisted of a purse-snatching
in 1984 and an attempted street robbery in 1985.  He served
less than two years in jail for both offenses combined.
Seven years after his second felony, Taylor was convicted of
cocaine possession and violated the terms of his parole when
he failed to show up for a drug test.

In July 1997, Taylor was caught breaking into the back door
of a church in July 1997.  He was convicted of attempted
robbery and sentenced under the "three strikes" law.  Taylor
appealed the conviction but it was upheld.  The California
Supreme court has not decided whether it will consider his
case.  Without the "three strikes" law, Taylor would be
sentenced to no more than three years in prison.  "The law
was designed for repeat felons, not repeat nuisances.  The
punishment doesn't fit the crime," said Los Angeles County
deputy public defender Alex Ricciardulli.  Taylor, now 37
years old, will not be eligible for parole until he is 60.

================

8. EDITORIAL:  And The Winner Is...

Adam J. Smith, Associate Director, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

This week the nation holds its breath as it waits to hear
the results of Election Day, 1998.  What is that you say?
The election was held more than 250 days ago!  True.  But
while most of the nation learned the results of the races
that they voted in on Election Night, the citizens of
Washington, DC, capital of the free world, have been
prevented by law from hearing whether or not they and their
neighbors passed or defeated initiative 59, which would make
it legal for sick and dying DC residents to use marijuana
with a doctor's recommendation.

Prevented by law?  Yes.  Thanks in large measure to Rep. Bob
Barr (R-GA), who added a rider to last year's DC
Appropriations Bill forbidding the District from spending
any money to count or certify the results of any initiative
which would reduce penalties for the use or possession of
marijuana.  The DC Board of Elections reluctantly followed
the law, and has yet to spend the estimated $1.64 that it
would cost to tally and print out the results by computer.

ACTUP DC, a sponsor of the initiative, and the ACLU, brought
the issue to federal court right after the election,
claiming that it is unconstitutional to bar Americans from
learning the results of a free election in which they had
taken part.  The suit further claims that passing a law to
prevent Americans from voting a certain way -- the amendment
does not prevent an initiative on increasing penalties for
the use of medicinal marijuana, for instance -- is also
unconstitutional.  Strangely, no decision has been handed
down.

But this week, Representative Barr and his duly elected
confederacy of anti-democracy dunces failed to get a similar
amendment attached to the new appropriations measure in
committee.  Without such a renewal, the results will be
counted -- with or without a decision of the court -- on
October 1, the beginning of the new fiscal year.

There is little risk that the medical marijuana law will
ever go into effect, of course, as Congress has thirty
working days after certification to simply overturn any
initiative passed by the voters of the District of Columbia.
This fight then, is not over whether AIDS and cancer
patients who have the additional misfortune of living in the
capital of our great nation will be able to find relief
without risking getting thrown in jail -- hint: they won't -
- but whether or not the people of the District will have
their voices heard, before they are ignored.

Exit polls show that the people of the District of Colombia
voted in favor of initiative 59 by an overwhelming majority.
National polls show that Americans on the whole favor access
to marijuana for seriously ill and dying patients as well.
The existence of Bob Barr, who in addition to being
responsible for the first suppression of election results in
American history, also recently suggested that those
advocating drug policy reform should be criminally
prosecuted, shows that just because a person is elected to
Congress, doesn't mean that they have even the slightest
conception of the principles on which the nation was
founded.

Let us hope that the DC Appropriations bill gets final
approval this week unencumbered by the anti-American Barr
Amendment.  There is really nothing to fear, as our elected
leaders will most certainly insure that even if the
initiative passed, not a single whining, pothead, good-for-
nothing, wanna-get-high 73 lbs. AIDS patient will be able to
use his or her condition as a convenient excuse to avoid
criminal prosecution under our drug laws.  Heaven forbid.
No, they'll still have to force down food through waves of
nausea, or face prosecution, just like Congress wants them
to.  It's just that on October 1, after almost a year of
waiting for Congressional leave to spend $1.64 of tax money,
it will be nice to finally put Election Night 1998 to bed.

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