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Marijuana: The History & The Mystery By Stuart B. Hoffman, M.D., F.A.C.P. Abraham J. Hammell, D.O.

Marijuana: The History & The Mystery By Stuart B. Hoffman, M.D., F.A.C.P. Abraham J. Hammell, D.O. Background. Cannabis is a genus of flowering plants that include 3 species: Cannabis Sativa - from China Cannabis Indica - from India Cannabis Ruderalis - from Russia. Background.

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Marijuana: The History & The Mystery By Stuart B. Hoffman, M.D., F.A.C.P. Abraham J. Hammell, D.O.

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  1. Marijuana: The History & The Mystery By Stuart B. Hoffman, M.D., F.A.C.P.Abraham J. Hammell, D.O.

  2. Background Cannabis is a genus of flowering plants that include 3 species: Cannabis Sativa - from China Cannabis Indica- from India Cannabis Ruderalis - from Russia

  3. Background All 3 species have been used for centuries to produce fiber from the stalks (hemp), seeds & seed oils for medicinal purposes, and as a recreational drug. All 3 species contain similar concentrations of the psychoactive ingredient Δ9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). All 3 species have been selectively bred for various purposes. Plants used for industrial hemp have a high fiber content & relatively little THC; whereas plants bred for recreational use have a high concentration of THC.

  4. Typical THC Concentrations Street Joint – 1.0 to 5.0% All parts of the cannabis plant. Thai Sticks – 1.0 to 7.0% Marijuana leaves tied around a stem or a narrow bamboo splint. Hashish – 2 to 8% The sticky pollen of the female cannabis plant. Sinsemilla – 7 to 14% The flowering tops of the unfertilized female cannabis plant. Hash Oil - 15 to 50% An extract of the active ingredients of hashish. Very high concentration of THC. Hemp Plant – 0.05 to 0.3% Stalks.

  5. More Details Both male & female cannabis plants produce flowers. The male flowers develop buds which open to release pollen to fertilize the flowers of the female plant. Fertilized female flowers then develop seeds to produce new plants. Fertilized female flowers producing seeds require most of the plant’s energy and very little THC is formed in these plants. Unfertilized female plants generate increased production of THC throughout all parts of the plant - particularly the flowers (sinsemilla).

  6. Male cannabis plant

  7. Female cannabis plant

  8. Early female cannabis plant

  9. Flowering The female flowers will start to form kolas around the branch junctions with a main one at the growing tip of the plants.

  10. Getting ready to harvest As the flowers become ready for harvest the pistils will darken and the seed pods will be swollen and sticky with resin and THC trichomes.

  11. How they grow Cannabis growers keep male and female plants separated to prevent pollination and thus increase THC concentration. Most cannabis plants growing in the wild have been cross pollinated many times and have a very low THC concentration. These plants grow freely all over North America. They are commonly found in roadside ditches and are called “ditchweed”. Ditchweeds are the descendants of the cannabis hemp grown on the hemp plantations. Ditchweed looks exactly like the cannabis plants bred either for hemp or THC.

  12. Sourcebook of criminal justice statisticshttp://www.albany.edu/sourcebook/pdf/t4382011.pdf Table 4.38.2011 Number of marijuana plants eradicated and seized, arrests made, weapons seized, and value of assets seized Under the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program, by State, 2011a aDetail may not add to total because of rounding. bMay include tended ditchweed, a type of marijuana that grows wild. Source: Table adapted by SOURCEBOOK staff from table provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Administration. Note: These data were collected by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in conjunction with the Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program. This program is a joint Federal and State effort in which the DEA contributes funding, training, equipment, investigate, and aircraft resources to the participating States in the effort to eradicate domestically cultivated marijuana.

  13. Ancient History 600 B.C.: First used as a psychoactive drug –in China. - Generally disdained – never became popular. -Alcohol and Opium were the big problems. 105 A.D.: Invention of hemp paper in China. - Kept secret until: 9th century A.D.: Arabs learn how to make hemp paper and spread it to Spain in the 12th century. 13th century A.D.: All of Europe learns how to make hemp paper.

  14. History continued 1716-1769: - Farmers could be jailed for not growing hemp in Virginia during times of shortage. - Hemp was used as currency. - You could pay your taxes with hemp. DO NOT TRY THIS TODAY! Late 1700’s: - Cannabis hemp was George Washington’s primary crop at Mount Vernon. - Cannabis hemp was Thomas Jefferson’s secondary crop at Monticello. - Benjamin Franklin founded the first hemp paper company in the colonies.

  15. Fast Forward to 1914 1914: Harrison narcotics act passed. - 1st federal law to regulate opiates & cocaine. - Coordinated and superseded all narcotics laws. - Basically a tax law*. - Imposed a tax and regulated all forms of commerce for these substances. *Courts had consistently ruled that the Federal government did not have the constitutional power to regulate. - Local Affairs. - Medical Practice. - Pharmacies. -Drugs. -Alcohol. 10th amendment gave these rights exclusively to the states.

  16. Details To get around the courts, congress made it a tax law “as a revenue requirement of the federal government”. “All persons or entities who dispense, produce, manufacture, import, compound, sell, distribute, barter, or give away: opium, coca leaves, their salts, derivatives or preparations must register with the Department of the Treasury.”

  17. More details Marijuana was not included in this law. Marijuana was a minimal problem in the U.S. – general public was barely aware of it and cared less. 1919: 18th amendment to the constitution – prohibited distribution and sale of “intoxicating liquors”: -Did not: • Define “intoxicating liquors”. • Prohibit alcohol consumption. • Did not provide any penalties for violations.

  18. 1919: Volstead act passed to define “intoxicating liquors” and provided penalties for violations. • No effect on middle & upper classes. • Criminal gangs took over the liquor business. • Violence, bribery, public official corruption. • Loosening of the social mores in the 1920’s. • Cocktail parties. • Speakeasies. • Bootlegging. Considered socially acceptable and romantically dangerous. Adverse effects of prohibition were so obvious, that in 1933 the states ratified the 21st amendment to the constitution – which repealed the 18th amendment.

  19. 1920’s The period from 1919 to 1937 determined the course of federal marijuana legislation in the United States. 1927: Each state had passed its own laws controlling and regulating opiates & cocaine. • Wide variations in definitions, controls, oversight, penalties, and enforcement. • Recognized need for uniform national law to control these drugs.

  20. 1930’s Oct. 8, 1932: Uniform narcotic drug act passed • Required all state laws to conform to a single federal law for opiates & cocaine. • Marijuana provisions were optional supplements to the act. • Any state wishing to regulate the sale and possession of marijuana was instructed to simply add cannabis to the definition of “narcotic drugs”, and then all provisions of the act would apply to marijuana as well as to opiates & cocaine.

  21. Definitions Narcotic from Greek, “narkos” A drug that in moderate doses dulls the senses, relieves pain and induces profound sleep. In excessive doses causes stupor, coma, depressed respiration and death. • E.g.: • Opium • Morphine • Dilaudid • A medical definition With the inclusion of cocaine in the 1914 Harrison Narcotic act, law enforcement, the courts, media, and common usage included cocaine as a “narcotic” - - even though it does just the opposite of a true narcotic - - - it is a central nervous system stimulant.

  22. Definitions continued With the inclusion of marijuana in the 1932 uniform narcotic drug act; law enforcement, the courts, media, and common usage again expanded to include marijuana as a “narcotic”, although its medical classification is a euphoric. Today the term “narcotic” is loosely applied by the nonmedical community to almost all illicit drugs.

  23. Prior to the Uniform Narcotics Drug Act of 1932 there was no federal law regarding marijuana. By 1937, 35 of the 48 states opted to include marijuana into the act. Every other state had their own marijuana laws. The law limited use of opiates, cocaine & marijuana to “legitimate medical purposes”.

  24. 6 powerful, cultural, economic, & industrial forces that shaped marijuana legislation • The general public • Andrew Mellon • Harry Anslinger • William Randolph Hearst • DuPont Chemical Corporation • The hemp industry

  25. General Public Marijuana use in the U.S. – minimal in the 1930’s. Public not concerned nor interested. After the prohibition failure – no public appetite for any form of federal government regulation of drugs or alcohol.

  26. Andrew Mellon Richest man in America – founded Gulf Oil, Union Steel, Alcoa, & Bank of New York. Much of the family’s fortune was invested in DuPont Chemical Corporation. Appointed Secretary of the Treasury by President Harding.

  27. Harry Anslinger • Railroad policeman – worked for many different police & military units all over the world from 1917-1928. • Focused on stopping international opium traffic. • Widely recognized as honest, incorruptible, and ambitious • Married Andrew Mellon’s niece in 1930. • Appointed by President Hoover as the first commissioner of the federal bureau of narcotics – a division of the treasury department – run by his wife’s uncle, Andrew Mellon. • Served under 5 presidents: Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, & Kennedy. • Worked ceaselessly to bring marijuana under federal control.

  28. William Randolph Hearst • Newspaper tycoon. • Owned enormous timber acreage. • Used his timber to make wood pulp for his paper manufacturing business, whose biggest customer was his newspaper chain. • Hemp decorticator made hemp paper cheaper than wood pulp paper. • Threatened to drive Hearst’s papermaking company out of business and severely decrease the value of his timberland. • Openly bigoted and racist – hated: Mexicans, blacks, Orientals, Jews, and poor people. • Felt that drugs & alcohol turned all these minorities into violent criminals.

  29. Hemp Industry Vital, major worldwide industry from colonial times to 1930’s. First Bibles, most maps, charts, books, Betsy Ross’ flag, first draft of Declaration of Independence and the Constitution – all on hemp paper or hemp cloth. Paintings of Rembrandt, Van Gogh, and Gainsborough were on hemp linen/canvas and they used hemp oil-based paints. Rudolph Diesel invented his diesel engine to run on hemp oil. 1916 U.S. government predicted that by 1940 all paper would come from hemp, and no more trees would need to be cut down. Most lacquer, paint, varnish, solvents and textiles came from hemp.

  30. 1935 • Hemp decorticator invented – revolutionized the industry • 1 acre of hemp produced as much paper as 4 acres of trees. • Hemp paper better quality than wood paper. • Harvest 1 acre hemp in 1 hour. • Harvest 1 acre cotton in 2 hours. • Hemp fiber twice as strong as cotton. • Hemp could take over many competing industries.

  31. DuPont Chemical Corporation Patented a sulfuric acid process to produce wood pulp paper. Company records: 80% of DuPont’s railroad car loadings were wood-pulp products. Patented nylon – hemp was its chief competitor. Patented rayon – hemp was superior, stronger and cheaper.

  32. Legislation Once the narcotic drug act was passed, Harry Anslinger realized the way to get federal control of marijuana was through a tax law. He also knew that in order to do this he would have to eradicate the U.S. hemp industry. He found willing allies in William Randolph Hearst & the DuPont Chemical Corporation.

  33. 1932 Treasury Department began crafting a bill to gain federal control of marijuana. Disguised as a tax revenue bill to get it past congress and the courts. Drafted by Harry Anslinger and Herman Oliphant, general counsel for the treasury department.

  34. 1932 – 1937 • A 5-year media campaign to alarm the American public and Congress about the dangers of marijuana and its threat to our country. • Hearst newspapers • Sensationalism • Screaming headlines • Horror stories • Marijuana blamed for murderous rampages and rapes by blacks and Mexicans. • This melodrama, outright exaggeration and false claims came to be known as “yellow journalism” after a popular cartoon character in Hearst’s newspapers – called “The Yellow Kid”.

  35. 1932 – 1937 , cont. • Radio spots blanketed the airwaves from 1932-1937. A typical example: • “By the tons it is coming into this country – the deadly, dreadful poison that racks and tears not only the body, but the very heart and soul of every human being who becomes a slave to it in any of its cruel and devastating forms….Marijuana is a short cut to the insane asylum. Smoke marijuana cigarettes for a month and what was once your brain will be nothing but a storehouse of horrid specters. Hashish makes a murderer, who kills for the love of killing, out of the mildest mannered man who ever laughed at the idea that any habit could ever get him….”

  36. 1937 The Marijuana Tax Act was presented to the House Ways and Means Committee, chaired by Robert Doughton of North Carolina. His election campaign had been largely financed by DuPont Chemical Corporation. This bypassed further hearings, and it went to the Senate Finance Committee, chaired by another DuPont ally, Senator Prentiss Brown of Michigan, where it was rubber stamped unchanged and sent back to Congress for a vote. The bill was opposed by the American Medical Association – THC had medicinal value and should be studied – and by the ABA – who said provisions of the Marijuana Tax Act were unconstitutional. The bill passed both houses of Congress with no debate.

  37. The Marijuana Tax Act • Required anyone who imported, produced, distributed or sold any part of the cannabis plant (including hemp) to: • Register with the I.R.S. for licensing. • Pay a transfer tax of $1/oz/transaction if not registered. • File a written order form with the I.R.S. for every transaction. • Possession of cannabis without this written order form was considered presumptive evidence of non-compliance with the Act, punishable by a fine of no more than $2,000 for each violation &/or a prison term of no more than 5 years. • The law was to be enforced by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, under Commissioner Harry Anslinger.

  38. Samuel R. Caldwell (February 11, 1880 – June 24, 1941) Samuel R. Caldwell was the first person convicted of possession of marijuana under the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, according to federal files. He was fined $1,000 and sentenced to four years of hard labor in Leavenworth for the two marijuana cigarettes that were found in his possession.

  39. 1937 Legislation The Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 destroyed the hemp industry in the United States. “The power to tax is the power to destroy” – John Marshall, former Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. DuPont’s 1937 annual report to the stock holders: “radical changes from the revenue raising powers of the government will be converted into instruments for forcing acceptance of new ideas of industrial and social reorganization”.

  40. 1941 – 1945 From 1937 forward: heightened awareness and fear of marijuana among the public and Congress due to the campaigns of Harry Anslinger & William Randolph Hearst. Marijuana was not popular in the U.S. until after World War II. Japanese cut off our supplies of hemp from the Philippines. War effort was hampered by severe shortages. Marijuana Tax Act was temporarily lifted. U.S. Congress and Department of Agriculture – campaign: “Hemp for Victory” – farmers subsidized to grow hemp. Deferred military service for fathers & sons if they grew hemp.

  41. 1940’s and 1950’s • 1943: • The U.S. was producing 350,000 tons of hemp per year. • After the war, the Tax Act was resumed and cannabis hemp again became “a dangerous drug”. • 1951: • Marijuana becoming a popular drug in the U.S. • Congress passed the Boggs Act. • Much harsher penalties. • Marijuana, opiates, & cocaine all treated the same.

  42. Boggs Act • Mandatory sentencing rules: • 1st offense 2-5 years • 2nd offense 5-10 years • 3rd offense 10-20 years • Removed judicial discretion for 2nd and 3rd offenses. • Sentence could not be suspended nor could parole be granted.

  43. 1951 -1956 Federal Bureau of Narcotics actively urged states to adopt laws like the Boggs Act – to increase state law enforcement activity. By 1956, over half the states had a “Little Boggs Act”.

  44. 1956 As marijuana use increased, the government increased the penalties. • 1956: Narcotic Control Act • Potential fine for all THC offenses $20,000. • Mandatory prison sentence for possession or IRS registration violation. • 2-5-10 years for successive offenses • No distinction between users & traffickers • Any sale or transfer of marijuana by an adult to a minor – minimum 10 year sentence. • Customs & Narcotics Bureau agents authorized to carry weapons and make arrests on reasonable suspicion. • Amended immigration and Nationality Act to provide for deportation of alien drug users & suppliers.

  45. The Single Convention • 1961: International Treaty Convention • Prohibited production and supply of “narcotics” except for medical and research purposes. • Updated treaties to include new synthetic opiates and a mechanism for including future new drugs. • Developed the concept of drug schedules. • Included cannabis for the 1st time. • The basis for the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970. • Signed by 180 nations. • Not self-executing – nations had to pass laws to carry out its provisions.

  46. 1969: Leary v. United States395 U.S. 6 (1969) U.S. Supreme Court case dealing with the constitutionality of the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937. 1965, Timothy Leary arrested, convicted and sentenced to 30 years in jail – 3 joints & marijuana in a snuff box. Unanimous Supreme Court decision: Marijuana Tax Act is unconstitutional. Leary’s conviction was overturned.

  47. 1969 • 1969: Congress repeals the Marijuana Tax Act. • Oct. 27, 1970: • Congress passes the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970. • The Controlled Substance Act is part of the above Act. • The legal foundation of the government’s fight against abuse of drugs & other substances. • Provides control mechanisms. • Provides schedules. • Provides for adding drugs, decontrolling drugs, moving from 1 schedule to another. • All under Title II of the Comprehensive Act.

  48. 1970’s • 1972: Drug Abuse Treatment Act • Federally funded programs for prevention & treatment of drug abuse. • 1973: Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD) was revamped and merged into the newly formed Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in the Department of Justice.

  49. Drug Enforcement AdministrationDepartment of Justice1973 U.S. Customs Service (Drug Investigations)Department of the Treasury Office of Drug Abuse Law EnforcementDepartment of Justice Office of National Narcotics IntelligenceDepartment of Justice Narcotics Advance Research Management TeamExecutive Office of the President Bureau of Narcotics & Dangerous DrugsDepartment of Justice1968-1973 Bureau of NarcoticsDepartment of the Treasury1930-1968 Bureau of Drug Abuse ControlFood & Drug AdministrationDepartment of Health, Education & Welfare1966-1968 Bureau of ProhibitionDepartment of the Treasury1927-1930 Bureau of Internal RevenueDepartment of the Treasury1915-1927

  50. What Happened • 1953-1979: • Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) • Cabinet level department. • National Institute of Mental Health. • National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. • National Institute on Drug Abuse. • Became SAMHSA by an Act of July 12, 1992. • 1979: • Education shifted out of H.E.W. and H.E.W was renamed: Department of Health and Human Services (H.H.S.).

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