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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Let The Ayahuasca Flow
Title:US: Let The Ayahuasca Flow
Published On:2004-12-31
Source:Austin Chronicle (TX)
Fetched On:2008-01-17 04:41:23
LET THE AYAHUASCA FLOW

Federal drug warriors took a hit on Dec. 8 when the full U.S. Supreme Court
voted to lift a temporary stay that Justice Stephen Breyer had granted
against the U.S. branch of the Brazilian Union of the Vegetable Beneficent
Spiritist Center (or, in Portuguese, the Uniao do Vegetal or UDV)
congregation based in Santa Fe, N.M. The court relief means that for the
first time in six years UDV church members will be able to use ayahuasca, a
hallucinogenic substance derived from the Amazonian vine Banisteriopsis
caapi, which church members take as sacrament.

In 1998, fed narcos raided the Santa Fe church -- one of three branches of
the Amazonian Santo Daime faith -- and seized 30 gallons of ayahuasca tea,
which they assert they had the right to seize since it contains
diemethyltryptamine or DMT, which the feds regulate under the Controlled
Substances Act. The head of the UDV's U.S. branch, Seagram's whisky heir
Jeffrey Bronfman, cried foul and sued. His church's use of the drug is akin
to the legal use of peyote by members of the Native American Church, he
argues, and so far the courts have agreed. The feds have lost their case
against the UDV twice -- in federal district court and then on appeal
before a three-judge panel of the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals --
before asking Breyer to impose a stay pending a review of the case by the
full bench of the Denver-based 10th Circuit. That stay has now been lifted,
meaning the ayahuasca will flow while the appeals court reviews the
government's request.
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