News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: New Federal Report Contradicts Drug Czar's Claims |
Title: | US: Web: New Federal Report Contradicts Drug Czar's Claims |
Published On: | 2004-08-27 |
Source: | DrugSense Weekly |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 01:33:25 |
NEW FEDERAL REPORT CONTRADICTS DRUG CZAR'S CLAIMS
A newly released federal report refutes claims by US Drug Czar John Walters
that the United States is being inundated with Canadian pot, that the
drug's potency is dramatically rising, and that marijuana poses a greater
public health threat than heroin or cocaine.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice report, "National Drug Threat
Assessment 2004," the overwhelming majority of commercial grade marijuana
consumed in the U.S. comes from California and Mexico. The report further
adds that Hawaii, not Canada, is the US' "leading source of high potency
marijuana." The report estimated that between 10,000 and 24,000 metric tons
of marijuana is available in the US.
In recent months, Walters has testified that the U.S. marijuana market is
being inundated with high potency cannabis from British Columbia, dubbing
it the "crack of marijuana." Most recently, Walters has claimed that this
influx of Canadian pot is directly responsible for sending rising numbers
of Americans to the emergency room.
According to the DOJ report, however, increased mentions of marijuana
during emergency room visits "in recent years have not been significant,"
and account for less than ten percent of all drug mentions. The report
further stated that the average THC content of U.S. commercial grade
marijuana is around five percent, despite claims by Walters that today's
marijuana potency levels are "10 to 20 times stronger" than they were a
generation ago.
Authors of the report note that despite federal and state anti-drug
efforts, marijuana remains "widely available" in the United States, with
"98.2 percent of state and local law enforcement agencies nationwide
[describing] marijuana availability as high or moderate." Nevertheless,
only 13 percent of state and local law enforcement agencies identified
marijuana as "their greatest drug threat," and less than five percent
identified pot as "the drug most contributing to violent crime in their areas."
The release of the DOJ report came on the eve of an announcement from the
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy that the administration
plans "to shift some of the focus in research and enforcement from 'hard'
drugs such as cocaine and heroin to marijuana."
Copies of the report are available online at:
http://www.usdoj.gov/ndic/pubs8/8731/
For more information about NORML, see http://www.norml.org/
A newly released federal report refutes claims by US Drug Czar John Walters
that the United States is being inundated with Canadian pot, that the
drug's potency is dramatically rising, and that marijuana poses a greater
public health threat than heroin or cocaine.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice report, "National Drug Threat
Assessment 2004," the overwhelming majority of commercial grade marijuana
consumed in the U.S. comes from California and Mexico. The report further
adds that Hawaii, not Canada, is the US' "leading source of high potency
marijuana." The report estimated that between 10,000 and 24,000 metric tons
of marijuana is available in the US.
In recent months, Walters has testified that the U.S. marijuana market is
being inundated with high potency cannabis from British Columbia, dubbing
it the "crack of marijuana." Most recently, Walters has claimed that this
influx of Canadian pot is directly responsible for sending rising numbers
of Americans to the emergency room.
According to the DOJ report, however, increased mentions of marijuana
during emergency room visits "in recent years have not been significant,"
and account for less than ten percent of all drug mentions. The report
further stated that the average THC content of U.S. commercial grade
marijuana is around five percent, despite claims by Walters that today's
marijuana potency levels are "10 to 20 times stronger" than they were a
generation ago.
Authors of the report note that despite federal and state anti-drug
efforts, marijuana remains "widely available" in the United States, with
"98.2 percent of state and local law enforcement agencies nationwide
[describing] marijuana availability as high or moderate." Nevertheless,
only 13 percent of state and local law enforcement agencies identified
marijuana as "their greatest drug threat," and less than five percent
identified pot as "the drug most contributing to violent crime in their areas."
The release of the DOJ report came on the eve of an announcement from the
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy that the administration
plans "to shift some of the focus in research and enforcement from 'hard'
drugs such as cocaine and heroin to marijuana."
Copies of the report are available online at:
http://www.usdoj.gov/ndic/pubs8/8731/
For more information about NORML, see http://www.norml.org/
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