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Social
and Cultural Analyses
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The Consumers Union
Report on Licit and Illicit Drugs
by Edward
M. Brecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports Magazine, 1972
Part VIII -
Marijuana and Hashish
55. Marijuana and
alcohol prohibition
It was a change
in the laws rather than a change in the drug or in human nature that
stimulated the large-scale marketing of marijuana for recreational use
in the United States. Not until the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead
Act of 1920 raised the price of alcoholic beverages and made them less
convenient to secure and inferior in quality did a substantial commercial
trade in marijuana for recreational use spring up.
Evidence for such
a trade comes from New York City, where marijuana "tea pads"
were established about 1920. They resembled opium dens or speakeasies
except that prices were very low; a man could get high for a quarter
on marijuana smoked in the pad, or for even less if he bought the marijuana
at the door and took it away to smoke. Most of the marijuana, it was
said, was harvested from supplies growing wild on Staten Island or in
New Jersey and other nearby states; marijuana and hashish imported from
North Africa were more potent and cost more. These tea pads were tolerated
by the city, much as alcohol speakeasies were tolerated. By the 1930s
there were said to be 500 of them in New York City alone. 1
In 1926 the New
Orleans Item and Morning Tribune, two newspapers under
common ownership, published highly sensational exposés of the
"menace" of marijuana. 2
They reported that it was coming into New Orleans from Havana, Tampico,
and Vera Cruz in large quantities, plus smaller amounts from Texas.
"In one day, ten sailors were followed from the time they left
their ships until they delivered their respective packages of the drug
to a particular block in the Vieux Carre." 3
The sailors, it was said, bought marijuana in the Mexican ports for
$10 or $12 per kilogram (2.2 pounds) and sold it in the Vieux Carré
for $35 to $50. 4 This was far
more profitable than smuggling a comparable weight of whiskey.
Much of the smuggled
marijuana was smoked in New Orleans; but some, it was said, was shipped
up the Mississippi and "found its way as far north as Cleveland,
Ohio, where a well-known physician said it was smoked in one of the
exclusive men's clubs." 5
In New Orleans,
the reporters in 1926 laid particular stress on the smoking of marijuana
by children. "It was definitely ascertained that school children
of 44 schools (only a few of these were high schools) were smoking 'mootas.'
Verifications came in by the hundreds from harassed parents, teachers,
neighborhood pastors, priests, welfare workers and club women.... The
Waif's Home, at this time, was reputedly full of children, both white
and colored, who had been brought in under the influence of the drug.
Marijuana cigarettes could be bought almost as readily as sandwiches.
Their cost was two for a quarter. The children solved the problem of
cost by pooling pennies among the members of a group and then passing
the cigarettes from one to another, all the puffs being carefully counted."
6
A Louisiana law
passed in 1927, after the newspaper exposé, provided a maximum
penalty of a $500 fine or six months' imprisonment for possession or
sale of marijuana. * 7 There
followed "a wholesale arrest of more than 150 persons. Approximately
one hundred underworld dives, soft drink establishments, night clubs,
grocery stores, and private homes were searched in the police raids.
Addicts, hardened criminals, gangsters, women of the streets, sailors
of all nationalities, bootleggers, boys and girls many flashily
dressed in silks and furs, others in working clothes all were rounded
up in the net which Captain Smith and his squad had set." 8
* The penalties
were later escalated to include thirty years at hard labor or the
death sentence for sale of marijuana to anyone under twenty-one
years of age (first offense). We have found no record, however,
of the actual imposition of the death sentence in a United States
marijuana case.
The newspaper investigation,
the new law, and the heavily publicized police roundups did not, however,
accomplish their purpose. On the contrary, according to Commissioner
of Public Safety Frank Gomila, during the next few years New Orleans
"experienced a crime wave which unquestionably was greatly aggravated
by the influence of this drug habit. Payroll and bank guards were doubled,
but this did not prevent some of the most spectacular hold-ups in the
history of the city. Youngsters known to be 'muggle-heads' fortified
themselves with the narcotic and proceeded to shoot down police, bank
clerks and casual bystanders. Mr. Eugene Stanley, at that time District
Attorney, declared that many of the crimes in New Orleans and the South
were thus committed by criminals who relied on the drug to give them
a false courage and freedom from restraint. Dr. George Roeling, Coroner,
reported that of 450 prisoners investigated, 125 were confirmed users
of marihuana. Mr. W. B. Graham, State Narcotic Officer, declared in
1936 that 60 percent of the crimes committed in New Orleans were by
marihuana users." 9
Intensive patrolling
of the New Orleans harbor tended to curb imports; but Louisianans were
little inconvenienced by the smuggling curbs; they simply began to grow
their own marijuana. "The first large growing crop in the city
was found in 1930 and its value estimated at $35,000 to $50,000....
In 1936 about 1,200 pounds of bulk weed were seized along with considerable
quantities of cigarettes. On one farm, 5-1/2 tons were destroyed and
other farms yielded cultivated areas of about 10 acres....
One resident of
the city was found growing 100 large plants in his backyard." 10
The net effect of eleven years of vigorous law enforcement was summed
up by Commissioner Gomila in 1938: "Cigarettes are hard to get
and are selling at 30 to 40 cents apiece, which is a relatively high
price and a particularly good indication of the effectiveness of the
present control." 11 Marijuana
smoking, in short, had become endemic in New Orleans and
remains endemic today. What years of law enforcement had accomplished
was to raise the price from two for 25 cents to 30 cents or 40 cents
apiece and even this increase might be attributable in part
to inflation.
In Colorado, the
Denver News launched a similar series of sensational marijuana exposés
following the pattern set in New Orleans. 12
Mexican laborers imported to till the Colorado beet-sugar fields, it
seems, had found Prohibition alcohol very expensive and so had resorted
instead to marijuana, bringing their supplies north with them. A Colorado
law against marijuana was duly passed in 1929. 13
These sensational
newspaper accounts and early efforts to outlaw marijuana should not,
however, be taken as evidence that marijuana smoking was in fact widespread.
In 1931 the United States Treasury Department, then responsible for
enforcing both the federal antinarcotics and the federal antialcohol
laws, indicated that the marijuana exposés in the newspapers
were quite possibly exaggerated:
A great deal of
public interest has been aroused by newspaper articles appearing from
time to time on the evils of the abuse of marihuana, or Indian hemp,
and more attention has been focused on specific cases reported of
the abuse of the drug than would otherwise have been the case. This
publicity tends to magnify the extent of the evil and lends color
to an inference that there is an alarming spread of the improper use
of the drug, whereas the actual increase in such use may not have
been inordinately large. 14
Footnotes
Chapter 55
1. Mayor's Committee
on Marijuana, "The Marijuana Problem in the City of New York,"
(1944), in The Marijuana Papers, ed. David Solomon (New
York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1966), p. 246.
2. See New Orleans Morning Tribune,
October 17, 19-23, 28, 1926; and New Orleans Item, October
22, 1926; February 4, 1927.
3. Robert F. Walton, Marijuana,
America's New Drug Problem (Philadelphia: B. Lippincott, 1938),
p. 29.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid., p. 30.
6. Ibid., pp. 30-31.
7. Ibid., Table 1, p. 37.
8. Ibid., p. 31.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid., p. 32.
11. Ibid.
12. Ibid., p. 3.3.
13. Ibid., Table 1, p. 37.
14. U.S. Treasury Department, Traffic in Opium and Other Dangerous
Drugs for the Year Ended December 31, 1931 (Washington, D.C.: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1932), p. 51.
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