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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
59. The 1969 marijuana
shortage and "Operation Intercept"
The extent of marijuana
use and distribution in the United States was brought to nationwide
attention in the spectacular failure of "Operation Intercept,"
an elaborate and determined effort by the government to shut off the
flow of smuggled marijuana from Mexico. The program was based on the
belief that Mexico was and would remain the primary source of marijuana
for Americans.
Operation Intercept
was launched at 2:30 P.m. Pacific Daylight Time on Sunday, September
21, 1969, and abandoned on October 11 just 20 days later.
Felix Belair, Jr., broke the story two weeks in advance, in the New
York Times under a September 8 dateline from Washington: "At
the direction of President Nixon Federal enforcement agencies are preparing
an all-out drive on the smuggling of drugs into the United States from
Mexico. Details of the drive... are being kept a closely guarded secret
pending a joint statement later this week by the Secretary of the Treasury
and the Attorney General. In personnel and equipment it will be the
nation's largest peacetime search and seizure operation by civil authorities."
1 So important was the drive
that President Nixon had discussed it at his September 8 meeting with
President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz of Mexico. "On this side of the border
pursuit planes and some motor torpedo boats will be employed for the
first time. Additional observation planes will be placed at the disposal
of a strengthened border patrol." Operation Intercept was to be
concerned partly with heroin and other drugs but primary
emphasis was to be placed on marijuana, the bulkiest of the drugs commonly
smuggled and therefore the easiest to intercept.
The drive to close
the American border was strategically timed for the September 1969 marijuana
harvest. The American marijuana supply was already far short of the
demand, and the closure was intended to intensify the shortage.
"Pot began
to be scarce in June [1969]," Peggy J. Murrell explained in the,
Wall Street Journal for September 11, 1969, "when
Mexico started cracking down on shipments of the weed smuggled into
the U.S." 2 A college sophomore
named Frank, vacationing in New York City's East Village, was quoted
as saying: "Nobody can get any grass. After all this damned LSD,
speed, and mescaline that's going around, it sure would be great to
act back to some nice, soft pot." Miss Murrell then explained:
"Frank had
intended to stock up on marijuana in New York and take it to his friends
at college, but the 'pot drought' has left him emptyhanded. 'It's really
awful,' he complains. 'What will I tell the kids?' "
A Wall
Street Journal reporter had interviewed Larry Katz, head of the
justice Department's Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs in San
Diego, who explained that the summer marijuana shortage started in Mexico
"because of a drought and a killing. Lack of summer rains thinned
the grass [marijuana] crop. Then a Mexican official who had ordered
the burning of 50 acres of what was left, was shot and killed.... As
a result of the killing, martial law has been declared. They have moved
in troops for a house-to-house search throughout the state (of Sinaloa)
and every road leading out of Mexico is heavily guarded. The Mexican
government now maintains squads that constantly destroy marijuana wherever
they find it." 3
Though the Wall
Street Journal failed to mention it, the burgeoning demand for marijuana
on the part of a rapidly growing mass of users was also no doubt a major
factor in the midsummer 1969 "pot shortage." Supplies were
lagging far behind demand at least temporarily.
"Far from rejoicing
at the marijuana shortage," Miss Murrell's Wall Street
Journal dispatch continued, "some narcotics officials are now
afraid that pot smokers may switch to other, more dangerous routes to
euphoria." 4 One of these
officials was William Durkin, head of the New York Bureau of Narcotics
and Dangerous Drugs, who was quoted as saying: "Youthful drug experimenters,
if they can't get one kind of drug, will look for something else."
A twenty-one-year-old
Radcliffe College senior interviewed by Miss Murrell emphatically confirmed
this official view. "I really didn't want to try acid (LSD) before,"
she was quoted as saying. "But there's no grass around, so when
somebody offered me some (LSD), I figured, 'What the hell.' I didn't
freak out or anything, so I've been tripping [taking LSD] ever since."
"The objective
of the [Operation Intercept] program," Secretary of the Treasury
David M. Kennedy and Attorney General John N. Mitchell declared in a
joint statement released at precisely 2:30 P.m. on Sunday, September
21, 1969, "is to reduce the volume of narcotics, marijuana, and
dangerous drugs which are smuggled into the United States from Mexico."
5 The statement added that "more
than 80 percent of the marijuana smoked in the United States" entered
the country illegally from Mexico. If this 80 percent could be cut off,
all would be well. That, at least, was the official hope.
Traffic at the border
"was backed up for more than two and a half miles within an hour
after Operation Intercept began," Felix Belair, Jr., of the New
York Times reported from San Ysidro, California, on September 21.
"And as the usual Sunday exodus from the Tijuana bullfight and
racetrack approached the border station in late afternoon, traffic was
backed up for six miles" 6
in the border dust and heat. No doubt the officials who planned Operation
Intercept had had this peak traffic flow in mind when they set 2:30
P.m. on Sunday afternoon as H-hour. By then a maximum number of Americans
would have entered Mexico for the afternoon, and would be caught in
the operation en route home.
Halted motorists
"expressed their feeling in the classical manner" by blowing
their horns. "They're playing our song," a customs agent remarked.
Similar scenes,
the Times dispatch continued, were "being enacted at the 30 other
border-crossing stations along the 2,500-mile-long border between the
two countries. In between, special radar installations have been set
up by the Federal Aviation Administration to enable waiting customs
agents to detect any attempt to cross the border unobserved.
Military pursuit
planes borrowed from the Air Force were poised to chase any aircraft
that failed to file a pre-flight plan before heading across the border.
The surveillance
network was spread out to sea, with Navy boats plying the Gulf of
Mexico and a variety of patrol craft in coastal waters. The "intensified
inspection of vehicles and persons crossing the border" was in
effect also at the 27 airports at which international flights are
authorized to land. 7
"Despite complaints
about zealous inspectors peeking into the purses and lunchboxes of school
children and forcing travelers to strip for personal searches, the United
States said today that it has been successful in its Mexican-border
crackdown on drug smuggling," 8
said the lead on an Associated Press dispatch from Los Angeles on the
eighth day of the operation. Although only small quantities of drugs
bad been seized during the week, a federal spokesman was quoted as saying:
"We're measuring our success not by the quantity of seizures made
but by the price of marijuana, heroin, and other drugs on the market.
It is raising their cost beyond the means of most young people in America.
"We're positive
we're stopping narcotics and dangerous drugs from coming into this country.
No large seizures have been made since Intercept was launched last Sunday,
because obviously the big smugglers have gotten the word." Obviously
the small smugglers had also gotten the word. "We know we're succeeding,"
the federal spokesman continued, "therefore we feel that most Americans
will agree it is worth our effort, the manpower and expense involved."
The New York Daily News ran the dispatch under the headline
"GRASS CURTAIN A SUCCESS."
As might be expected,
however, Operation Intercept engendered a number of protests. The earliest
of these came from along both sides of the border.
"In the 30
twin cities that straddle the United States-Mexican border from here
to the Gulf," Mr. Belair of the New York Times again
reported from San Ysidro on the third day of the operation, "the
government's drive on marijuana smuggling has become one of the hottest
issues since Pancho Villa raided frontier towns.
Commerce and tourism
are grinding slowly to a halt. Retail business on the American side
has dropped more than 50 percent. And with no relief in sight, the
merchants are up in arms because Mexican customers won't waste two
to four hours waiting to go through customs inspection.
It's the same
in the cities and towns on the Mexican side that depend on weekend
tourists and commuter shoppers.......
Absenteeism is
rampant among Mexican..... workers with permits that allow them to
live in Mexico and work in the United States. Mexican school children
attending public and private schools in the United States have been
showing up two to three hours late or don't show up at all....
The impact of
the operation hit like a windstorm at Chula Vista, the nearest shopping
center to this major gateway.... Chula Vista business establishments
count on Mexican customers for about 70 percent of their trade. Yesterday,
they catered to a handful of local customers. 9
On the second day
of Operation Intercept, the dispatch continued, "the United Statcs-Mexican
Border Cities Association decided to do something about it. It beaan
organizing a protest, urging its 30 twin city members to get in touch
with their Congressmen, governors, and mayors and demand a modification...."
The head of the association also sent telegrams to all affiliated chambers
of commerce on the United States side, warning that "time is short,
and the need for action immediate." In a telephone interview he
added: "The economic life's blood of these communities is based
on a free flow of vehicular and pedestrian traffic in both directions.
Disrupt that flow, and the economy dies, people are thrown out of work
and the communities will become ghost towns...."
On the seventh day
of the operation, the New York Times reported from Mexico
City:
Indignation mounted
here yesterday in the press and business and government circles against
the measures adopted by the United States in an antinarcotics drive
on the Mexican border.
"Humiliating
Mexicans" was the banner headline published by La Prensa, one
of the largest newspapers in the country. It emphasized a theme that
was echoed in many other dailies.
In the Chamber
of Deputies, representatives of all parties protested vigorously against
Operation Intercept on the border as a program that "damages
the dignity of Mexicans and constitutes an unfriendly act...."
The National Confederation
of Chambers of Commerce here termed the operation "an absurd
and exaggerated program" for the meager results it has produced.
10
President Diaz of
Mexico, who in early September had paid a courtesy visit to Washington
during which his relations with President Nixon bad been cordial, in
early October personally denounced Operation Intercept as "a bureaucratic
error" that had "raised a wall of suspicion between Mexico
and the United States." 11
The protest spread
from Mexico to other Latin American countries. An ambassador from one
such country, stationed in Mexico City, told a reporter: "It is
the old story of United States policy decisions that affect a Latin-American
country profoundly being taken for domestic political reasons without
consultation or consideration." 12
Another ambassador likened Operation Intercept to the United States
military intervention in the Dominican Republic in 1965.
Prior to Operation
Intercept, border inspectors worked on a schedule that allowed them
on the average one minute per vehicle crossing the border. During Operation
Intercept, this quota was increased to an average of two or three minutes
per vehicle hardly enough for a really thorough search.
Further extending the duration of searches, of course, would have further
extended the delays and the lines of cars.
Some persons desiring
to enter the United States were required to strip to the skin for a
personal inspection. Official reports revealed that during the first
week of Operation Intercept 1,824 border crossers were stripped and
searched. This left some 1,978,000 persons who had crossed the border
with only a superficial search or none at all. Most of the 1,824 "skin
searches," incidentally, proved fruitless; there were only 33 arrests
along the border during the week. 13
"Ten days of
relentless warfare on the smuggling of marijuana and dangerous drugs
across the Mexican border has convinced United States enforcement officials
of the futility of trying to dry up the illicit traffic with currently
available money, manpower, and equipment," 14
Mr. Belair reported from San Ysidro on October 1. At that time nearly
2,000 agents and inspectors, including many transferred to the border
from other posts, were at work in the operation.
"Attempts to
get the drugs across border highway crossings concealed in motor vehicles
have almost ceased. But enforcement officials say that illegal air traffic
continues to move through the Mohawk Valley in Arizona, Laredo, Texas,
and the rugged approaches to El Centro and San Diego, Calif....
"Meanwhile,
with supplies of marijuana and dangerous drugs piling up south of the
border as a result of the drive on land, Mexican distributors are changing
smuggling methods. Checked at the normal crossing points, they have
started to probe the fences along remote mountain trails and in the
desolate flatlands where Mexican roads parallel the border by fewer
than 100 yards." An undetermined amount of marijuana and other
drugs was also being smuggled in by plane despite newly installed FAA
radar equipment and Air Force intercept planes lent for the operation.
"Recently positioned radar installations... showed the blips of
intruding aircraft from the south but the blips faded from scanning
screens as the planes dropped between mountain ranges and canyon corridors
or passed beyond range of the truck mounted sensors." * 16
* This discovery
by drug smugglers of the vulnerability of the United States Mexican
border to aerial intrusion was to have disastrous aftereffects.
Long after Operation Intercept itself was discontinued, aerial smugglers
continued to use the techniques pioneered in September 1969.
"They fly
low and slow, by the light of the moon, and make $50,000 a night,"
Robert Lindsey reported in the New York Times in November
1971." 15
"They use
some private planes and old military transports and land on deserted
airstrips or sagebrush-covered desert. Their cargo is marijuana,
cocaine and heroin.
"Along
the sparsely settled frontier that divides the United States and
Mexico, airborne drug-runners are doing a booming business, and
Federal agents say they do not know how to stop them.
"On most
nights, the agents estimate, at least 10 planes cross the border
with marijuana and other drugs. On rare occasions, the smugglers
are caught by United States agents flying their own planes. But
usually they land unnoticed...."
"Anybody
who knows how to fly can get into the business and make a lot of
money...... one customs agent was quoted as saying; and an official
of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs added: "They're
developing their own air force, and it's getting bigger and bigger."
Most of the
planes used were small, but a Department of justice official noted
that recently (November 1971), "a lot of them are starting
to use bigger planes DC-3's, surplus military transports,
turbo-prop executive planes, and we have our eye on one group that
has a Constellation."
A Constellation
can carry twenty tons of cargo enough to supply the
entire United States heroin market for three or four years with
the fruits of a single flight.
Despite the
fact that marijuana weighs far more than heroin per dose and sells
for far less, it, too, can be profitably smuggled by air. The Department
of justice official told reporter Lindsey bow "in the interior
of Mexico, you can buy weed [marijuana] for as low as $2 a brick
[2.2 pounds], but if you don't know your way around, you will probably
have to pay closer to $30. It doesn't take a very big plane to fly
500 bricks if you take out the seats and strip it down....
"Say [a
smuggler] buys it for $30 and sells it in the states for $130; that's
a profit on 500 bricks of $50,000 for a night's work." At $130
per brick or kilogram, moreover, the cost per half-gram marijuana
cigarette works out at 6.5 cents-hardly an exorbitant price, even
at wholesale.
On October 8, 1969,
a delegation of Mexican officials beaded by Mexican Attorney General
David Rodriguez conferred in Washington with a delegation of American
officials headed by United States Attorney General Mitchell. As late
as the afternoon of October 9, after two full days of these talks, Mr.
Belair reported from Washington to the New York Times that
"the United States has rejected a Mexican government appeal for
a prompt termination of Operation Intercept.... A source close to the
conferees said the United States had no intention of calling off the
drive or of substantially modifying border inspections......" 17
But the next day,
Operation Intercept was called off.
"In a dramatic
overnight reversal of position," Mr. Belair announced under an
October 10 dateline, "the United States bowed today to Mexican
demands and ordered a strategic retreat in its war on the smuggling
of marijuana and dangerous drugs into this country.
"A joint statement
by representatives of both Governments after three days of conferences
on Operation Intercept said it bad been superseded by Operation Cooperation.
It added that the United States would 'adjust' its border inspection
procedures 'to eliminate unnecessary inconvenience, delay and irritation.'
"Precisely
what happened to cause the about-face by United States delegates was
not immediately clear and the Federal enforcement officials who are
most concerned with the problem said they were 'too sick to talk about
it."' Mr. Belair added, however, that State Department officials
had first proposed the retreat, that justice Department officials had
agreed; "this left the Treasury Department contingent under Assistant
Secretary Eugene T. Rossides standing alone without White House support....
As the showdown approached today, the White House, was advised of the
pending decision but decided against any direct involvement." 18
Traffic across the border began flowing freely again on the next day
Saturday, October 11.
"An immediate
problem for enforcement officials," Mr. Belair added, was how to
soften the impact of today's retreat on the morale of customs agents
and inspectors and members of the Border Patrol who have been working
12 and 14 hours a day to make Operation Intercept a success."
While primary responsibility
for ending Operation Intercept was commonly attributed to the protest
from Mexico, from the rest of Latin America, and from American border
businessmen and their Congressmen, the statistics of drugs seized may
also have played a role. During the year ending June 30, 1969, United
States customs officials had seized 57,164 pounds of marijuana
about 150 pounds per day. During the three weeks of Operation Intercept,
they bad seized 3,202 pounds of marijuana about the same
amount per day. 19 Operation
Intercept had enormously inflated marijuana publicity, but had not increased
marijuana seizures. How much smuggling increased elsewhere as a result
of the transfer of customs officials and narcotics agents to the Mexican
border is not known.
A statement by then
Deputy Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst and Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury Eugene T. Rossides, released by the United States Department
of justice twelve days after the termination of Operation Intercept,
claimed a modest success. It described marijuana as "unavailable
in Miami and almost unavailable in New York," as well as "almost
unavailable at Yale, Harvard and the University of California [Berkeley
and Los Angeles]. A similar or even more tight supply condition exists
at the University of Chicago, Rice Institute, Oklahoma University, Southern
Methodist University and Northwestern University." 20
This announcement
from Washington evoked a bitter retort from Professor Charles R. Beye,
chairman of the classics department at Boston University, who declared
in a letter to the editor of the New York Times:
In their elation
at having made marijuana scarcer on our college campuses, could the
Federal narcotics agents ponder for a moment the ugly repercussions
of their campaign?
Many dealers responding
to this scarcity are blending in all kinds of other ingredients to
provide strange psychic effects neither sought nor planned. The high
price of marijuana is moving the high school crowd into some really
weird trip-causing agents, of which glue is only the mildest.
The intensive
police pressure reinforces the sense of being criminal and thus antisocial.
Then, too, instead of your friendly student dealers, older men suspiciously
criminal-looking, are beginning to push the pot; obviously the student
amateurs are being closed out of the increasingly profitable marijuana
business and organized crime is being given another avenue of exploitation.
As someone who
spends a great deal of time with the young I must say that marijuana
is here to stay. As a father I can only hope that these hypocritical,
viciously unnatural laws and the people who enforce them are removed
before an entire generation is perverted morally and corrupted physically.
21
Professor Beye's
concern that marijuana users deprived of marijuana might shift to other
substances was confirmed in some detail in a study of what actually
happened among Los Angeles marijuana smokers during Operation Intercept.
The study was undertaken by two graduate students in psychology at the
University of California at Los Angeles, Kay Jamison and Steven Rosenblatt,
in collaboration with Dr. William H. McGlothlin of the UCLA psychology
department. 22 Questionnaire
returns were secured in this project from 478 UCLA undergraduate and
graduate students, and from 116 patients attending the Los Angeles Free
Clinic. The great majority of both the students and clinic patients
were marijuana smokers who had smoked marijuana ten or more times.
One question which
the study sought to answer was whether there had actually been a marijuana
shortage before and during Operation Intercept a shortage
sufficient to curtail marijuana use. Deputy Attorney General Kleindienst
and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Rossides, it will be recalled,
had announced on October 23 that marijuana was "almost unavailable"
at UCLA. The study did not bear this out. "Of those using marijuana
ten or more times," the Los Angeles group reported, 44 percent
of the students and 51 percent of patients reported that their frequency
of marijuana use was below normal at some time between May and October
1969, as a consequence of the unavailability of marijuana." 23
The other half of the respondents were able to go right on smoking marijuana
at their customary frequency despite the shortage that preceded Operation
Intercept and despite Operation Intercept itself.
The respondents
were also asked how much they bad been paying for marijuana in May 1969,
and bow much in October 1969. The responses, when averaged, worked out
to $10.13 per ounce in May and to $11.87 per ounce in October. About
60 half-gram marijuana cigarettes can be made from one ounce of marijuana.
Thus the price as reported by Los Angeles smokers rose from about 16.9
cents per marijuana cigarette in May to about 19.8 cents in October.
24
Finally, the Los
Angeles study sought to determine how the marijuana shortage affected
the consumption of other drugs. "Of those reporting a shortage
of marijuana," the UCLA researchers noted, "76 percent of
students and 84 percent of patients reported that they increased their
consumption of one or more other drugs (including alcohol) because of
the unavailability of marijuana." 25
Here are the drugs to which these respondents turned as a result of
the marijuana shortage. 26
|
Drug
|
Students
(Percentage)
|
Free Clinic
(Percentage)
|
| |
Male
|
Female
|
Male
|
Female
|
| |
(N = 56)
|
(N = 30)
|
(N = 24)
|
(N = 25)
|
| Hashish |
52
|
37
|
54
|
44
|
| Alcohol |
55
|
23
|
50
|
48
|
| Sedatives |
9
|
10
|
29
|
24
|
| Stimulants |
11
|
7
|
21
|
16
|
| LSD |
16
|
7
|
50
|
48
|
| Other Strong Hallucinogens |
23
|
13
|
37
|
28
|
| Opiates or Cocaine |
2
|
3
|
25
|
24
|
The temporary shortage
of Mexican marijuana led to a marked increase in the importation into
the United States of highly potent marijuana from Vietnam. Some of it
was mailed home through GI channels; far larger amounts were brought
home by military personnel returning from the war. San Francisco observers
reported a flood of Vietnamese marijuana on the market immediately following
the docking of each homebound troopship. There were few prosecutions,
however perhaps because officials did not welcome the political
repercussions which might follow the large-scale criminal prosecution
of veterans freshly returned from war.
Another effect of
Operation Intercept was to open the United States for the first time
to the large-scale importation of North African and Near Eastern hashish.
There is a delicate balance between marijuana prices and hashish prices.
Hashish is more costly to produce because it takes much more labor during
the brief harvest period but it is easier to smuggle because
a comparable dose weighs only one-fifth to one-eighth as much. Trivial
amounts of hashish had long been available in the United States. The
tight marijuana supply before and during Operation Intercept triggered
a large-scale increase in hashish smuggling.
Numerous instances
were cited in newspaper dispatches before, during, and after Operation
Intercept: For example, the New York Times reported from
Washington, D.C., on August 17, 1969, that "the smuggling of hashish,
a concentrated form of marijuana, has sharply increased," according
to Myles J. Ambrose, then Bureau of Customs Commissioner. Seizures for
the year ending June 30, 1969, totaled 623 pounds "up
from 311 pounds the previous year. Only about 70 pounds bad been seized
in 1966 and 1967." Marijuana seizures did not increase. An assistant
commissioner of customs cited three reasons for the rise in hashish
smuggling: it is far less bulky than marijuana, it is highly potent,
and it appeals to the "hippie type" of tourist. 27
On October 6, 1969,
Sydney H. Schanberg reported in the New York Times from
Srinagar, Kashmir, that Kashmiri hashish formerly went mostly to the
Middle East. "But now," he quoted the local chief of police
as saying, "there is a new market Europe and America.
And therefore the price has gone very high." 28
On October 10, 1969,
Dana Adams Schmidt reported in the New York Times from
Beirut, Lebanon, that "eleven Americans are in prison in Lebanon
on charges of using or trafficking in hashish." He went on to explain:
"Two pounds of hashish selling here for $40 to $80 can be resold
in the United States for that amount an ounce." 29
The Burlington,
Vermont, Free Press reported on March 17, 1970, that hashish
purchased for $3,000 in Ibiza, Spain, and alleged to be worth $350,000
in the United States market had been seized in Vermont after it had
been shipped by freight from Ibiza to Casablanca, to Marseilles, to
St. Thomas, Ontario, to Tonawanda, New York, and then to Rutland and
Plainfield, Vermont. 30
Finally, the marijuana
shortage induced many industrious people to spend more time harvesting
domestic "weed" marijuana, growing throughout the United States.
Under ordinary circumstances,
with high-quality Mexican marijuana available at moderate prices, there
is relatively little incentive to harvest the domestic weed supply.
The hourly wage rate is much higher in the United States than in Mexico,
and harvesting marijuana takes time. When prices rise and supplies become
scarce, however, people take to the harvest fields in large numbers,
Edward B. Zuckerman described the marijuana-harvesting process in a
dispatch from North Judson, Indiana, published in the Wall
Street Journal of August 20, 1969:
The elderly farmer
escorts a visitor around his prosperous-looking farm near this quiet
northern Indiana town. There's the corn field, he says, and there's
the potatoes. And over there is the marijuana.
The farmer hastens
to point out that he doesn't cultivate the marijuana, it just grows
wild. Indeed, he considers it a headache. "It gets so thick around
my storage lot that I have to pay good money to spray it so I can
find my machinery," he says. "Then, I'm always shooing away
people who come on my land to pick the stuff."
The farm is a
typical one in this lush farming area not far from Chicago. The hardy
marijuana plant... grows in weedlike abundance along roads and drainage
ditches here. It's difficult and expensive to kill, and it has made
the region something of a mecca for enterprising devotees... who drive
to the farmlands to help themselves rather than pay the $15 to $20
an ounce that processed marijuana brings on the clandestine market.
"We've arrested
every type of individual white, colored, male, female,
young and old a real cross-section of the population,"
says Sgt. Harry Young of the Indiana State Police, whose members regularly
inspect cars parked along the roads near here....
Marijuana came
to North Judson, as well as to other areas of the Midwest where it
grows in abundance, as the upright and respectable hemp plant....
Mills that converted the tough fibers of the plant's stalk into rope
used to dot the Midwest.... Hemp cultivation has all but ceased in
the U.S. but the plant hangs on. "It's extremely hardy and adaptable
we've seen it growing in sandy soil and in the most swampy areas,"
says University of Illinois botanist Alan W. Haney. "It's also
very bard to get rid of. It takes a high concentration of poison to
do the job. I've seen plants that.wilted after being sprayed, but
sprang back within two weeks." 31
By early November
1969, the marijuana famine was over in considerable part
as a result of increased harvest of the domestic American " weed"
supply. Reporter John Kifner supplied the details in a dispatch from
Lawrence, Kansas, which appeared in the New York Times
for November 7, 1969, less than a month after the abandonment of Operation
Intercept:
Only a few of
the plants 8 to 10 feet tall with clusters of seven sharply
serrated leaves are still green. Most of the stalks are
brown and withering after the first frosts.
Some harvesters,
who contend that a field-dried crop yields the best product, are still
gathering tops and leaves.
But much of the
work the hurried chopping under the hot sun, the heaving
of armsful of plants into automobile trunks and the stumbling around
in the dark with flashlights and pillowcases to be filled
has been done.
The last crop
is hanging, upside down so the precious sap can flow into the leaves,
in garages, backyards and dormitories waiting to be dried and processed.
The harvesters are settling back and lighting up to enjoy the fruits
of their labors.
The crop is marijuana,
and this has been a good growing year, particularly here in the flat
Middle Western plains, where the Cannabis sativa plant grows wild
along the edges of fields, river banks and railroad tracks, and sometimes
in cultivated plots.
"The marijuana
has been like a super benefit to this community," a student at
the University of Kansas said with a grin. "A lot of people have
got new motorcycles and things because of it."
The director of
the Kansas Department of Agriculture's Noxious Weeds Division reported
that there were 52,050 acres of marijuana in the state in 1968
the figure is probably higher this year. The plant is also growing
in wild profusion throughout Nebraska, Iowa and Illinois.
It is a strong
and hardy plant that resists efforts at eradication by fire or chemicals,
to the delight of the young and the distress of the law enforcement
officials and politicians,...
In Indiana, farmers
complain of the difficulty of clearing the plant from the edges of
their fields. According to underground sources, an elderly farmer
in the Champaign-Urbana area, near the University of Illinois, has
simply let a field go to marijuana.
He sits in his
farmhouse with field glasses, these sources say, waiting for youths
to come and pick the crop. Then he calls the police and collects an
informer's fee.
While the Middle
West is the main center for wild marijuana, the plant is being harvested
more and more secretly in small cultivated patches throughout the
country.
In Vermont, the
state police say there are vast quantities of marijuana growing wild
in the Champlain Valley and being regularly harvested at night.
Policemen destroyed
tons of marijuana over the summer months, but the crop was too big
for the available manpower and equipment....
Detective Cpl.
William Chilton said he believed the quality of Vermont marijuana
was almost as good as that of most of the Mexican varieties.
There are scattered
fields throughout Georgia, including a patch in the Okefenokee Swamp,
and Joseph Weldy, the state's chief drug inspector, said he expected
to find "a lot of marijuana fields in the spring."
In Austin, Tex.,
marijuana has been found growing on the State Capitol grounds and
at the municipal golf course. Crafty planters frequently sow their
crop on public ground, where it will be well-tended by unsuspecting
gardeners.
In Oregon, state
agents had 3,000 plants under surveillance in the Cornelius Pass west
of Portland last August. They were thwarted when an industrious Washington
County lawman destroyed the plants with chemicals. There was a lack
of communication, officials said.
Law enforcement
and underground sources agree that the domestic marijuana harvest
this summer and fall was probably the biggest yet. It was centered
largely in the Middle West and particularly in Kansas.
The reasons for
this, they agreed, are the shortage of Mexican marijuana, caused by
Operation Intercept and other American pressures on the Mexican Government,
and the rapidly increasing numbers of marijuana smokers.
The harvesting
season runs generally from July to late October, with September the
prime time. Throughout these months, hundreds of young people have
been busily working in isolated fields, and rural sheriffs have been
just as busily responding to calls from farmers reporting "a
bunch of hippies in the fields" acting strangely.
Melwyn Purdy,
an agent of the campus Bureau of Investigation here who is assigned
to narcotics problems said there were 175 arrests for marijuana harvesting
in this state since July 4. Last year, there had been about 40 arrests.
He described those
arrested as "mostly young subjects, of college age with no criminal
background."
Some of those
arrested, Mr. Purdy said, bad road maps or hand-sketched charts showing
where patches of marijuana might be found. Some of the areas of heaviest
growth, he added, are along the Republican River in north central
Kansas and in the eastern part of the state.
Gov. Robert Docking
has expressed alarm at the situation, particularly at the possibility
that organized crime might be moving into Kansas. Farmers, however,
are not enthusiastic about the Governor's plan to put marijuana under
the weed control program since they would have to undergo the trouble
of eradicating it from their own lands. Some conservationists and
ecologists have expressed alarm at the potential destruction of ground
cover.
A more powerful
lobby hunters and sportsmen is also worried
about the program. Quail feed on marijuana seeds, and organized hunters
fear that a favorite quarry will be reduced in number....
The increase in
the marijuana market has led to shady business practices. Kansas marijuana
is being wrapped in Mexican newspapers and sent to California masquerading
as the imported variety.
Most smokers seem
to feel that Kansas marijuana is better than none at all, so the young
people in and around Lawrence seem particularly happy about this year's
crop. 32
Another report,
perhaps apocryphal, says that there was too much marijuana growing in
Kansas in 1969; hence "the professional pot harvesters there have
formed an association in violation of the Sherman AntiTrust Act to maintain
price levels by destroying part of the crop." 33
The United States
House of Representatives' Select Committee on Crime in the fall of 1969
took an interest in this harvesting of domestic weed marijuana to supplement
and perhaps replace imported Mexican marijuana. One witness it called
was Lieutenant Wayne F. Rowe of the Nebraska State Highway Patrol; Lieutenant
Rowe was questioned by Larry Reida, the Select Committee's associate
chief counsel, and by Congressmen Claude Pepper of Florida, the committee
chairman, and Robert V. Denney of Nebraska.
Mr. Reida.
Mr. Rowe, could you make an estimate, based on your information and
experience in the field of marijuana control for the last couple of
years, as to the number of acres of marijuana in Nebraska?
Mr. Rowe.
No, sir, I couldn't make this estimate. We had a discussion group
yesterday. The experts said it was considerable.
Mr. Reida.
We are talking about thousands of acres, right?
Mr. Rowe.
Right.
Mr. Denney.
We heard one estimate of 156,000 acres in Nebraska, right?
Mr. Denney. Yes,
we did.
Mr. Reida.
As a matter of fact, it grows in clumps; you don't have a 100-acre
field of marijuana.
Mr. Rowe.
No, sir. You may find one plant on an acre and in other fields the
entire field would be infested.
This "weed"
marijuana, Lieutenant Rowe continued, was attracting "hempleggers"
from all over the country:
Now, last year
was the first year that we had a great deal of experience with marijuana
harvesters coming in from out of State. In the year of 1968 we documented
40 arrests for marijuana harvesting. These were all people from out
of State.
To date in 1969
we have documented 81 arrests of people from outside of Nebraska who
have come in to harvest the marijuana that is growing here. This represents
over a 100-percent increase over last year.
Mr. Pepper.
How many arrests have you made?
Mr. Rowe.
I have a breakdown in States: 32 arrests of California residents,
six arrests of New York residents, six arrests of Massachusetts residents,
five New Mexico, five from Washington, four from Virginia, three from
Pennsylvania, three from Wyoming, three from Colorado, two from Michigan,
two from Kansas, two from Utah, one from Ohio, one from Wisconsin,
one from Arizona, one from Iowa, one from Oregon, one from Idaho,
one from Montana, and one from Oklahoma....
Mr. Pepper.
Did you notice that those arrests increased as the supply of marijuana
coming into this country was diminished?
Mr. Rowe.
Yes, sir. The spring crop of marijuana in Mexico, * as I understand
it, was bad because of the weather. They were unable to dry it out.
We also understand from the people whom we have apprehended that Mexican
marijuana is not available in supply as is demanded by the present
market.
* In Mexico,
the same field may yield three or even four crops of marijuana per
year.
Mr. Pepper.
From that experience, would you anticipate that if we are successful
in our effort to diminish the available quantity of marijuana in other
parts of the country, there will be greater effort to get it from
Nebraska and Iowa than there is today?
Mr. Rowe.
Yes, sir, this will be what will happen. By coming to Nebraska they
eliminate the dangers of crossing an international border. 34
The way in which
Nebraskan and other Midwestern marijuana is subsequently distributed
throughout the United States was indicated in an Associated Press dispatch
from Freeport, Long Island, New York, dated October 4, 1970:
Five men were
arrested here today in a raid in which police confiscated 300 pounds
of marijuana said to be worth $600,000 at retail.
According to Nassau
County and Freeport police, three of the men had driven from California
in a panel truck, stopping on the way in Frank, Neb., to harvest a
crop of marijuana they knew was growing in an open field there. Using
machetes, the men cut enough marijuana to fill 15 duffle bags, the
police said. 35
The three were identified
as a twenty-four-year-old unemployed highschool teacher, a twenty-four-year-old
professor at an unaccredited California college, and a twenty-eight-year-old
student at a state university.
The suggestion that
300 pounds of weed marijuana, requiring only a machete for harvesting
and a panel truck for transportation, would yield $600,000 for a few
days' work was obviously grossly exaggerated but the influence
of such police estimates in attracting additional entrepreneurs to marijuana
harvesting and distribution should not be underestimated.
Clandestine marijuana
plantations have also made their appearance on a modest scale.
Not only is clandestine
pot farming being carried on all over the country, [columnist Nicholas
von Hoffman reported in the Washington Post] but many people are at
work developing higher yields, more potent strains so that good quality
grass should be increasingly available at moderate prices. In addition
to the thousands who're in this new industry for profit, there appears
to be tens of thousands who grow pot at home for their own use. It's
an indomitably hardy vegetable that grows anywhere, even in closets
or basements People plant it [indoors] in flower pots, train an electric
light on it and wait for the high harvest. 36
Mr. Zuckerman's
August 1969 dispatch to the Wall Street Journal, quoted
earlier, similarly reported that "some intrepid users have taken
to growing the stuff on their own." He cited as an example a twenty-year-old
college student who lived with his family in a Detroit suburb and who
had cultivated a small crop in his family's garden each summer since
he was seventeen.
"Every year
I tell my mother I'm growing gourds, and every year when there aren't
any gourds I tell her that I planted them late or something," the
student was quoted as saying. He worried a bit when he saw his father
in the marijuana patch "but it was all right. He'd
very considerately put stakes on my plants and tied them for Support."
37
Once the plants
are grown and harvested, the Wall Street Journal dispatch
continued, this student "speeds the drying process by tying his
leaves in a pillowcase and running them through the clothes dryer."
The student was quoted as explaining: "At the end of the summer,
you'll usually find two or three of my friends waiting for their pillowcases"
at a nearby launderette. This home-grown marijuana development resembles
in several respects the home fermenting of grapes, the home brewing
of beer, and the manufacture of gin in home bathtubs during Prohibition
(1920-1933).
"Other amateurs,"
the Wall Street Journal added, "go in for marijuana
cultivation in a bigger way. A hip young farmer in upstate New York,
where wild marijuana is scarce and local police are less vigilant, is
raising 500 plants for his friends in New York City. 'Why should they
pay for the stuff, when I can grow it so easily?' he says."
An observer living
in one New England township, formerly an agricultural center, says that
marijuana is beginning there to take the place of other cash crops no
longer profitable. "The only farms yielding a profit in our entire
township are the three marijuana plantations." 38
The chief problem
in growing marijuana secretly, either outdoors or indoors, is the excessive
height of the plant often eight to ten feet at harvest time,
and sometimes even higher. This height, of course, is the result of
the fact that for so many hundreds of years seed from the tallest plants
was selected in order to ensure long hemp fibers. just as clandestine
chemists have been turning out drugs in kitchen laboratories, however,
so clandestine geneticists and horticulturists are already at work developing
a shorter marijuana less conspicuous to the police if grown
outdoors and taking up less space indoors. Success should be fairly
rapid; a marijuana strain growing only three to four feet tall has already
been reported in London. 39
Clandestine synthesis
of THC is another potential development. A group of young underground
chemists in London, indeed, has already succeeded in synthesizing a
small quantity of an impure THC, which they proudly smoked in front
of BBC television cameras. 40
It is almost certainly the relatively low price and relatively ready
availability of natural marijuana and hashish that have to date discouraged
further development of clandestine synthetic THC. If prices rise high
enough, or marijuana and hashish become scarce enough, that curb on
THC synthesis and distribution will no longer function.
Footnotes
Chapter 59
1.
New York Times, September 9, 1969.
2. Peggy J. Murrell, Wall Street Journal, September 11,
1969.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. New York Times, September 22, 1969.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid.
8. New York Daily News, September 29, 1969.
9. New York Times, September 25, 1969.
10. New York Times, September 28, 1969.
11. New York Times, October 10,
1969.
12. New York Times, October 8, 1969.
13. New York Daily News, September
29, 1969,
14. New York Times, October 2,
1969.
15. Robert Lindsey in the New
York Times, November 30, 1971.
16. New York Times, October 2,
1969.
17. New York Times, October 10,
1969.
18. New York Times, October 11, 1969.
19. Robert Berrellez, Associated Press,
in the Reporter Dispatch, White Plains, N.Y., October 1,
1969.
20. New York Times, October 24,
1969.
21. Charles R. Beye, Letter to the Editor, New York Times,
October 30, 1969.
22. W. McGlothlin, K. Jamison, and S. Rosenblatt, "Marijuana and
the Use of Other Drugs," Nature (London), 228 (December
19, 1970): 1227-1229.
23. Ibid
24. Ibid
25. Ibid
26. Ibid
27. New York Times, August 18,
1969.
28. New York Times, October 6, 1969.
29. New York Times, October 10, 1969.
30. Burlington, Vt., Free Press,
'March 17, 1970.
31. Edward B. Zuckerman in the Wall
Street Journal, August 20, 1969.
32. New York Times, November 7,
1969.
33. Nicholas von Hoffman in the Washington Post Star, August
12, 1970.
34. Crime in America
A Mid-America View, Hearings before the Select Committee
on Crime, U.S. House of Representatives, 91st Cong., 1st Sess., pursuant
to H.R. 17, October 11, 1969, Lincoln, Nebraska (Washington, D.C.: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1969), pp. 165-168.
35. New York Times, October
6, 1970.
36. Nicholas von Hoffman, Washington Post Star, August
12, 1970.
37. Edward B. Zuckerman, Wall
Street Journal, August 20, 1969.
38. Personal communication.
39. Personal communication.
40. Personal communication.
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