Pubdate: Thu, 24 Oct 2002
Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
Copyright: 2002 Cox Interactive Media.
Contact:  http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28
Author: Bill Rankin

TRIAL ORDERED IN CASE OF HALLUCINOGENIC TEA

A man accused of illegally importing into Atlanta jungle vines and leaves 
to brew a hallucinogenic tea must stand trial, a federal magistrate ruled 
Wednesday.

U.S. Magistrate Alan Baverman declined to dismiss an indictment against 
Alan Thomas Shoemaker, whose lawyer contended the vines and leaves are 
legal substances.

In his ruling, Baverman noted that Shoemaker is accused of importing into 
Hartsfield International Airport almost 1,000 pounds of the materials, "the 
combination of which make a potent hallucinogenic brew." In January 2001, 
Shoemaker sent three crates of ayahuasca vines and huambisa leaves here 
from Peru. For centuries, the jungle vines and leaves have been brewed to 
make a tea used by shamans in the Amazon region during religious and 
spiritual healing ceremonies.

The bitter-tasting tea is believed to heal the sick, bring contact with 
spirits and divine the future. But it also contains the hallucinogen DMT, 
an illegal controlled substance. Earlier this year, a federal grand jury in 
Atlanta indicted Shoemaker on charges of illegal importation and possession 
of DMT. It is the first prosecution of its kind in Atlanta.

Shoemaker, 49, said in a recent interview that he moved to Peru 10 years 
ago to study shaman folklore. His lawyer, Page Pate of Atlanta, said 
Shoemaker planned to use the jungle vines and leaves to make tea solely for 
religious purposes in the United States.

In court motions, Pate did not contend that the indictment infringes on 
Shoemaker's First Amendment, or religious freedom, rights. Instead, he 
argued that Congress, when enacting the Controlled Substances Act, only 
meant to make manufactured DMT an illegal substance, not the naturally 
occurring jungle vines and leaves that contain DMT.

Pate also noted that DMT exists naturally in other plant life, including 
some grown by the U.S. Department of Agriculture to prevent soil erosion, 
and in the human body.

But Baverman found that the Controlled Substances Act, while not specifying 
the vines or leaves as illegal substances, covers "any material" that 
contains DMT. "When Congress speaks clearly, the court must follow what 
Congress has stated," the judge wrote.

And Baverman found that congressional efforts to prevent illegal drug use 
"were directed at the human consumption of controlled substances, not, for 
example, their use in basic agriculture or their naturally occurring 
presence in the human body."

Pate expressed disappointment at the findings, which will be forwarded to 
U.S. District Judge Julie Carnes, who is to preside over Shoemaker's trial. 
Pate said he will appeal the ruling to the federal appeals court in 
Atlanta, either before or after Shoemaker's trial, if necessary.
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