Pubdate: Sun, 05 Sep 2004 Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Copyright: 2004 Lexington Herald-Leader Contact: http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240 Author: Gregory Crouch, New York Times News Service Cited: Institute of Medical Marijuana http://www.medicalmarijuana.org/contents.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) KENTUCKY MAN TAKES POT PROWESS TO NETHERLANDS Legal There, but Trouble Persists NAALDWIJK, Netherlands - James R. Burton, who once served a year in a U.S. federal prison, still gets a kick out of the signs at his marijuana plantation here reminding employees whom to call in the event of an emergency: the Dutch police. Sixteen years ago, Burton did time in the maximum-security prison in Marion, Ill., and lost his family farm in Bowling Green, Ky., after being caught with an estimated $112,000 worth of marijuana that he said he needed to stave off glaucoma. Last year, the Dutch government gave him a five-year contract to grow more than 10 times that much. Burton, 56, seemed the perfect candidate to supply the Netherlands' new medical cannabis program, through which terminally ill patients and sufferers of chronic pain can buy doctor-prescribed marijuana at local pharmacies. For one thing, he has had plenty of on-the-job training, having grown and smoked pot every day for most of the last 35 years. "He's qualified to grow marijuana, I can tell you that," said Eddie Railey, a Kentucky state police investigator at the time of Burton's arrest. "He's good at it. He has a lot of experience." Even his one-year stretch behind bars was not a total waste, Burton said, because he got a grounding in the high-security techniques needed to guard a government-sponsored cannabis crop. Thirty-two security cameras, three vocal guard dogs and the occasional Dutch police car make sure no dope leaves through the back door. "It's better-guarded than the bank here," Burton said proudly. Dressed in a lab technician's white coat, his ponytail barely visible, Burton nurses a deadly serious devotion to a plant that makes others simply giggle. One of only two growers chosen for the medical cannabis program, this American expatriate in Rotterdam was sure he had found nirvana in the Netherlands, a place to fulfill his dream of establishing marijuana as a valid medical treatment. His euphoria about the Dutch experiment, however, has been short-lived. The Dutch program's first anniversary is this month, and Burton and health officials are clashing over what to charge for medical cannabis, how to test it and even how many varieties to sell. "Everything I have ever worked for is going down the tubes," he said. Burton said government regulations like testing and packaging are ruining his business. His medical marijuana, which is irradiated to remove bacteria, sells at a drugstore for about $11.50 a gram; local cafes often charge less than half that, so many patients understandably choose to go there instead. "The government here is sticking its neck out on this project, and the whole world is watching," Burton said. "Unfortunately, they have made some misjudgments and miscalculations." But if Burton's mission to make pot the world's next wonder drug has already cost him his home and his freedom in the United States, his mouthing off on marijuana's behalf seems likely to result in the loss of his government contract, particularly because, in the government's view, it violates a confidentiality agreement. At the very least, his recent appearance on a national television network here lambasting the medical cannabis program -- sprinkled with threats of a lawsuit against the government -- has exasperated Dutch officials. "Certainly there are problems, but it's not a flop," said Willem Scholten, director of the Dutch Office of Medicinal Can-nabis. "It's too early to make such a judgment." Burton has not seen eye to eye with the powers that be since he went to prison in 1988, after a federal jury in the United States ruled that growing marijuana at his farm was a crime in spite of his claims that he needed it to ward off his glaucoma. Burton has stuck to that defense ever since, convinced that three joints a day have staved off a form of glaucoma that afflicts some members of his family. "One of the reasons I have such great passion for it is because it did save my eyesight," Burton said. "I have met tens of thousands of people who marijuana does work for." For more than three decades, Burton has followed the same medical regimen: first thing in the morning, again in the afternoon, and just before bed. More than once, he has told reporters that his two brothers "were totally blind" from the same form of glaucoma that threatened him. But his brothers say that only one of them has glaucoma and that both can see just fine as long as they wear their glasses. After his release from prison, Burton decided he had little choice but to leave the United States. His criminal case had attracted enough media attention to make him an undesirable, even among drug dealers. "I was homeless, I didn't have any money, I couldn't get a job," he said. "I really couldn't get any marijuana anymore because when I called up and said, 'This is James Burton,' all of the dealers hung up." So he moved to the Netherlands, where he could buy and smoke pot. In time, Burton started distributing marijuana to Dutch patients, which was technically illegal but tolerated. Business boomed, and in 1993, he opened up SIMM, the Dutch acronym of his Institute of Medical Marijuana. Three years ago, the Dutch government put out a call for medical cannabis growers. Burton easily met the requirements, including delivery of cannabis of a consistent quality during three trial runs. In fact, he can grow 134 varieties, slice it, dice it and package it. His medical cannabis is sold under the name SIMM. "You can't have at the pharmacy 'White Nightmare' or 'AK-47,'" he said. "The doctor can't prescribe those kinds of names. You have to have medical terms." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake