Pubdate: Wed, 12 Nov 2008 Source: Bemidji Pioneer (MN) Copyright: 2008 Forum Communications Co. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/c267ikFs Website: http://www.bemidjipioneer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4739 Author: Don Davis, Minn. State Capitol Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Dave+Monson APPEALS COURT HEARS NORTH DAKOTA HEMP CASE ST. PAUL -- A U.S. Appeals Court panel is considering whether North Dakota law trumps federal law when it comes to raising hemp. Two North Dakota farmers want to grow hemp, a close relative to illegal marijuana, but the federal Drug Enforcement Administration has not granted them permission. The farmers sued to get the permit, but a federal district court threw out their suit. The two sides argued the case Wednesday before an Appeals Court panel in St. Paul. A decision could come in weeks or months. The farmers say state law forbids them from distributing leaves and flowers, which on marijuana plants are used to give users highs. The DEA says federal law takes precedent over state law, and it does not allow for hemp production because of its close relationship to marijuana. North Dakota Rep. David Monson, an Osnabrock Republican, and Wayne Hauge of Ray applied to grow hemp under a North Dakota law, which at the time required a federal permit. The state law has changed, so a federal permit no longer is required, but the farmers say they still want that permit so they do not face federal legal problems. The farmers' lawyers say DEA's hearings on the issue have stalled, so they sued to get the permits. That suit was thrown out a year ago and they appealed. Federal attorney Melissa Patterson of Washington, D.C., said state law cannot override federal law. The U.S. Constitution gives Congress power to regulate commerce between states, which is the basis Congress used in passing laws regulating marijuana and similar plants. "What states do cannot expand or contract Congress's interstate regulation powers," Patterson told the judges. But one of the farmers' lawyers, Joe Sandler, said that is not the question judges should decide. Instead, he said, "the question here is whether the mere existence of a plant can affect interstate commerce." Hemp can be used to make cloth and paper, as a fuel and as an ingredient in lotions and foods. Monson said hemp would bring $800 an acre revenue, while wheat may make him $240. Hauge and Monson are the first farmers to seek permission to grow hemp under the 2005 law. The representative and his attorneys said that North Dakota law is so strict that hemp could not be turned into a hallucinogen. Besides, they added, the drug that would lead to a high is so limited in hemp that it could not produce the same affect as marijuana. Judge Michael J. Melloy appeared to be concerned that hemp and marijuana could not be differentiated. "They are going to look alike to some degree," Patterson told him. Sandler said that because of North Dakota's strict monitoring of hemp, no one would try to sneak in marijuana: "It would be the last place in the world that anybody would do anything illegal." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake