![thedailywhat:
Follow-Up of the Day: Student Left In Cell Sues DEA For $20M: It was never a question of when, but how much: Daniel Chong, the UC San Diego student abandoned in a cell by the Drug Enforcement Administration for five days without food, water, or human contact, has filed a lawsuit seeking $20 million in damages.From the letter sent by Chong’s attorney to DEA general counsel:
“The deprivation of food and water for four and one-half days while the person is handcuffed the entire time constitutes torture under both international and domestic law.”
The letter requests that all federal agencies preserve any evidence related to the case, including video, interview notes, and written reports.
[death+taxes]
This is some seriously fucked up shit, he’d better get that $20 mil.](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m3gce6q6JU1qzpwi0o1_500.jpg)
Follow-Up of the Day: Student Left In Cell Sues DEA For $20M: It was never a question of when, but how much: Daniel Chong, the UC San Diego student abandoned in a cell by the Drug Enforcement Administration for five days without food, water, or human contact, has filed a lawsuit seeking $20 million in damages.
From the letter sent by Chong’s attorney to DEA general counsel:“The deprivation of food and water for four and one-half days while the person is handcuffed the entire time constitutes torture under both international and domestic law.”
The letter requests that all federal agencies preserve any evidence related to the case, including video, interview notes, and written reports.
This is some seriously fucked up shit, he’d better get that $20 mil.
(via blakemaston)
Researchers hoping to study the medical benefits of marijuana are taking the Drug Enforcement Agency to federal court for blocking access to the plant.
The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) has received free legal representation in a lawsuit against the DEA over a license to grow marijuana for federally regulated research.
The D.C. based law firm Covington & Burling LLP, one of the foremost law firms representing the pharmaceutical industry, has offered pro-bono legal representation to the research group to appeal the DEA’s August 15 final order in the First Circuit Court of Appeals. MAPS estimated the law firm saved them $175,000 in legal costs.
The DEA rejected University of Massachusetts professor Lyle Craker request to obtain a license to grow marijuana to study it’s potential medical uses, claiming that the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) can be the only one to supply marujuana for Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-regulated research.
But NIDA’s monopoly on the supply of marijuana for research has proven troublesome. Although the FDA has approved MAPS’ proposed study of marijuana for U.S. veterans with chronic, treatment-resistant post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the agency has remained silent about whether it will agree to sell MAPS marijuana for the study.
“The federal government’s official policy is that marijuana has no medical benefit,” the American Civili Liberties Union said in a legal brief. “But the government is unwilling to put it’s policy to the test of science: instead, the government exercises monopoly control over the nation’s supply of marijuana that may be used for scientific purposes, by allowing an agency whose mission is to explore the consequences of the abuse of marijuana.”
The DEA ruled in June that marijuana should remain classified as a dangerous drug like heroin because studies have not confirmed it’s medicinal value, but the agency may itself be to blame for the lack of evidence.
The use of medical marijuana has been legalized in 16 states and the District of Columbia. But, according to the DEA, marijuana cannot be considered to have medicinal value because there is a lack of scientific studies assessing it’s safety and efficacy as a medicine, and the scientific evidence is not widely available. The agency also noted that there are no FDA-approved marijuana products at present.
But the DEA hasrepeatedly denied Dr. Crakers’s application for the production of marijuana, blocking studies that would help determine the drug’s medical benefits.
And just days after the DEA insisted that there is no medical value to marijuana, the White House appeared to contradict the position, saying in a report there may actually be “some” medical value to “individual components of the cannabis plant.
Recently, a study conducted by Haifa University in Israel found that the rats which were treated with marijuana within 24 hours of a traumatic experience successfully avoided any symptoms of PTSD.
In 2009, the American Medical Association, the largest physician’s organization in the U.S., adopted a resolution calling on the DEA to reclassify marijuana to facilitate research on marijuana-based medicines.
“Results of short term controlled trials indicate that smoked cannabis reduces neuropathic pain, improves appetite and caloric intake especially in patients with reduced muscle mass, and may relieve spasticity and pain in patients with multiple sclerosis,” the AMA’s resolution (PDF)reads.
Hell yeah
