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Snacks can make people obese and
high-wired. But get them fired? A U.S. Border Patrol agent dismissed from his
job earlier this year after testing positive for drugs is blaming a San
Diego-based manufacturer of hemp bars for his downfall. Michael Baranic, a San
Diego attorney representing the fired agent, said his client's troubles started
last year after he ate Govinda's Fitness Foods hemp bars just before a random
drug test.
The Border Patrol fired the agent in May
based on the results of the test, which indicated the presence of psychoactive
chemicals in his blood.
"My client has never used (illegal)
drugs," said Baranic, adding that he would seek reinstatement, back pay and
attorney's fees for the former agent at a hearing this month before the
government's Merit System Protection Board.
Baranic declined to divulge the name of
his client. Border Patrol spokesman Raleigh Leonard said he could not comment on
the case or reveal the agent's name because it's a personnel matter.
The dispute comes as the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals is considering whether to uphold a Drug Enforcement
Administration rule banning the sale of food made with hemp.
Hemp food products typically contain trace
elements of the mind-altering substance Delta-9 Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC,
which is found in marijuana. The DEA contends that the consumption of any amount
of THC is illegal.
The Border Patrol agent is hardly the
first to invoke the so-called "hemp defense."
Several studies conducted in the mid-1990s
found that the use of hemp seed oil could trigger positive test readings for low
levels of THC, according to the Journal of Analytical Toxicology.
Indeed, the U.S. Air Force banned the use
of hemp by its service people several years ago after Master Sgt. Spencer Gaines
was exonerated by a court-martial jury after testing positive for marijuana use.
Gaines asserted during the trial that the
test results stemmed from his consumption of hemp oil, which is used in hemp
food products.
Likewise, Marine Lance Cpl. Kevin Boyd was
acquitted by a court martial jury in 1998 of a single count of using marijuana
after he blamed the use of hemp oil for his troubles.
But representatives of Govinda's and the
hemp industry said that the hemp defense has rarely been used by defendants in
drug cases in the last couple of years because strict processing of the hemp
crop, which is largely grown in Canada, has virtually eliminated THC residue.
"You'd have to do 500 pounds of steady
eating to get a buzz," said Larry Gatpandan, a co-founder of Govinda's.
Gatpandan said he first heard of the fired
Border Patrol agent's allegations against his company earlier this year when he
received an affidavit from the government asking him to certify that Govinda's
hemp bars were free of THC.
"I didn't sign it," he said. "They're
trying to ruin the reputation of my company."
Govinda's sold $200,000 worth of hemp bars
last year. That's about 20 percent of the firm's total revenues.
Overall, hemp products account for about
$40 million in annual sales in the U.S. food and body-care sectors and $100
million in sales in the fiber sector, according to the Hemp Industry
Association.
David Bronner, chairman of the
association's food and oils committee, said hemp is being used as a scapegoat by
drug users caught in the drug-testing mill. Bronner is the president of Dr.
Bronner's Magic Soap in Escondido.
"Some people smoke marijuana, get
desperate and look for an excuse," Bronner said.
Bronner noted that hemp oil - which is
used in Govinda's hemp bars - contains only 5 parts per million of THC.
And hemp oil makes up only 10 percent to
20 percent of the ingredients in Govinda's product.
"There's no way the THC would show up in a
drug test," Bronner said.
Bronner said the U.S. hemp industry is
awaiting the court decision on the DEA ban with apprehension.
Last October, the DEA declared that food
products containing even trace amounts of THC were banned under the Controlled
Substances Act.
The DEA ordered a halt in the production
and distribution of all goods containing THC that were intended for human
consumption.
It ordered all such products to be
destroyed or removed from the United States by March 18.
However, the 9th Circuit said the
government cannot enforce the new regulation until the court rules on challenges
to it.
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