Kentucky’s top agriculture official: DEA wrong to call hemp products illegal
Ryan Quarles, Kentucky’s Agriculture Commissioner, fired a letter to the head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration this week asking to meet to discuss “federal overreach” with industrial hemp.
“I was dumbfounded when I read a Louisville Courier-Journal article that was titled, ‘Are you breaking the law when you buy hemp products?'” Quarles said, according to a copy of the letter.
He referenced statements from DEA spokesman Melvin Patterson calling all hemp products — even chocolate hemp bark — illegal if the product can be consumed. Even though federal law limits the THC amount to a non-intoxicating level.
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“Consumable hemp products are legal to buy,” Quarles said.
Duane Sinning, who oversees the industrial hemp program in Colorado, also views hemp products as legal.
“Agriculture laws are not really that hard, unless you get the DEA involved and they want to make it hard,” he said.
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The 2014 Farm Bill allowed states to pass laws to grow and market industrial hemp, but the law is brief and interpreted in conflicting ways.
Quarles requested a meeting with DEA Acting Administrator Robert Patterson during Quarles’ trip to Washington, D.C., at the end of January to meet with agriculture officials from other states.
“We enforce the Controlled Substances Act,” Melvin Patterson said Thursday in response to Quarles’ letter. “He’s knocking on the wrong door.
“Unless Congress changes it, we’re going to continue to do our jobs.”
Quarles said he believes Congress should — and eventually will — remove hemp from the federal Controlled Substances Act list.
Reporter Beth Warren: bwarren@courier-journal.com; 502-582-7164; Twitter @BethWarrenCJ. Support strong local journalism by subscribing today: www.courier-journal.com/bethw.
Filed under: General Problems
Perhaps Kentucky should bring out their state police and/or national guard to protect their legally grown crops and the farmers that raise them!