Sounding Circle: South Dakota Farmer Struggles To Grow Hemp

 South Dakota Farmer Struggles To Grow Hemp6 comments
picture 2 Jul 2007 @ 19:45, by Raymond Powers

S.D. Farmer Struggles To Grow Hemp
By Chet Brokaw, Associated Press Writer
Press & Dakotan - Yankton, SD

July 2, 2007


MANDERSON -- Alex White Plume hoped his extended family could make a good living growing hemp when he first planted seeds on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in southwest South Dakota, but years of fighting with federal drug officials have left him in financial trouble.

The White Plume family planted hemp for three years from 2000 through 2002, but they never harvested a crop. Federal agents conducted raids and cut down the plants each year because U.S. law considers hemp, a cousin of marijuana, to be a drug even though it contains only a trace of the drug in marijuana.

"We had all these plans of grandeur and independence, to lead the way with industrial hemp," White Plume said. "None of it worked out."

White Plume plans to sell much of his ranching operation this fall. He said he probably can keep his house and at least some of his buffalo that graze among the pine-dotted ridges that give the reservation its name. His horses, a truck with license plates reading "HEMP," and other equipment likely will be sold to pay off some of his debts.

The Alex White Plume story & pictorial

READ ON and click here to finish this article

White Plume never was charged with a crime, but the DEA sued him and got a court order to bar him from growing hemp. He argued that the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 gave the Sioux the right to grow hemp.

The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year ruled against White Plume, saying the treaty did not give tribal members the right to grow the plant. Hemp is also subject to federal drug laws, which require a DEA permit to grow the plant in both its marijuana and hemp forms, the appeals judges said.

"We are not unmindful of the challenges faced by members of the Tribe to engage in sustainable farming on federal trust lands. It may be that the growing of hemp for industrial uses is the most viable agricultural commodity for that region," the appeals judges wrote.


But even though White Plume lost a court case last year, he is ready to resume the cultivation of hemp if the federal government ever allows it. The plant could help boost the economy of the Oglala Sioux Tribe's poverty-stricken reservation, where unemployment is estimated to be as high as 85 percent, he said.

"I could never climb back up to where I was, but I still believe in hemp, so we're going to continue to struggle," White Plume said.

The family's attempt to grow hemp, which is used to make rope, oils, skin lotion, cloth and a variety of other products, is featured in a "Point of View" documentary that will be broadcast Tuesday on Public Broadcasting Service stations nationwide. The film started as a look at hemp growing, but it grew to include a look at Indian treaties and the Lakota culture and tradition, according to filmmakers Suree Towfighnia and Courtney Hermann.

An important part of the story, filmed periodically over a five-year period, deals with the emphasis on extended family among the Lakota, Towfighnia said during a recent visit to White Plume's home. "People can learn from the Lakota way of life because it's a beautiful way of life."

White Plume said he used to run a successful trail ride business, but that faltered after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks because fewer European tourists visited the United States.

He said he became interested in growing hemp in 1998 after seeing country star Willie Nelson promote it. The Oglala Sioux Tribe also passed a measure legalizing the growing of hemp on the reservation.

The tribal law should have been enough to allow hemp farming because of the sovereignty granted to the Lakota by treaties, White Plume said.

White Plume planted hemp on his land in 2000, planning to make money by selling the seed to others, but U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents cut down his plants a few days before he intended to harvest them. The DEA also seized similar plantings by his brother and sister in the next two years.

"All that left us in debt and demoralized, trying to figure out what to do because our sovereignty was directly attacked," White Plume said.

But he laughs when he talks about the hemp plants that still grow on his land, even right outside the back door of his house. The plants spread from seeds knocked off during the DEA raid, he said.

"When the DEA used their weed whackers to cut my plants down, they reseeded it something awful," said White Plume, a former vice president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe.

The appeals court also noted that hemp is used to make many useful products, and the DEA registration process imposes a burden on anyone seeking to grow hemp legally.

"But these are policy arguments better suited for the congressional hearing room than the courtroom," the appeals judges wrote.

White Plume's lawyer, Bruce Ellison of Rapid City, said courts have consistently declined to give much consideration to Indian treaties. And the hemp law should be struck down because it is not rational, he said.

White Plume now intends to spend time working on environmental protection and treaty issues, such as an effort to regain the Black Hills that were taken from the Lakota more than 125 years ago.

And if farmers ever are allowed to grow hemp, he's ready to plant another crop.

"We didn't give up our struggle. We still want to grow hemp and we still got all our plans in shape," White Plume said.

"It's not a drug plant," he said.


Coipyright (c) 2007 Press & Dakotan


[< Back] [Sounding Circle]

Category:  


6 comments

9 Jul 2007 @ 20:49 by Betty Roth @206.103.217.186 : What can we do to help?
I saw your story on PBS last night and was appalled. The US Government has once again overstepped its powers.Don't give up. When your hemp is finally sold, I would like to know who is using it so I can support by buying items made from it. What can I do to help? Have you asked anyone for a microloan? Check with Kiva.org to see if there are microloan available.  


11 Jul 2007 @ 14:04 by Cynthia Olson @128.104.40.188 : How can I help?
Do you have a fund set up to cover your legal expenses? Is there someone I should write a letter to in support of your cause? What you are trying to do, growing hemp as an oil and fiber crop where not much else will grow, makes so much sense, it boggles the mind that anyone could find a reason to try and stop it! I am a spinner and fiber artist. When I buy hemp fiber to spin it comes from China. Makes no sense!
Please let me know if I can make a contribution to your efforts.  



30 Nov 2007 @ 18:21 by nivk @81.25.42.150 : thanks
very useful info
thax  



24 Dec 2007 @ 13:45 by Vicki Clemons @66.209.232.183 : Hemp growing
Just another way for the USGov to keep Native Americans down. The law needs to be amended to exclude hemp-growing. It is not a drug with THC in it. That has been acknowledged. And importing it is allowed, so why is there DEA involvement to start with? Makes no sense at all. They need to concentrate on problems like cocaine-, heroine-trafficking. Even California has allowed hemp-growing. They legalized the growing just like the Tribal Council did. Why hasn't the DEA done anything about that and ripped out those crops? If California requires permits, the Tribal Council can issue permits, too. California is not a sovereign nation, so what's the deal here?
Thank you for the article.  



27 Nov 2008 @ 18:27 by DELBERT PETERSON @69.77.225.147 : YOU DO NOT TELL THE TRUTH
YOUR JUST LIKE BOB NEWLAND AND JOE AMERICAN HORSE. YOU SAID YOU WERE IMSPIRED BY WILLY NELSON FN BULLSHIT YOU MET ME AT MANDERSON AFTER RED CLOUD THREATENED TO HAVE ME ARRESTED FOR GIVING AWAY HEMP ROPE THAT WAS LEFT OVER FROM THE MOVIE CRAZY HORSE AND MY HEMP WEDDING SUIT THAT WAS ON CNN AFTER I HAD THE FIRST HEMP WEDDING AT MT.RUSHMORE I WAS THE FIRST PERSON IN SOUTH DAKOTA TO GO PUBLIC ABOUT HEMP AND YOU MONEY GRABBERS CAME LATER ASKING FOR CASH TO HELP YOU OUT. FUCK YOU GUYS YOU ARE NOT IMPORTANT THE PLANT IS AND LOTS OF PEOPLE IN SOUTH DAKOTA KNOW WHO THE FIRST HEMPMAN WAS HERE----DELBERT PETERSON FROM HOT SPRINGS S.D.  


23 Jan 2009 @ 05:46 by Barbara Gerber @65.54.97.186 : Hemp !

Don't give up, the only reason they are fighting you is because of the Big
Oil And Big timber industry's. Have the
tribe go through our newely elected President's men. It looks like Obama has a head on his shoulder. And I am not a druggy. I am a 55 year old woman
that just happens to know their greedy reason's. Remind them that their forfather's smoked it's cousin. Hemp is harmless. It would take a whole field to even start anyone on a high. They are idiot's. Go for it Brother.!!!
 



Your Name:
Your URL: (or email)
Subject:       
Comment:
For verification, please type the word you see on the left:


Other entries in
10 Oct 2008 @ 06:21: Nature loss 'dwarfs bank crisis'
12 Sep 2007 @ 19:01: How the Food Industry is Deceiving You
17 Aug 2007 @ 22:17: BUilding Straw Houses from flax to hemp
15 Jul 2007 @ 15:07: Ultimate green machine: a car made of hemp
1 Mar 2007 @ 17:06: Michael Pollan, Whole Foods' John Mackey Dialoghue in Berkeley
3 Nov 2006 @ 16:15: Seafood, other ocean life threatened by overfishing, pollution
30 Oct 2006 @ 19:32: Stoynfield's Response to Business Week Organic Myth Article
30 Oct 2006 @ 19:28: The Organic Myth
4 Oct 2006 @ 20:04: Positive Proof of Global Warming
18 Aug 2006 @ 20:42: California Senate Passes Law Allowing Farmers to Grow Hemp



[< Back] [Sounding Circle] [PermaLink]? 


Link to this article as: http://soundingcircle.com/newslog2.php/_v195/__show_article/_a.htm

Main Page: soundingcircle.com