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Issue #19.45 :: 11/06/2007 - 11/12/2007
Marijuana as First Amendment right

Rutherford fights for religious pot use

BY J. TOBIAS BEARD

The Rutherford Institute, a Charlottesville-based organization that defends civil liberties, is currently representing Carl Eric Olsen in his 30-year struggle for religious freedom. That in itself is not noteworthy, as The Rutherford Institute specializes in religious cases. But what is unusual is the particular religious freedom for which Olsen is fighting. Since the early '70s, Olsen has been a member of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church (EZCC), a religious group that holds that marijuana is a sacrament, and whose members smoke it all day, every day.


Rutherford Institute Founder and President John Whitehead loves his hemp cereal. Rutherford is taking on the case of Carl Eric Olsen, who is fighting for the right to smoke pot as part of his religion.

The EZCC has existed in Jamaica since at least the 1940s, and was first incorporated in the United States in Miami in 1975. In the late '70s and early '80s, the Church was involved in several major drug busts, netting as much as 38,000 pounds of marijuana in one raid in 1978.

"I [have been] arrested over and over again," Olsen says from his home in Iowa, and over and over again he has challenged those arrests, losing every time.

But things may be different now. Under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), Olsen, 55, is claiming that the government is keeping him from practicing his religion. According to the RFRA, the courts must use "strict scrutiny" in cases involving religion to make sure that an individual's First Amendment rights have not been violated.

Enter The Rutherford Institute. Despite a seemingly straight-laced image, defending the right to smoke pot is not necessarily at odds with the Institute's mission. John Whitehead, Rutherford's founder, says that the issue is not drugs, but religious freedom. "The question," Whitehead says, "always comes down to, 'What kind of power does the government have?'" In the case of marijuana legislation, the answer for Whitehead is too much. Whole Foods, he says, used to sell a hemp cereal that he was particularly fond of, but "when Bush got into office…[the government] went crazy for a while" and pulled the cereal off the shelf. "I love my hemp cereal," says Whitehead.

In a 1979 case, the Florida Supreme Court wrote, "(1) the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church represents a religion within the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States; (2) the 'use of cannabis is an essential portion of the religious practice.'" Nevertheless, the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld a ruling in 1990 denying Olsen a religious exemption to smoke marijuana. That ruling meant that he could no longer be a practicing member of the EZCC.

"Without being able to gather with other people and smoke marijuana," says Olsen, "my religion does not exist."

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Comments
This ongoing persecution by the governments of the world has gone on for far too long. I do not belong to a church but believe in God and the Bible, and also the Koran. I beleive it is clearly stated in the Bible that all herbs were given to mankind for his service and for the betterment of life. I don't believe in organized religion and therefore do not have a religious affiliation with any church. Does this mean that my beliefs or "religion" should be valued less than everyone elses? Apparently so because I tried to use a religious right defense in a Michigan court and the judge said I'm not a Rastafarian so therefor in no way do I have a legitimate defense, and laughed me out of court and into 6 months of work release at a detention center for 10 grams of cannabis. Stop the madness END THE WAR ON SOME DRUGS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
dalokzooNovember 7th, 2008 03:22pm
If the substance is not man-made (or "manufactured" as it is stated in the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970), and therefore can be grown naturally and organically, then its inclusion in the aforementioned Act is unconstitutional to any individual of the Jewish or Christian faiths. Religious scholars all agree that Genesis includes a covenant between God and man, providing man "dominion" over beast, birds, fish and seed bearing herbs, plants and trees. Any person that believes in this truly and lives a life of faith, is also subject to the unconstitutional interference of the government in their right to "free excercise" of their religion.
afpjrFebruary 4th, 2009 12:29pm
This is bullshit. i am lds, and in the bible god says "I will raise up for them a plant of renown, and they shall be no more consumed with hunger in the land, neither bear the shame of the heathen any more." (Ezekiel 34:29) A healing plant. On either side of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare 12 manner of fruits, and yielding her fruit every month; and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations." not allowing me to participate in religious activities is a violation of my first amendment, bottom line!! whether god meant smoking th plant or not is an opinion!!! we cannot continue to upkeep laws based upon opinion!!!!
brettJuly 29th 07:55pm
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