HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Pot Scarcity Peeves Patients
Pubdate: Fri, 25 Oct 2002
Source: New York Post (NY)
Copyright: 2002 N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.nypost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/296
Author: Richard Johnson
Note: Paula Froelich And Chris Wilson contributed to this story.
Note: Title by MAP
Cited: National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws 
http://www.norml.org

POT SCARCITY PEEVES PATIENTS

A MYSTERIOUS marijuana shortage in New York has gotten so bad that local 
medicinal pot groups are begging for an emergency supply of reefer from 
out-of-state sources.

According to a board member of the New York City Medical Marijuana Buyers 
Club, the shortage has gotten so desperate that two cancer patients 
undergoing chemotherapy have had to be re-hospitalized because they ran out 
of the weed.

"There's almost no pot around at all. None," the source tells PAGE SIX's 
Ian Spiegelman. "There is a very small amount of hydroponically grown 
marijuana available, but it's incredibly expensive."

Ultra-potent hydroponic pot runs about $400 an ounce. More common 
commercial blends cost a mere $100 to $150 per ounce.

The medical marijuana club represents about 150 severely ill people who 
treat their symptoms with cannabis - which is still illegal in New York 
State, even for terminal cases. The typical patient uses about two ounces a 
month, and cannot afford the price of the luxury bud. "We sell it at cost, 
but the stuff that's around now is too expensive even at cost," a club 
member said.

Club members are reaching out across the U.S. "We're e-mailing other 
buyers' clubs, requesting that because of the emergency situation people 
come and donate small amounts."

The lack of herb has been attributed to everything from the arrest of 25 
corrupt officials in Mexico last week to heightened security on East Coast 
highways until the sniper case arrests. "Because of all the police 
activity, people do not want to come up the Interstate with large 
quantities of marijuana," says the source. "They're too scared."

And New Yorkers just lost out on a botanical bonanza yesterday when two men 
in upstate Herkimer were busted for possession of 150 pounds of the 
forbidden weed.

The shortage appears to be strictly local. Keith Stroup, executive director 
of the Washington, D.C.-based National Organization for the Reform of 
Marijuana Laws, says, "I buy marijuana regularly and I haven't had any 
problems."

Will the city's potheads really have to pack up and move to Humbolt County? 
Fred Gieger, unit head at the DEA's New York field office, says, "We have 
no indication that there is any marijuana shortage."

The NYC Medical Marijuana Buyers Club plans to hold a rally at City Hall on 
Halloween, in honor of club member "Uncle Donny," who died last week of 
kidney failure that had nothing to do with his smoke intake.
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MAP posted-by: Derek