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- Message-ID: <319094782.3582661@ucommon1.commonlink.com>
- Date: 18 Aug 1994 23:39:43 -0000
- From: Carl_E._Olsen@commonlink.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Subject: CBS News - Holy Smoke
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
-
- CBS NEWS - 60 MINUTES
- Volume XII, Number 7
-
- October 28, 1979
-
- DAN RATHER: They call themselves the Ethiuopian Zion Coptic Church. Their
- outraged neighbors and many law enforcement officials call them a fraud, a
- group of rich dopeheads who have been allowed to laugh at the law and get
- away with it. That's because the Coptics insist that marijuana, which they
- call by its Jamaican name, ganja, is their sacrament.
-
- Holy Smoke
-
- DAN RATHER: One of the things we Americans have always accepted is that
- people have a right to practice their religion, no matter how unorthodox,
- without being molested by the law or by the rest of the community. But
- there's a church in Florida now that lawmen say is stretching that
- proposition a lot further than most people can accept, at least a lot further
- than they can accept.
-
- The issue will be decided by a case before the Florida Supreme Court that
- could eventually wind up before the United States Supreme Court, and that
- issue is whether or not the state can prosecute members of a church who
- believe marijuana was given to them by God, and that smoking pot is for them
- a holy ritual. Our story begins on Star Island in the coastal waterway
- between Miami and Miami Beach.
-
- Over the years, the people who've lived in this part of Miami Beach often
- have been famous, sometimes have been notorious, always have been wealthy.
- The Duke of Windsor, the abdicated King Edward VIII, often stayed with
- friends in the island neighborhood. Gangster Al Capone once had a
- not-so-small castle over there. But even Al Capone could not have disturbed
- his neighbors as much as have the current residents of Number 43, Star
- Island.
-
- (Coptics chanting)
-
- They call themselves the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, a religion these white
- Americans claim has its roots in black Jamaica. Their outraged neighbors and
- many law enforcement officials call them a fraud, a group of rich dopeheads
- who have been allowed to laugh at the law and get away with it. That's
- because the Coptics insist that marijuana, which they call by its Jamaican
- name, ganja, is their sacrament; as valid and as necessary to them, they say,
- as wine is to Catholics during communion.
-
- These services take place three times a day, but the Coptics appear to
- partake of their sacrament just about all the time. Their leader here on
- Star Island is a six foot seven inch former Catholic from Boston named Thomas
- Reilly. He prefers to be known as Brother Louv.
-
- BROTHER LOUV: Well, let's start from the beginning, page one of the Bible,
- Genesis, book one, verse 29: "Behold, I have given you every herb bearing
- seed, which is upon the face of all the earth..." Now, is there any dispute
- that marijuana is a green herb bearing seed that grows all over the earth?
-
- RATHER: All right, let's -- let's address ourselves to the truth. Is the
- basic message you should smoke ganja?
-
- BROTHER LOUV: The basic message is you should stop your sin. When you and I
- are neighbors and I have the security that you are a man who keeps the
- commandments of God, then I know you're not going to rob me, you're not going
- to murder me, you're not going to covet me. So that't the only security that
- people can have is to stop their sinful ways, stop becoming homosexuals when
- they know what the Scripture says about homosexuality; they know what wisdom
- shows you about destroying your own seed of life. They should stop their
- abortion. They should stop their birth control. They should stop their oral
- sex, their hand sex, and any way that they're destroying their own life and
- their own seed life. They should stop those things immediately. And they
- should have known to be smoking ganja from a long time. For how is it that I
- know to?
-
- RATHER: The Coptic Church bought this house in 1975 for $270,000, paid for
- in cash. It's a kind of luxury commune with about 40 members, but a commune
- that adheres to the Bible, Old and New Testament teachings; a kind of
- combination of Billy Graham fundamentalism and Kosher law. Though there is
- no formal marriage ceremony, the Coptic women must be faithful and subject to
- their husbands. But the women, and even the Coptic children, are encouraged
- to smoke marijuana, and that's where the trouble first started.
-
- It was in early 1978 that the local Miami media began focusing in on
- activities of the Coptic Church. While it was the constant chanting and the
- smell of marijuana that upset close neighbors on Star Island, it was those
- scenes of Coptic children smoking marijuana on local television that brought
- protests from the city as a whole. Then in November, 1978, news broke of the
- mass deaths of the Peoples Temple cult in Jonestown, Guyana, and many Miami
- residents were shocked into wondering if they might not have a potential
- Jonestown on their doorstep.
-
- BROTHER LOUV: I have no knowledge of Jim Jones except what I read in the
- paper. And I read in the Bible that the wages of sin is death, and I
- understand he ran a homosexual, perverted, wife-swapping, adulterous,
- lecherous, camp somewhere in the jungle, and that many of the people were
- murdered and some committed suicide, and I'm not the least bit surprised.
-
- RATHER: Nevertheless, the furor caused by the Coptic Church's activities led
- the state attorney to take action against them. A civil action for public
- nuisance was brought against the Coptics, rather than a criminal charge for
- possessio of marijuana. The state attorney's office had in fact offered to
- drop all charges if the Coptics would move out of Star Island to some place
- where they were less conspicuous. The Coptics flatly refused. Instead, they
- hired the best and most expensive lawyers in town. Milton Ferrell, Jr. is
- their chief defense attorney.
-
- RATHER: All right, so it was a civil action; went before the judge. The
- judge decided that, yes, this was a church under the definition of a church
- for First Amendment purposes, right?
-
- MILTON FERRELL, JR: He decided it was a religion. It was a --
-
- RATHER: It was a religion. And now the question before the Supreme Court is
- whether it is or isn't.
-
- FERRELL: No, the question before the Supreme Court -- the Supreme Court's
- not concerned as to the sincerity of the religious belief, or as to whether
- or not marijuana's essential to the conduct of the religion, nor whether the
- religion is a religion under the First Amendment of the United States
- Constitution. Those findings can't be challenged in the Supreme Court.
- Those have been found as a fact already. There's no controversy about that
- at all. The controversy in the supreme court of Florida is this: whether
- the State has a compelling state interest sufficient to override the
- fundamental interest of any citizen of the United States to practice their
- religion without governmental interference in it.
-
- RATHER: The implications of such a confrontation, says Florida Assistant
- State Attorney Henry Adorno, extend far beyond the Coptic Church.
-
- HENRY ADORNO: If a court were to rule that the Coptics do have a First
- Amendment right, then I think that would be the opening of the floodgates for
- possible legalization of marijuana in Florida. I, as a prosecutor, would
- then have to go around and decide who to arrest for possession of marijuana.
- They obviously would then come up with the defense, "Well, I'm a Coptic," or
- "I have, you know, I believe that marijuana is my sacrament," which would
- then muddle the criminal system to no end in trying to defend or trying to
- prosecute a case where the defense is First Amendment grounds.
-
- RATHER: Meanwhile, quite aware of all the legal problems they have caused,
- the Coptics continue their activities at Star Island. While the
- constitutional issue is debated, a federal civil rights ruling allows them to
- go on smoking marijuana unmolested. One court battle, the right to be
- considered a church, has already been won. But just what sort of church is
- it?
-
- The Coptics claim that their mother church is on the Caribbean island of
- Jamaica. Brother Louv and his American brethren first came to Jamaica in the
- early seventies. They were all graduates of Haight-Ashbury and the campuses
- of the sixties, a remnant of a lost generation. They came looking for
- marijuana, and they found it and bought it in the slums of Kingston from this
- Jamaican, Keith Gordon. At the same time, Gordon introduced them to an
- obscure Christian sect. This was the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, which
- claimed for years that the blacks of Africa were the original Jews of the
- Bible, and that the slaves of the New World were their direct descendants.
- Marijuana, or ganja, was the "holy herb". Ripe for a new spiritual
- experience, these Americans could have found nothing better than a religion
- that extolled the poor, the black man and marijuana all in one tidy package.
-
- Coptic Heights lies 30 miles outside Kingston. The Coptic Church owns as far
- as the eye can see. They have roads. They have trucks, lots of trucks.
- They have a dozen corporations trading under different names. To the average
- Jamaican, these Coptics are efficient, prosperous and highly suspect.
-
- DAWN RITCH: What they're doing is, on an organized basis, exporting
- marijuana to Miami.
-
- RATHER: Jamaican journalist Dawn Ritch.
-
- RITCH: The group in Miami at Star Island, they are the backers. They're the
- people with the money. They control this thing that they would like to
- pretend is a church. It is no church. That is a factory for the export of
- ganja.
-
- RATHER: Law enforcement agencies say that with his new-found American
- friends, Keith Gordon's marijuana business took off like a turpentined cat.
- From being a small-time pusher, he quickly grew to head an organization that
- controlled cultivation and large-scale distribution right into the United
- States. Today, the majority of marijuana grown illegally in fields such as
- this throughout Jamaica has already been presold to Brother Keith and the
- Coptics. It's prime marijuana that's much in demand.
-
- RITCH: Columbia marijuana, Mexican marijuana, is between two and four
- percent THC. Our marijuana is between four and eight percent. So we are
- genuinely the source. Also closest. But Coptic has, I am told, 7,000 acres
- of farm in Colombia, as well. We are now a branch, you see. They claim, in
- -- in Florida, that we are the source, we are the home of this church. We
- are simply a branch of a multinational corporation operating on the wrong
- side of the law.
-
- BROTHER LOUV: When -- when you talk about smuggling, what do you mean by
- smuggling?
-
- RATHER: It is not a fact that you are in the business, the business, of
- smuggling marijuana into the United States?
-
- BROTHER LOUV: I have no knowledge of even what you're thinking about, much
- less what you're talking about.
-
- RATHER: The United States Coast Guard here in Florida long has been
- interested in activities of the Zion Coptic Church, as have the FBI, the
- Federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the Florida Department of Criminal
- Law Enforcement, and even the Miami Beach police.
-
- One of The Miami Beach police who, as an undercover agent, recently spent a
- lot of time investigating the Coptic Church is Sergeant Rick Baretto.
-
- Tell me, if you can and if you will, what I am dealing with when I'm dealing
- with Brother Louv and Star Island. What is this about?
-
- SERGEANT RICK BARETTO: I don't know. I really don't.
-
- RATHER: You looked into it for two years and you don't know what it's about?
-
- SERGEANT BARETTO: That's correct. They obviously have had -- been in a
- financial situation where they can afford a lot of very high-priced
- attorneys. So they've been able to successfully tie us up time and time
- again and -- through litigation.
-
- RATHER: That's the way the system works, isn't it?
-
- SERGEANT BARETTO: The wheels turn slowly, yes, sir.
-
- FEMALE PATROL BOAT PILOT: This is Coast Guard 459, Coast Guard 459, over.
-
- RATHER: On at least two occasions in this state alone, members of the church
- have been arrested in very large drug busts. November, 1977, Marion County,
- Florida: 13 tons of marijuana found hidden in a tunnel on a farm owned by the
- church. February, 1978, Citrus County, Florida: 20 tons of marijuana taken
- off the vessel Our Seas, owned by the church; 16 persons arrested, including
- Brother Louv's fellow church leader, Keith Gordon of Jamaica. However, none
- of the charges stuck. May 14th, 1979: Marion County charges dropped. May
- 22nd, 1979: Citrus County charges dropped. Lack of solid evidence cited as
- the reasons; that the state had found church members around marijuana, but
- was unable to establish a direct link between the members and the confiscated
- dope. So, the fact remains - and this is important - that not a single
- member of the Zion Coptic Church ever has been convicted of possessing so
- much as a single ounce of marijuana in any court in - the state of Florida.
-
- Is this whole church, based so conveniently in Miami and Jamaica, just a
- cover for large-scale organized crime? Well, no, it's certainly not as
- simple as that. All the law enforcement agencies who have investigated the
- Coptics agree: they cannot be faulted on the sincerity of their religious
- views. Moreover, the Coptics have never, never been linked in any way with
- the smuggling of hard drugs, cocaine and heroin, that right now is so rampant
- throughout Florida. Nor with other activities associated with so-called
- mafioso crime, such as prostitution, gambling and gun-running. None of these
- would be consistent with the Coptics' professed beliefs. Marijuana, and only
- marijuana, is what the Coptics are about. To them it is a holy mission.
-
- (Coptics singing in religious ceremony)
-
- RATHER: Back in Miami, the Coptics are pursuing that mission with all the
- zeal of a political candidate running for office. They recently hired a
- production company to film their every move, and they study their screen
- performances with great care. They advertise themselves, together with a
- biblical plug for marijuana, in the Miami telephone book Yellow Pages. And
- they publish an expensive newspaper which details with relish their latest
- costly legal battles. Where does Brother Louv say he gets the money to do
- all this?
-
- BROTHER LOUV: I want you to consider that you're talking to a spiritual
- person who has solved the physical problems, and we should be talking about
- the matters that could uplift everyone who's hearing us right now.
-
- RATHER: Well, where will the money for this thing come from?
-
- BROTHER LOUV: Do you read in the Scripture money is the tool of the Devil.
- The love of money is the root of all evil. We love the blessing. Within
- blessing we've found a higher way of thinking than dollars and cents. Money
- is a tool. A worldly tool.
-
- RATHER: How do you feel about the Internal Revenue Service case, which is
- several (indistinct cross-talk) --
-
- BROTHER LOUV: They're a bunch of robbers and thieves and whores!
-
- RATHER: The Internal Revenue Service?
-
- BROTHER LOUV: Robbers, thieves and whores.
-
- RATHER: On what evidence do you (indistinct cross-talk)?
-
- BROTHER LOUV: They have no integrity. They have no foundation. They all
- have little soft, pink, fleshly little hands. They sit in offices all day
- long trying to rob the people.
-
- RATHER: Brother Louv's brotherly love clearly wears a little thin when
- reminded of the Internal Revenue Service. Recently, estimating the value of
- automobiles, property, boats and the amount of marijuana seized so far, the
- IRS and the U.S. Customs presented the Coptics with a bill for back taxes and
- penalties totaling $l8-million. Privately, law enforcement officers hope
- that the tax man may succeed where the police have so far failed, and bring
- down the Coptic Church. The Coptics have simply refused to pay, and to them
- it's just one court case among many.
-
- Their minds, and a great deal of their money, are right now tied up in a
- legal battle of greater significance which they are determined to win, if
- necessary by going all the way to the United States Supreme Court.
-
- If you were to become Brother Louv's defense attorney, an unlikely prospect,
- I think you'll agree --
-
- ADORNO: I agree.
-
- RATHER: -- and you were advising him, where is the greatest danger to him
- legally?
-
- ADORNO: Legally it's in the decisions that are -- in the mood of the -- of
- the country. I don't think this country is ready for the legalization of
- marijuana, or at least the state of Florida is not ready for that. And I
- think that for him to win his battle, he's going to have to fight the greater
- battle, which is not -- not only allowing Coptics to smoke marijuana, but
- take the one step further and having marijuana legalized. I think that's the
- only way that he's ultimately going to win his battle.
-
- BROTHER LOUV: Not -- from the time you say legalized, that to me sounds like
- whisky, and whisky's something you can buy from the government but if you
- make your own they'll put you in jail. So that does not apply to marijuana.
- Marijuana, ganja, is free. We're not fighting for the freedom or the
- legalization. We're declaring that it is and always has been free.
-
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