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- From: carlolsen@dsmnet.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Newsgroups: alt.hemp,talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: McKinney's THC Story
- Date: Sun, 2 Oct 1994 21:34:21
- Message-ID: <carlolsen.498.0015933B@dsmnet.com>
-
- TELEPHONE INTERVIEW
- WITH
- LAURENCE MCKINNEY
- CAMBRIDGE PHARMACEUTICAL LABORATORIES, INC.
- POST OFFICE BOX 748
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 02139
- (617) 868-9386
- JULY 20, 1991
-
- OLSEN: What's the difference between synthetic THC and
- natural THC?
-
- MCKINNEY: Molecularly speaking, there's no difference at all.
- The only difference between getting THC out of the plant, is when
- you get it out of the plant, the residuals, the impurities, are
- all these dismissive molecules, which are other plant molecules,
- of course. When you make synthetic THC, the only residual
- impurity, quote-unquote, is delta-8 THC, so Marinol's technically
- 95% THC and 5% delta-8 THC, whereas marijuana is 5% THC and 95%
- plant material which apparently has no effect, because every time
- people give all this testimony and talk about the effects of
- smoking marijuana, or whatever, whenever they talk about the
- effects, the effects are identical from the effects of taking
- THC.
-
- OLSEN: You said there's never been any ..., you know, when
- people talk about marijuana, they're talking about THC, because
- none of the other chemicals have ever been tested.
-
- MCKINNEY: Exactly. Well, it's not that they haven't been
- tested, they've been tested, but there's been no real indication
- that they have an effect to the extent that it changes the effect
- of smoking marijuana. In other words, there's never been a test
- on any of the other drugs that are in marijuana that indicated
- they have dramatic enough effects that they would be changing the
- effect of THC. Say, maybe, there was, you know, 2% water in your
- orange juice, it wouldn't do a lot of difference to the orange
- juice. It would be slightly diluted, but you wouldn't taste any
- difference, and you wouldn't feel any difference. So, what's
- happening is, the government charges, which are totally specious,
- is that there are these other things in marijuana, sure, but not
- one of these other things in marijuana has been shown to be
- dangerous or problematical, nor has it ever been shown that those
- experiencing the effects of marijuana are experiencing the
- effects of anything else but THC.
-
- OLSEN: What about the argument that smoking marijuana is bad
- because it's smoke?
-
- MCKINNEY: That, per se, is silly, because the National Cancer
- Institute will tell you that unless you smoke more than four
- cigarettes a day, there's no determination that you're moving
- towards lung damage, and very few people are smoking more than
- four joints a day.
-
- OLSEN: Is there anything different about marijuana smoke than
- tobacco smoke
-
- MCKINNEY: No. Actually, marijuana does have a slightly
- tarrier smoke. It's about 30% to 40% tarrier, but, again, we go
- down to how many joints a day.
-
- OLSEN: What about the bronchodilator and bronchoconstrictor
- things?
-
- MCKINNEY: That has to do with the effects of THC on the smooth
- muscle. Initially, it acts as a stimulator, which causes smooth
- muscle to contract, which gives you that feeling of your
- diaphragm getting tight, or people say that smoke is expanding.
- That's ridiculous. Smoke is not expanding their diaphragm, it's
- contracting. It's because it effects all smooth muscle
- immediately, making it contract.
-
- OLSEN: Well, they say marijuana's like a bronchodilator, and
- tobacco is a bronchoconstrictor.
-
- MCKINNEY: Who say?
-
- OLSEN: I've read this over and over again.
-
- MCKINNEY: Yeah, well, there's a lot of things. People used
- to say you could bury your dope in the ground, it would get full
- of mold and everything. There's a lot of bullshit around in this
- business, because there's so many people
-
- OLSEN: I've also heard that it was good for migraines, because
- it expanded the blood vessels in the brain.
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, that's complete bullshit, because there's
- nothing that's going to give you a headache faster than expanding
- the blood vessels in the brain. In fact, the two kinds of
- headaches that we normally have, one is caused by constriction of
- the muscles in the neck which drops the blood pressure in the
- brain, the other is caused by exhaustion which by making the
- smooth muscles relax ...
-
- OLSEN: Well, it was described to me as the migraine or the
- headache comes from constricting of the blood vessels, cutting
- off the supply of oxygen to the brain.
-
- MCKINNEY: No. No, not at all. If you cut off the blood
- supply to the brain, you'd be dead. It just drops the blood
- pressure slightly.
-
- OLSEN: Well, just restricting the flow, I mean, somewhat.
-
- MCKINNEY: Restricting the flow drops the blood pressure,
- doesn't it?
-
- OLSEN: I don't know.
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, let's face it. You've got X amount of blood
- pressure, and you put less blood in. Come on.
-
- OLSEN: Yeah. I don't know. It was described to me as being a
- reduction in oxygen.
-
- MCKINNEY: By a licensed physician who had a knowledge of
- cardiovascular things, or some marijuana advocate? Let's get
- straight here. Who are we talking to, experts or Merlins?
-
- OLSEN: No. I just heard this. I'm just checking it out.
-
- MCKINNEY: Don't believe a thing you hear, unless the guy who
- is saying it .
-
- OLSEN: Well, I don't believe a thing I hear. I repeat it as
- being something I heard, and that's all the value I give it.
-
- MCKINNEY: Between you and me, I won't pass along anything.
- Ever since I've been in the drug education business, since 1970,
- I always check it out with the medical journals before I repeat
- anything.
-
- OLSEN: Well, of course, well, I just thought I'd check with
- you, since you're that kind of a person.
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, here's the word. THC from a plant and THC
- from a vat are absolutely identical. However, since that's the
- case, and since no one smoking marijuana has ever described the
- symptoms of smoking marijuana as being different from those of
- having an effect of THC, we are really putting people in jail for
- an alternative administration of a legal drug, and that's what I
- keep saying. If you vaporize a plant to get your THC molecules,
- even though they re mixed with a lot of other crap, sure, it's
- ineffective, but it's simply an alternative mode of
- administration. And the Drug Enforcement Administration has to
- admit that people smoking marijuana are self-medicating
- themselves with THC. And if you talk about self-medication,
- instead of getting high, and you talked about self-medication
- with crude THC, rather than smoking a doobie, now you re talking
- about using this wonder drug that everyone says is so safe.
-
- OLSEN: Yeah. Yeah, OK, tell me now, what are the two
- chemicals that are used to make THC synthetically.
-
- MCKINNEY: Olivitol and paramenthadianol , And you react the
- two, and I'm not certain how you react the two, I mean, that's
- the part I don't know. Do you put it in a pressure cooker? Do
- you put it in a special apparatus? Do you do this? Do you do
- that? I'm not sure. But you react the two together. It is
- being done at Norac Industries owned by Chester, Dr. Chester,
- McCluskey in Azusa, California. I mean, this is something that
- ought to he fun. You could get a sort of a tour of the lab. You
- could get all the marijuana activists out to Azusa and stand
- around the place where they make the THC.
-
- OLSEN: Yeah. I'm interested in where they get these two
- chemicals from, too.
-
- MCKINNEY: They get it from Sandoz in New Jersey.
-
- OLSEN: And do you have any idea how Sandoz gets it?
-
- MCKINNEY: They make it.
-
- OLSEN: OK. And do you have any idea how they make it?
-
- MCKINNEY: Yeah, from a lot of other stuff. I think they start
- with gallac acid. I'm not certain, but I think they start with
- gallac acid. I'm not sure, but the thing is, someone told me ...
- Carl Nocka is the man who makes it.
-
- OLSEN: OK. Got his address?
-
- MCKINNEY: Carl Nocka is the man who makes the olivitol for
- Sandoz. I believe it's Sandoz, in their chemical division. He
- describes the process of making olivitol as mouse milk.
-
- OLSEN: OK. Is there any way I could find out from this guy,
- or from anybody else, exactly where the organic compounds come
- from? What do they start out with? Where do they get the plant
- material or the mineral material?
-
- MCKINNEY: There's no plant material.
-
- OLSEN: Well, where do they get the minerals from then, to
- start this whole process?
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, they usually get them out of the ground.
-
- OLSEN: Yeah. And what are they? What are the minerals?
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, it comes down to probably atoms of carbon and
- nitrogen, and things like that. You see, when you talk about
- biosynthesis, it means the plant, using its own clever bits of
- iona this and iona that, is shifting the molecules back and
- forth. Let's also recall that the plant doesn't make
- tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), it makes tetrahydrocannabinolic acid
- and then it has to be decarboxylated by heat. Now, the other way
- of making THC is to make cannabidiol and then reverse isomerize
- it, which the isomerizer never did do, into THC. That's the
- Razdan process. You see, the thing is, that when you're making
- THC, if you let the reaction go too far, you end up with
- cannabidiol. And, what the Razdan process locked into, the fact
- was, take it all the way to cannabidiol and then turn the
- cannabidiol into THC. That's how they do Razdan THC, which is
- the stuff that Harry Pars wanted to put on the market. Remember,
- THC can be made by anybody for nausea, it can't be made by anyone
- else excepting Unimed for weight gain.
-
- OLSEN: OK. Why?
-
- MCKINNEY: Why? Because they got an orphan drug from the
- United States government, a monopoly. That's why this whole
- thing started. Kapoor, an Indian fellow with $200 million, took
- over Unimed and then he got an orphan drug for weight gain, and
- pushed forward with a lot of government pressure, and they opened
- up the market in Europe by having the UN change their OKs on THC.
-
- OLSEN: OK. What's an orphan drug?
-
- MCKINNEY: Orphan drug means when a drug supposedly has so
- little market that making the ..., the expense of creating an FDA
- passable version of the drug would exceed the money that a person
- was going to make from it. It's called an orphan drug. That
- means that nobody really wants to make it, because it's not
- profitable enough. So, in order to induce a company to make an
- orphan drug, the government gives one company a monopoly. So,
- Unimed has a monopoly. The interesting thing about Unimed is
- that it's owned by an Indian named John Kapoor who lives in
- Chicago, but it's distributed by Roxane Laboratories which is
- wholly, privately, owned by the German drug cartel Boehringer-
- Ingelheim, which means that the profits from this drug are going
- to Germany. And, the people who make the olivitol are Sandoz.
- It's a Swiss company. So, the profits from the manufacture of
- the raw ingredients go to Switzerland. All the money from this
- wonderful drug goes out of the United States, increasing our
- deficit. If we grew it in this country and made it, it would be
- American THC. This is sold by the Germans, with ingredients made
- by the Swiss. And we could do it all ourselves. The original
- work was done by Arthur D. Little and was picked up by Unimed
- back in 1983, because no one else wanted to make it. The
- capsules are made by Banner Laboratories in Los Angeles. So, the
- THC, pure THC, is shipped from Norac to Banner, Banner puts it
- into capsules and ships it to the Cleveland, Ohio, warehouse of
- Roxane Laboratories.
-
- OLSEN: How do you think that the government can keep marijuana
- illegal then?
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, because, you see, the law, as was written by
- John Mitchell, is the Controlled Substances Act. If it was the
- Controlled Drug Act, we'd have a real problem, because in modern
- day we don't think of a drug as being a collection of substances,
- but as being a specific molecule. But, by calling it a
- Controlled Substances Act, you can play all sorts of legal
- rubbery games like saying that cocaine is in Schedule 2, because
- there's a medical use for cocaine, but crack is in Schedule 1.
-
- OLSEN: And the coca plant is in Schedule 2.
-
- MCKINNEY: Yes. But, what I'm trying to point out is, although
- cocaine is in Schedule 2, and they can't get it out of Schedule
- 2, to make more money for the police and the Justice Department,
- crack is in Schedule 1, which means there is no medical
- intervention, it's all in the hands of the police, although,
- chemically speaking, crack and cocaine are precisely the same.
- It's simply another form of it. And that's why I say you have
- the Controlled Substances Act. That's how you can have the
- entire peyote plant in that category, or the entire marijuana
- plant, because it's a substance. THC is in Schedule 2.
- Marijuana is in Schedule 1. It's in Schedule I supposedly
- because it contains a drug called THC which is in Schedule 2.
- However, if you take the THC out of marijuana, it's still in
- Schedule 1, even though its got its drug taken out of it, because
- it's the marijuana that's the controlled substance, and that is
- the trick to a controlled substance. They could make Scotch Tape
- into a controlled substance.
-
- OLSEN: Why is marijuana then, without THC, in Schedule I and
- tobacco is legal?
-
- MCKINNEY: Because, in Schedule I in the Controlled Substances
- Act they define a number of different items, and marijuana is
- defined as the leaves and the flowering tops and everything made
- of the marijuana plant. That's the legal definition.
-
- OLSEN: But how can you call it due process, I mean, how is it
- fair that a classification include something and doesn't include
- something else, when they both fit the same definition?
-
- MCKINNEY: No one ever said the body of law in any country is
- particularly good. In Arabia, they chop your head off. I mean,
- let's face it, the laws are never anything but the current
- reflection of popular political opinion. So, what you're looking
- at here is a drug which is itself, at 95%, considered to be a
- wonder drug, safe, never been an overdose. OK? But, at 5% in a
- plant, it's in the same category as heroin. In other words, when
- it's 20 or 30 times more potent, it's legal. But, when it's so
- crude, when it's in its crudest form, it's like saying gasoline
- and crude oil ...
-
- OLSEN: Well, aren't they saying, because of the fact that it's
- only 5% and it's mixed with all this other stuff, that that's why
- it's worse that the 95% pure?
-
- MCKINNEY: Well, what they're saying, whenever you try to make
- marijuana into Schedule 2, is that there are all these other
- things which haven't been tested. They make you put marijuana
- through the same test you'd put THC through, which is to say,
- what are the impurities?," and of course there are 423 molecules
- in marijuana, only one of them is THC. So, if you take out the
- THC, how many impurities have you got? 422. That's how they do
- it. Because, normally, when you make a drug, you've got to test
- the impurities and see if they're OK, and see if they have any
- effect. Can you imagine anyone wanting to test 422 other
- molecules? Now, the only thing I have, there's been a change in
- the generic drug laws that says you don't have to duplicate the
- entire procedure, but you do have to make it equivalent, its got
- to have the same effect. And when the FDA told us that they
- didn't care where you got THC from, as long as it was 95% pure,
- there was some question there. But what it comes right down to
- is that nobody in the marijuana movement, including Richard
- Dennis, wants to put their money behind the one simple routine
- that would change everything, which I've been talking about for
- the last four years, which is a very simple movement to change
- the definition of marijuana in the rule books. All you have to
- do is include tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) as one of the legal
- products of the plant, along with hemp seed and hemp cloth and
- hemp this and hemp that, and the whole thing would fall apart
- immediately, because then you would have the anomaly of a plant
- which had its active ingredient removed still being in Schedule
- 1. It would fall apart on its own ridiculousness. And yet ...
-
- OLSEN: In other words, you're saying that it would be looked
- at like tobacco?
-
- MCKINNEY: Yeah. I mean, it wouldn't be looked at like
- tobacco. Suppose that you had a lemon, and vitamin C was legal,
- but lemons were illegal because they had vitamin C, and a lemon
- was defined as everything that comes off the lemon tree.
-
- OLSEN: Yeah. Well, you re saying marijuana is illegal because
- it has THC in it.
-
- MCKINNEY: I'm saying that the way that the government keeps
- marijuana illegal is by broadcasting the idea that marijuana
- contains a dangerous drug. The dangerous drug they refer to is
- THC at 5%. On the other side of their mouth, they're calling THC
- a safe and harmless drug at 95%. In other words, when the THC is
- in sesame oil, which is the only other ingredient in Marinol,
- surrounded by a gelatin capsule, it's a wonder drug. When the
- THC is in a hemp stalk, surrounded by hemp fibers, it's Schedule
- I criminal, and how it would be illegal for us to hack our way
- into there and pull the legal drug out. You see, to us, to our
- way of thinking, and our argument all along, we're going into a
- plant to pull out something legal, and we're calling the plant
- illegal because its got the legal stuff in it. It doesn't make
- any sense. You can simply say that the people smoking marijuana
- are self-medicating themselves with the effects of THC, which are
- found by the government to be safe, efficacious, and absolutely
- harmless. There's never been an overdose, there's never been a
- death. And they're just people who have, you know, nausea maybe?
- Who knows, maybe they want to gain weight. Fine, let them self-
- medicate. Why can't they medicate by taking it out of the plant?
- It's like saying you've got to have pure synthetic maple syrup,
- you can't tap a tree.
-
- OLSEN: So, is there another way to get THC out of marijuana
- besides smoking it, and without refining it?
-
- MCKINNEY: No.
-
- OLSEN: Is there some way to use the raw marijuana at home,
- does it have to go through some ...
-
- MCKINNEY: You can't get pure THC out of it.
-
- OLSEN: You can't?
-
- MCKINNEY: You can't. No. You can get maybe a solution as
- high as 65% or 75%, you can. That's about as high as you con go.
- The reason it costs nearly as much to make natural THC is because
- there's so much more gunk to clear out with the liquid
- chromatograms. When you've only got two molecules to separate,
- it's not so hard. When you've got 400 to separate, it's harder.
-
- OLSEN: It would be more expensive to make THC from a plant
- than it would be to ...?
-
- MCKINNEY: As expensive. Until you get into serious large
- production, there's no real advantage. The one thing that's the
- biggest advantage is you don't have to rely on a lot of complex
- expensive chemicals made by a lot of complex expensive companies.
- When Carl Nocka said that making olivitol was mouse milk, what he
- meant was it takes a hell of a lot of whatever they use to make
- it out of to make a little bit. It's a very low yield process.
- That's why olivitol costs $1,000 a kilogram. Very expensive.
- Now, in the making of THC from the raw materials, it costs a lot
- more to refine it, but the raw materials are cheaper. You see,
- the liquid chromatogram uses packed columns of silica gel which
- will retard certain molecules and let other molecules go through.
- And what happens is that it retards the cannabinoids say, but
- then eventually the little granules in the tube become all
- clogged up with what they're trying to sieve out. And the
- problem is because there's so many similar molecules to THC in
- the gunk, that you can't run the solution through the tubes more
- than two or three times and it's all gunked up. And, silica gel
- costs $150 to $250 a kilogram. It's like sand. It's specially
- treated sand, for all intents and purposes. But the fact is,
- it's expensive, and when you have a synthetic, which only has
- delta-9 and delta-8, you can see it's a lot easier to separate
- them. Still, the most expensive part of making the synthetic is
- separating the delta-9 so you end up with a 95% solution.
-
- OLSEN: You have to do this no matter how you make it, right?
-
- MCKINNEY: You always have to go to the liquid chromatogram for
- the last stage. The thing is, when you make it synthetically,
- you end up with an 80% solution, and there are only two molecules
- in that solution. In the making of natural , you end up with a
- 75% solution, 25% of which is made up of 420 different other
- things. However, generically speaking, this may not be as
- important if it's shown that tests have no differences in the
- effect. The only reason that Perdue-Frederick dropped that is
- because there wasn't enough sales of the synthetic. Otherwise,
- they would have backed us with the natural.
-
- OLSEN: They would have kept testing?
-
- MCKINNEY: They would have backed us with the natural. They
- didn't test. They never got to that stage. But the funny thing
- is that, of course, if they push the synthetic enough, or course,
- other people will come in line and start working with the
- natural, hopefully. And, if they're going to make the natural,
- they're going to have to make it out of the plant, and the plant
- will have to drop to Schedule 2, as all precursors of Schedule 2
- drugs have to be in the same schedule. You can't have a
- precursor of a drug in a higher schedule than the drug itself.
-
- OLSEN: What is a precursor? You mean the plant?
-
- MCKINNEY: The plant, the poppy.
-
- OLSEN: The coca plant?
-
- MCKINNEY: Yeah. The poppy plant is in Schedule 2, opium
- poppy. And, if, say, for instance, if mescaline became legal,
- they'd have to put peyote in Schedule 2 for the same reason. And
- that's why I keep saying, if we can only get natural THC into
- Schedule 2, it would force marijuana into Schedule 2. But the
- nutniks in the marijuana reform movement are all a bunch of ex-
- hippies sitting around rolling doobies on the back porch and
- gazing at the sun and saying, "Oh wow!" They're not realizing
- there are two important things to do. First, it's very easy to
- change the definition if it looks like you're doing it to keep
- marijuana away from people. And by simply slipping in a
- definitional change in the marijuana definition in the law, state
- by state, you can slip that through the legislatures with no one
- getting excited, because they wouldn't understand what you were
- really doing. It sounds like you're, you know, bringing the
- definition up to date, because in 1985 THC became legal,
- therefore, THC is defined as the psychoactive drug in marijuana,
- and that's the way it's defined in the Physician's Desk
- Reference, the PDR.
-
- OLSEN: Well, you know, Iowa's law says that marijuana's in
- both Schedule I and Schedule 2. Schedule I says it has no
- medical use, and Schedule 2 says it does, and what you just said
- would be a way to solve, to make the Iowa law make sense and
- accomplish exactly what they tried to accomplish without making
- it look like a bunch of idiots wrote it.
-
- MCKINNEY: You can change the definition so that marijuana is
- illegal, excepting for the products, and one of those products
- would be pure, it could be pharmaceutically pure THC.
-
- OLSEN: Which would be Schedule 2.
-
- MCKINNEY: Yeah. Now, the legislatures and the lawmakers know
- if anyone wouldn't realize what they were doing by changing that
- to make it clear that only pharmaceutically pure THC from the
- marijuana plant would be considered legal, but the rest of it's
- no good, it sounds like you're making it impossible for someone
- to do this, but whet they are doing is that they're making
- marijuana the precursor of a legal drug.
-
- CARL ERIC OLSEN
- (515) 243-7351
-
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