From: Michael Motyka <mmotyka@lsil.com>
To: Cypherpunks@cyberpass.net
Message Hash: 3c7735416b0c1accb19fff3a98b361bc3c69a86defd8797fd15ef8b70fc5131e
Message ID: <3648ABF9.515D@lsil.com>
Reply To: <3648A1A9.7DE1@lsil.com>
UTC Datetime: 1998-11-11 00:08:59 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1998 08:08:59 +0800
From: Michael Motyka <mmotyka@lsil.com>
Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1998 08:08:59 +0800
To: Cypherpunks@cyberpass.net
Subject: Off Topic But Truly Beautiful (fwd )
In-Reply-To: <3648A1A9.7DE1@lsil.com>
Message-ID: <3648ABF9.515D@lsil.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Clyde wrote:
>
> Long but fascinating...
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
> 9 November 1998
>
> DATELINE--Tallahassee, Fla.
> Oranges that get you high
> ===========================
>
> A Florida Biochemist designs a citrus tree with THC.
>
> In the summer of 1984, 10th-grader Irwin Nanofsky and a
> friend were driving down the Apalachee Parkway on the way
> home from baseball practice when they were pulled over by
> a police officer for a minor traffic infraction.
>
> After Nanofsky produced his driver's license the police
> officer asked permission to search the vehicle. In less
> than two minutes, the officer found a homemade pipe
> underneath the passenger's seat of the Ford Aerostar
> belonging to the teenage driver's parents. The minivan
> was seized, and the two youths were taken into custody on
> suspicion of drug possession.
>
> Illegal possession of drug paraphernalia ranks second
> only to open container violations on the crime blotter of
> this Florida college town. And yet the routine arrest of
> 16 year-old Nanofsky and the seizure of his family's
> minivan would inspire one of the most controversial
> drug-related scientific discoveries of the century.
>
> Meet Hugo Nanofsky, biochemist, Florida State University
> tenured professor, and the parental authority who posted
> bail for Irwin Nanofsky the night of July 8, 1984. The
> elder Nanofsky wasn't pleased that his son had been
> arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia, and he
> became livid when Tallahassee police informed him that
> the Aerostar minivan would be permanently remanded to
> police custody.
>
> Over the course of the next three weeks, Nanofsky penned
> dozens of irate letters to the local police chief, the
> Tallahassee City Council, the State District Attorney
> and, finally, even to area newspapers. But it was all to
> no avail.
>
> Under advisement of the family lawyer, Irwin Nanofsky
> pled guilty to possession of drug paraphernalia in order
> to receive a suspended sentence and have his juvenile
> court record sealed. But in doing so, the family minivan
> became "an accessory to the crime." According to Florida
> State law, it also became the property of the Tallahassee
> Police Department Drug Task Force. In time, the adult
> Nanofsky would learn that there was nothing he could do
> legally to wrest the vehicle from the hands of the state.
>
> It was in the fall of 1984 that Biochem 101: How to
> John Chapman Professor of design a
> Biochemistry at Florida State Cannabis-equivalent
> University, now driving to work citrus plant
> behind the wheel of a used Pontiac
> Bonneville, first set on a pet Step One:
> project that he hoped would Biochemically
> "dissolve irrational legislation isolate all the
> with a solid dose of reason." required enzymes for
> Nanofsky knew he would never get the production of
> his family's car back, but he had THC.
> plans to make sure that no one
> else would be pulled through the Step Two:
> gears of what he considers a Perform N-terminal
> Kafka-esque drug enforcement sequencing on
> bureaucracy. isolated enzymes,
> design degenerate
> "It's quite simple, really," PCR (polymerase
> Nanofsky explains, "I wanted to chain reaction)
> combine Citrus sinesis with Delta primers and amplify
> 9-tetrahydrocannabinol." In the genes.
> layman's terms, the respected
> college professor proposed to grow Step Three:
> oranges that would contain THC, Clone genes into an
> the active ingredient in agrobacterial vector
> marijuana. Fourteen years later, by introducing the
> that project is complete, and desired piece of DNA
> Nanofsky has succeeded where his into a plasmid containing
> letter writing campaign of yore a transfer or T-DNA.
> failed: he has the undivided The mixture is transformed
> attention of the nation's top drug into Agrobacterium
> enforcement agencies, political tumefaciens, a gram
> figures, and media outlets. negative bacterium.
>
> The turning point in the Nanofsky Step Four:
> saga came when the straight-laced Use the Agrobacterium
> professor posted a message to tumefaciens to infect citrus
> Internet newsgroups announcing plants after wounding. The
> that he was offering transfer DNA will proceed
> "cannabis-equivalent orange tree to host cells by a mechanism
> seeds" at no cost via the U.S. similar to conjugation.
> mail. Several weeks later, U.S. The DNA is randomly
> Justice Department officials integrated into the
> showed up at the mailing address host genome and will
> used in the Internet announcement: be inherited.
> a tiny office on the second floor
> of the Dittmer Laboratory of
> Chemistry building on the FSU campus. There they would wait
> for another 40 minutes before Prof. Nanofsky finished
> delivering a lecture to graduate students on his recent
> research into the "cis-trans photoisomerization of olefins."
>
> "I knew it was only a matter of time before someone sent
> me more than just a self-addressed stamped envelope,"
> Nanofsky quips, "but I was surprised to see Janet Reno's
> special assistant at my door." After a series of closed
> door discussions, Nanofsky agreed to cease distribution
> of the THC-orange seeds until the legal status of the
> possibly narcotic plant species is established.
>
> Much to the chagrin of authorities, the effort to
> regulate Nanofsky's invention may be too little too late.
> Several hundred packets containing 40 to 50 seeds each
> have already been sent to those who've requested them,
> and Nanofsky is not obliged to produce his mailing
> records. Under current law, no crime has been committed
> and it is unlikely that charges will be brought against
> the fruit's inventor.
>
> Now it is federal authorities who must confront the
> nation's unwieldy body of inconsistent drug laws.
> According to a source at the Drug Enforcement Agency, it
> may be months if not years before all the issues involved
> are sorted out, leaving a gaping hole in U.S. drug policy
> in the meantime. At the heart of the confusion is the
> fact that THC now naturally occurs in a new species of
> citrus fruit.
>
> As policy analysts and hemp advocates alike have been
> quick to point out, the apparent legality (for now) of
> Nanofsky's "pot orange" may render debates over the
> legalization of marijuana moot. In fact, Florida's top
> law enforcement officials admit that even if the
> cultivation of Nanofsky's orange were to be outlawed, it
> would be exceedingly difficult to identify the presence
> of outlawed fruit among the state's largest agricultural
> crop.
>
> Amidst all of the hubbub surrounding his father's
> experiment, Irwin Nanofsky exudes calm indifference. Now
> 30-years-old and a successful environmental photographer,
> the younger Nanofsky can't understand what all of the
> fuss is about. "My dad's a chemist. He makes polymers. I
> doubt it ever crossed his mind that as a result of his
> work tomorrow's kids will be able to get high off of half
> an orange."
>
> Copyright 1994-98 San Francisco Bay Guardian.
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