From: [c--o--n] at [dsmnet.com] (Carl E. Olsen)
Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
Subject: Ganja Man (gets 35 years)
Date: Sat, 10 Sep 1994 16:43:35

THE GANJA MAN 
 
Brent Unger 
The News Herald 
 
	James Tranmer would gladly die for marijuana. 
	He's offered to go smiling to the gallows, throw the noose 
around his own neck, then pull the lever.  He'd prefer that the 
rope be made of hemp, but it's not a demand. 
	The U.S. government has not taken him up on his offer.  
Instead -- as a consolation prize of sorts -- the government has 
given him 35 years in a federal prison.  A sentence tantamount to 
life for the 50-year-old Tranmer. 
	A gothic drama of changing times and values, the story of 
James Tranmer reveals a great deal about the government's "War on 
Drugs," and our society as a whole. 
	If you listen to Tranmer, he's being persecuted for his 
religious belief in a plant that's fallen out of political favor.  
A euphoric, spiritual herb that's a part of creation and 
completely harmless. 
	If you listen to the government, Tranmer is being punished 
for conspiracy to import into Panama City thousands of pounds of 
marijuana -- a pernicious, addling Schedule I drug.  A drug with 
no redeeming qualities and a vast potential for abuse. 
	According to the government, Tranmer is just another drug 
dealer. 
	But even hardened courtroom regulars admit that there's 
something different about Tranmer. 
	Most people brought into court on drug charges vehemently 
deny any association with drugs, says Johnny Johnson, Bay County 
liaison for the U.S. Marshals. 
	And never, he says, do they sing a drug's praises -- which 
is exactly what Tranmer did.  "In a way," Johnson admits, "you 
gotta respect the guy." 
	Tranmer's lawyer refused to put him on the stand during the 
trial.  But at his July sentencing in Panama City's federal 
courthouse, Tranmer spoke his piece, praising marijuana -- over 
and over and over. 
	"I'm an herb man.  I've always been an herb man," Tranmer 
said in part.  "You cannot win this fight against marijuana.  If 
you fight against the herb, you fight against creation." 
	The judge was having none of it.  "By the look on the 
judge's face," Tranmer says, "I knew it was boring him -- I knew 
it didn't really make any difference.  But, you know, I did say 
what I felt." 
	Soon after Tranmer gave his impassioned speech, a pelican 
crashed into a power line outside the courthouse, dying in a huge 
fireball.  The courthouse went dark. 
	Friends of Tranmer took the pelican's death as a good sign -
- a sign that even if the judge wasn't listening, maybe somebody, 
somewhere was. 
	At it's core, the story of James Tranmer revolves around a 
hardy weed that grows wild in all 50 states.  An herb that 
continues to inspire debate like no other "drug." 
	Supporters tout marijuana as a spiritual herb with near-
magical powers and a host of medical and societal uses. 
	Opponents decry it as a mind-erasing gateway to more drugs 
and to increasing irresponsible behavior. 
	Both sides admit it is addling, but disagree wildly whether 
or not this is good. 
	Marijuana's "high" is difficult to measure, but its other 
effects, when examined objectively, seem rather benign. 
	The entry under marijuana in the 1992 edition of the MERCK 
Manual reads, in part: "Although many dangers of marijuana are 
frequently cited, there is still little evidence of biologic 
damage, even among relatively heavy users.  This is true even in 
the areas intensely investigated, such as immunologic and 
reproductive function."  The MERCK Manual, used by medical 
personnel nationwide, is the definitive guide on substances' 
effects on people. 
	No person in the 5,000-year history of marijuana use has 
ever died from the herb, and it is one of the few "drugs" for 
which there is no known fatal dose. 
	It has been estimated that in order to ingest a lethal dose 
of marijuana, a person would have to smoke 100 pounds of the 
stuff every minute for 15 minutes. 
	"I'd like to be the first to try that," Tranmer says, 
laughing.  "What a great way to go." 
	Tranmer first laid eyes on marijuana in 1965.  He promptly 
smoked it. 
	"I realized immediately that there was something to the 
marijuana," he says.  "I realized everybody had lied to me.  
Realized that this was not the demonic thing that everybody 
claimed it was.  It was a wonderful sensation, a wonderful 
feeling.  The rapport and the camaraderie among the people was 
very different than anything I ever experienced before.  I still 
didn't really understand or comprehend anything about it, but I 
knew I was going to be smoking marijuana for quite some time." 
	So began a fierce devotion.  A devotion that's led Tranmer 
on a most unlikely journey. 
	After 1965, Tranmer traveled the world looking for good 
ganja.  Then, in 1970 he smoked some Jamaican stuff -- and it was 
off to Jamaica.  He lived there on and off throughout the 70s, 
becoming a priest in the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church and growing 
to appreciate the true spiritual nature of the magical herb.  
While there, he was interviewed by 60 Minutes' Dan Rather. 
	In the late 1970s, a little known Miami-area prosecutor 
named Janet Reno battled Tranmer and the Coptics in court over 
their claimed religious right to smoke ganja.  The Coptics lost, 
Reno won. 
	Through it all, Tranmer smoked.  Thousands and thousands of 
times. 
	He is a ganja man, and his record reflects this: over 20 
marijuana arrests. 
	For his latest offense, he will probably die in jail. 
	He wouldn't change a thing.  "I'm overjoyed," he says. 
	Johnny Johnson admits that Tranmer seems intelligent, but 
fears the man is sadly misled. 
	Tranmer insists he's not.  His salvation, he says, revolves 
around doing what he knows to be right.  His salvation revolves 
around marijuana, his sacrament, his personal window to the 
spirit of God. 
	"The more they persecute me wrongfully," he says, "the 
better off I am." 
	Marijuana is classified as a Schedule I drug by the federal 
government.  In other words, it has a high potential for abuse, 
no approved medical uses and no safe dose.  Cocaine and PCP, on 
the other hand, are classified as Schedule II, and can be 
prescribed by doctors. 
	Thanks to machinery put in place by Ronald Reagan, the same 
legal tools associated with drugs like cocaine are being brought 
to bear on marijuana and marijuana users: broad search-and-
seizure powers, civil forfeiture laws, expanded application of 
conspiracy laws.  The list is long. 
	You almost have to be stoned, Tranmer says, to comprehend 
the awesome size of the umbrella called "conspiracy."  Tranmer is 
reluctant to discuss the merits of his case, but there are others 
that are illustrative.  Consider, for example, the case of Mark 
Young, now serving a life sentence in federal prison for 
"conspiracy to manufacture" marijuana.  He simply introduced a 
marijuana buyer to a marijuana seller/manufacturer. 
	According to federal records, roughly one in six inmates in 
the federal prison system has been prosecuted primarily for a 
marijuana offense.  About 15,000 people -- a number that now 
includes Tranmer. 
	It wasn't always that way. 
	Thanks largely to an increase in popularity among the white 
middle class, marijuana use was widely tolerated in the 1960s and 
1970s on both the state and federal levels. 
	During the 1970s, 11 states decriminalized marijuana, and 
many other states relaxed their laws. 
	The Shafer Commission -- appointed by President Richard 
Nixon in 1972 to study the marijuana question -- advocated 
federal de-criminalization of marijuana for personal use.  During 
his presidency, Jimmy Carter came out for this de facto 
legalization.  In 1977, the DEA said it was a viable policy 
option. 
	But when Reagan came to office in 1980 and began his 
ballyhooed "War on Drugs," marijuana suddenly and mysteriously 
became a scourge on the national character. 
	States gradually tightened their laws.  Federal laws became 
more and more stringent. 
 
IT'S COMPLICATED 
	With more than 60 unique components, many of which are 
addling, the gummy yellow resin secreted by the marijuana plant 
is complicated. 
	And perhaps the same could be said of James Tranmer. 
	He is a terribly difficult man to describe.  An interesting, 
intelligent, contradictory man, Tranmer does not fit easily into 
any simple classification. 
	He regularly sings in jail and laughs with visitors about 
how society is unraveling.  He is surprisingly upbeat at the 
prospect of facing 35 years -- and probably death -- in prison.  
This, despite his assertion: "I know I'm not a criminal.  And I 
know I've never hurt anybody." 
	Nicknamed "Judge" by his prison inmates, he will not let 
them lapse into immorality in his presence. 
	He is an optimist, yet he holds out little hope that he'll 
be free again. 
	He wants to be the first person executed for ganja, but 
admits the world would little notice. 
 
UNFAIR FIGHT 
	Both sides of the marijuana debate agree that thousands of 
lives have been ruined, but disagree as to the culprit: marijuana 
or the laws that forbid its use. 
	But, in a way, it is not a fair fight. 
	Marijuana opponents, after all, are far better organized and 
better financed than marijuana supporters. 
	Bay County's foremost marijuana advocate outside of Tranmer 
is Robert Lawrence -- a subsistence farmer and sometimes musician 
living in virtual exile in the dusty hamlet of Fountain. 
	"He is a simple man," Tranmer says, "but full of wisdom." 
	Lawrence says that a lot of people agree with him.  "But if 
all the rich and famous people in Bay County came out and said 
the laws are wrong, they'd lose their jobs and end up poor 
hippies like us." 
	The marijuana opponents, after all, include the federal 
government.  There is a huge bureaucracy backing the status quo.  
And there are prison sentences. 
	Most of Tranmer's "brothers and sisters" are either in jail 
or so battered and beaten up by years of evading the law that 
they've all but given up the struggle. 
	The government insists it's right.  Tranmer does the same. 
	But, in the final analysis, there is no question that 
proposing the legalization of marijuana is political poison.  And 
no question that legalization is a long shot. 
	James Tranmer doesn't care. 
	He knows he's right.  And he's sticking to it.  Damn the 
government. 
	"People hate to hear the truth," he says.  "They hate the 
spirit person.  And they hate the ganja man.  That's why they 
must persecute me." 
	Tranmer is now being transferred from Panama City's downtown 
jail to a federal prison in Lewisburg, Penn. 
	But one suspects that wherever he goes, he will continue his 
devotion to marijuana.  Wherever he goes, he will ask to be 
hanged for his beloved herb. 
	And wherever he goes, an odd jailhouse sound will be heard: 
singing. 
	The News Herald, Sunday, September 4, 1994, Page 1E.