EUR: Oopsie! Police slash research hemp instead of pot
Fri Sep 4 05:42:39 EST 2009
Thu Sep 3 19:42:40 UTC 2009
THE HAGUE, Sept 3 AP - Dutch police who mowed down what they thought were illicit marijuana plants were red-faced on Thursday when it emerged they'd ruined a research group's giant, officially sanctioned field of harmless hemp.
Police proudly announced Wednesday that they'd found more than 47,000 cannabis plants, with an estimated street value of nearly euro4.5 million ($6.45 million) concealed in a corn field in the Flevoland province east of Amsterdam.
They mowed down half the plants only to be informed they were the property of Wageningen University and Research Centre, a respected agricultural school.
The field contained a new strain of hemp that researchers hope can be a sustainable source of fiber, Simon Vink, a spokesman for the executive board of Wageningen University and Research Centre, said on Thursday.
Hemp plants are related to marijuana but have only trace elements of THC, the mind-altering chemical that cannabis contains.
"The street value from a drug point of view is less than zero," Vink said.