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Harrison Narcotics Tax Act

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Harrison Narcotics Tax Act
Great Seal of the United States
Other short titlesOpium and Coca Leaves Trade Restrictions Act
Long titleAn Act to Provide for the Registration Of, With Collectors of Internal Revenue, and to Impose a Special Tax Upon All Persons Who Produce, Import, Manufacture, Compound, Deal In, Dispense, Sell, Distribute, Or Give Away Opium Or Coca Leaves, Their Salts, Derivatives, Or Preparations, and for Other Purposes
Acronyms (colloquial)HNTA
NicknamesHarrison Anti-Narcotic Act
Enacted bythe 63rd United States Congress
EffectiveMarch 1, 1915
Citations
Public lawPub. L. 63–223
Statutes at Large38 Stat. 785
Legislative history
United States Supreme Court cases

The Harrison Narcotics Tax Act (Ch. 1, 38 Stat. 785) was a United States federal law that regulated and taxed the production, importation, and distribution of opiates and coca products. The act was proposed by Representative Francis Burton Harrison of New York and was approved on December 17, 1914.[1][2]

"An Act To provide for the registration of, with collectors of internal revenue, and to impose a special tax on all persons who produce, import, manufacture, compound, deal in, dispense, sell, distribute, or give away opium or coca leaves, their salts, derivatives, or preparations, and for other purposes." In Webb v. United States, the act was interpreted to prohibit prescribing maintenance doses for narcotics unless it was intended to cure the patient's addiction.[3]

The Harrison anti-narcotic legislation consisted of three U.S. House bills imposing restrictions on the availability and consumption of the psychoactive drug opium. House Resolution (H.R.) 1966 and H.R. 1967 passed conjointly with H.R. 6282 (the Opium and Coca Leaves Trade Restrictions Act).[4][5]

Although technically illegal for purposes of distribution and use, the distribution, sale and use of cocaine was still legal for registered companies and individuals.

Background

International

Following the Spanish–American War and the Philippine–American War, the Philippines saw a proliferation of opium use. A cholera outbreak in 1902 further strengthened this tendency due to the astringent properties of opium.[6]

Charles Henry Brent was an American Episcopal bishop who served as Missionary Bishop of the Philippines beginning in 1901. He convened a Commission of Inquiry, known as the Brent Commission, for the purpose of examining alternatives to a licensing system for opium addicts. Although Governor William Taft supported this policy, Brent opposed it "on moral grounds".[7] The Commission recommended that narcotics should be subject to international control. The recommendations of the Brent Commission were endorsed by the United States Department of State and in 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt called for an international conference, the International Opium Commission, which was held in Shanghai in February 1909. A second conference was held at The Hague in May 1911, and out of it came the first international drug control treaty, the International Opium Convention of 1912.

Domestic

Between 1895 and 1900 there were probably more morphine addicts in the United States than today on a per capita basis.[8] Opium usage peaked in 1896 and then began to decline gradually. Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., then dean Harvard Medical school, blamed the prevalence of opiate addiction on ignorance. As awareness of the addictiveness of morphine and patent medicines grew public opinion in the 1890s was in favor of state laws restricting morphine.[9] Demand gradually declined thereafter in response to mounting public concern, local and state regulations, and the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, which required labeling of patent medicines that contained opiates, cocaine, alcohol, cannabis and other intoxicants.[10] By 1914, forty-six states had regulations on cocaine and twenty-nine states had laws against opium, morphine, and heroin.[11]

Opium

In the 1800s opiates were mostly unregulated drugs. Morphine addiction had spread rapidly during and after the Civil war. The consumption of household remedies and marketed syrups containing morphine was commonplace and mostly associated with the upper and middle class of society.[12] Many women who were prescribed and dispensed legal opiates by physicians and pharmacist for "female problems" (probably pain at menstruation) became addicted.[13] It's likely many who became addicted initially did not know what the syrups and concoctions contained.[14][8]

Although morphine syrups were easily available, opium smoking was already banned by many municipalities.[8] There was more hostility to opium smoking than laudanum and other widely available tonics because of anti-Chinese sentiments and accusations that proprietors lured young white girls to opium dens.[15] Chinese immigrants were blamed for importing the opium-smoking habit to the U.S. The 1903 blue-ribbon citizens' panel, the Committee on the Acquirement of the Drug Habit, concluded: "If the Chinaman cannot get along without his dope we can get along without him."[16]

Heroin use became widespread among low-income immigrants in the early 20th century.[17] In the 1890s, the Sears & Roebuck catalogue started offering a syringe and a small amount of cocaine or heroin for $1.50.[18][19]

Cocaine

Cocaine was first isolated in 1855. Within a few decades public opinion had associated cocaine use with crime sprees committed by black men.[17] There were many hysterical news reports in the early 20th-century about cocaine-fueled rampages using hyperbole like "cocaine-crazed negro" and others exaggerating the addictiveness of cocaine saying it quickly reduced users to "another entry in Satan's ledger".[20][21] In 1900, the Journal of the American Medical Association published an editorial stating, "Negroes in the South are reported as being addicted to a new form of vice – that of 'cocaine sniffing' or the 'coke habit.'" A well-known article published in The New York Times on February 8, 1914 claimed cocaine use caused blacks to rape white women.[22] The article titled Negro Cocaine 'Fiends' Are a New Southern Menace is remembered for its portrayal of "the cocaine-crazed negro" who was invulnerable to bullets. The use of the term "fiends" by Dr. Edward Huntington Williams, the author of the article, is understood to connote the demonization of the non-white drug user.[22][23]

According to historian David F. Musto public opinion about cocaine turned negative as newspapers and even Good Housekeeping scapegoated the drug to explain rising crime in the South:[24]

Thus the problem of cocaine proceeded from an association with Negroes in about 1900, when a massive repression and disenfranchisement were under way in the South, to a convenient explanation for crime waves, and eventually Northerners used it as an argument against Southern fear of infringement of states's rights.

Despite the extreme racialization of the issue that took place in the buildup to the act's passage, contemporary research in Northern cities found relatively few cocaine users compared with alcoholics and opium addicts overall and no significant concentration among blacks. Blacks did use "patent medicines" containing opiates and cocaine for pulmonary conditions. It's possible that higher rates of disease among blacks in the early 20th century may explain why blacks consumed patent medicines more than whites.[25][26]

Hearings

Theodore Roosevelt appointed Dr. Hamilton Wright as the first opium commissioner of the United States in 1908.[27] Wright testified at the hearing about the dangers alleging that drugs made blacks uncontrollable, gave them superhuman powers and caused them to rebel against white authority.[28] He said cocaine was often "the direct incentive to the crime of rape of white women by Negroes".[29] He also stated that "one of the most unfortunate phases of smoking opium in this country is the large number of women who have become involved and were living as common-law wives or cohabitating with Chinese in the Chinatowns of our various cities".[30]

Dr. Christopher Koch of the State Pharmacy Board of Pennsylvania testified of the dangerous "cocaine-crazed" blacks in the South: "Most of the attacks upon the white women of the South are the direct result of a cocaine-crazed Negro brain".[24][28][31]

Writing in 1953 Rufus G. King explained that the Harrison Act was "intended partly to carry out a treaty obligation, but mainly to aid the states in combating a local police problem which had gotten somewhat out of hand."[32]

Congressional passage

When Representative Francis Burton Harrison of New York placed HR 1966 for debate before the full House of Representatives on June 26, 1913, he began by noting that the Smoking Opium Exclusion Act of 1909 failed to limit importation of opium because it regulated the maritime shipping industry, rather than the individual drug users. In Harrison's view, shipping companies could evade regulation by forging documents and smuggling opium across the Mexico–United States border, whereas individual drug users would struggle to dispute their role in smuggling networks.[33]

The Congressional Record showcases that the House was unsure whether the Commerce Clause actually permitted the federal government to restrict what types of goods could be exported, but the chamber adopted an expansive view based on dicta from the 1904 antitrust case Northern Securities Co. v. United States. While the House agreed that the Export Clause clearly prohibits taxing exported opium, they were divided as to whether they could outright prohibit such exports. Though the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act prohibited the importation of adulterated or misbranded food and drugs, that law was considered a product standard, whereas the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act would not allow any form of opium as imports or exports.[33] Congress would not attempt another restriction on the types of goods that can be exported until the 1940 Export Control Act.[34]

Representative Thomas U. Sisson of Mississippi objected to restricting the market for narcotics as encroaching on state police power in violation of the Tenth Amendment. Harrison admitted that the federal authority to tax those involved in the market for narcotics under the Taxing and Spending Clause was weak because the federal government stood to earn more in import taxes without this act. Surprisingly, Sisson and Harrison were in agreement that the bill would allow physicians to continue prescribing narcotics as part of medical treatment for those with substance use disorder, yet the act's enforcement by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue frequently prosecuted such patients.[34]

Enforcement

Enforcement began in 1915.[35] The act appears to be mainly concerned about the marketing of opiates. However, a clause applying to doctors allowed distribution "in the course of his professional practice only." Physicians believed relieving the suffering of physical dependance was within the "professional practice" exception. King says "there is not the slightest suggestion that Congress intended to change this". He says the public hysteria surrounding contemporaneous press reports about violent "dope fiends" probably distorted the Congressional intent and turned addicts into criminals.[36]

The "professional practice" clause was interpreted after 1917 to mean that a doctor could not prescribe opiates to an addict. Addicts and doctors were jailed for decades under theories adopted by the Narcotics Division that addiction could not be successfully treated in a clinical setting.[36] A number of doctors were arrested and some were imprisoned.[citation needed] The medical profession quickly learned not to supply opiates to addicts. In United States v. Doremus, 249 U.S. 86 (1919), the Supreme Court ruled that the Harrison Act was constitutional, and in Webb v. United States, 249 U.S. 96, 99 (1919) that physicians could not prescribe narcotics solely for maintenance.[13]

The impact of diminished supply was obvious by mid-1915. A 1918 commission called for sterner law enforcement, while newspapers published sensational articles about addiction-related crime waves.[37] Congress responded by tightening up the Harrison Act—the importation of heroin for any purpose was banned in 1924.[citation needed]

Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo appointed Representative Henry T. Rainey to lead a special committee to investigate the law's effects.[38] In June 1919, this Rainey Committee found that criminal organizations were smuggling drugs into the country across all four of the United States' coastal and land borders[39]. Annually, the United States consumed 470,000 pounds of opium, whereas France and Germany each purchased around 17,000 pounds of opium. While the United States' 1920 population of 106 million was far larger than France's 1921 population of 39 million and Germany's 1920 population of 62 million, per capita opium consumption was still much higher in America.[38] Based on the US Department of Commerce's monthly summaries of foreign commerce, between July 1919 and January 1920, imports of opium increased to 528,635 pounds from only 74,650 pounds during the same period a year prior.[38]

Challenges

In the 1919 cases United States v. Doremus and Webb v. United States, the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act was upheld by the Supreme Court under an expansive reading of the Taxing and Spending Clause based on the earlier License Tax Cases (1866).[34]

The act's applicability in prosecuting doctors who prescribe narcotics to addicts was successfully challenged in Linder v. United States in 1925, as Associate Justice James Clark McReynolds ruled that the federal government has no power to regulate medical practice.[34]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Opium Throughout History". PBS Frontline. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  2. ^ "Harrison Narcotics Tax Act, 1914". Drug Reform Coordination Network. Retrieved November 18, 2013.
  3. ^ Gray, Elizabeth Kelly (2023). Habit Forming: Drug Addiction in America. New York: Oxford University Press. pg 222.
  4. ^ "Opium Importation Amendment - P.L. 63-46" (PDF). 38 Stat. 275. H.R. 1966. Legis★Works. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 3, 2015. Retrieved June 14, 2015.
  5. ^ "Opium Manufacture Restrictions - P.L. 63-47" (PDF). 38 Stat. 277. H.R. 1967. Legis★Works. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 20, 2015. Retrieved June 14, 2015.
  6. ^ Escohotado, Antonio (1998), Historia General de las Drogas [General History of Drugs] (Alliance ed.), pp. 610–611
  7. ^ "King County Bar Association Drug Policy Project, Drugs and the Drug Laws: Historical and Cultural Contexts" (PDF). January 19, 2005. pp. 16–17. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 10, 2017. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c Courtwright 1992, p. 2.
  9. ^ Musto 1999, p. 4.
  10. ^ Street, John Phillips (1917). "The Patent Medicine Situation". American Journal of Public Health. 7 (12): 1037–42. doi:10.2105/ajph.7.12.1037. PMC 1362112. PMID 18009787.
  11. ^ Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting. September 1902. p. 572 (Google Print)
  12. ^ Duster 1970, p. 9.
  13. ^ a b Stephen R. Kandall. "Women and Addiction in the United States—1850 to 1920" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 12, 2001.
  14. ^ Duster 1970, p. 6-7.
  15. ^ Gray 2023, p. 148.
  16. ^ "Caught in the Net: The Impact of Drug Policies on Women and Families" (PDF). ACLU.
  17. ^ a b Courtwright 1992, p. 5.
  18. ^ Johnston, Ann Dowsett (November 15, 2013). "'Drink' and 'Her Best-Kept Secret'". The New York Times. Retrieved August 9, 2023. In 1897, the Sears, Roebuck catalog offered a kit with a syringe, two needles, two vials of heroin and a handy carrying case for $1.50.
  19. ^ "Sears Once Sold Heroin". The Atlantic. January 30, 2019. Retrieved August 9, 2023. For $1.50, Americans around the turn of the century could place an order through a Sears, Roebuck catalog and receive a syringe, two needles, and two vials of Bayer Heroin, all in a handsome carrying case.
  20. ^ Gray 2023, p. 205.
  21. ^ Kennedy 1985, p. 93-7.
  22. ^ a b Fisher 2024, p. 267.
  23. ^ Williams, MD, Edward Huntington (February 8, 1914). "Negro Cocaine 'Fiends' Are a New Southern Menace; Murder and Insanity Increasing Among Lower Class Blacks Because They Have Taken to 'Sniffing' Since Deprived of Whisky by Prohibition". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2023.
  24. ^ a b Musto 1999, p. 305.
  25. ^ Helmer, John, and Thomas Vietorisz. Drug Use, the Labor Market and Class Conflict. Washington: Drug Abuse Council, 1974. Libcom.org. Web. 17 Aug. 2014.
  26. ^ Gray 2023, p. 204.
  27. ^ Edward Marshall (March 12, 1911). "Uncle Sam is the Worst Drug Fiend in the World". The New York Times. Retrieved January 1, 2014.
  28. ^ a b Cockburn & St. Clair 1998, p. 71.
  29. ^ Gray 2023, p. 206.
  30. ^ Wetherington, Cora L.; Alan I Leshner (1999). Drug Addiction Research & the Health of Women. Diane publishing. ISBN 0-7881-8053-3. Wetherington states that the 1909 Shanghai Commission made this comment.
  31. ^ Kennedy 1985, p. 96.
  32. ^ King 1953, p. 736.
  33. ^ a b "House of Representatives". Congressional Record. 50 (3). June 26, 1913.
  34. ^ a b c d Rowe, Thomas C. (2006). Federal Narcotics Laws and the War on Drugs: Money Down a Rat Hole. Haworth Press. ISBN 0-7890-2808-5. p. 14-19
  35. ^ Drug Enforcement Administration | Enforcement | Encyclopedia of Law.
  36. ^ a b King 1953, p. 737-9.
  37. ^ Albert F. Nathan. "Drug Fiends Make 'Crime Wave.'" Los Angeles Times (1886–1922). Los Angeles, Calif.: Nov 30, 1919. p. II1 (2 pages)
  38. ^ a b c Kennedy, Ezra J. (May 1920). "Suppressing the Opium Traffic". The Pharmaceutical Era. 53 (5): 130.
  39. ^ The Consumers Union Report on Licit and Illicit Drugs Archived 2012-07-01 at archive.today Edward M. Brecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports magazine, 1972

Sources