Source: huffingtonpost.com
Polis called DEA chief Michele Leonhart "a terrible agency head" who has embarrassed herself and her agency.
WASHINGTON -- Members of the House of Representatives from both
parties took aim at the Drug Enforcement Administration on Thursday,
even as the House voted to give the agency $35 million more than it requested.
Members
from both parties were set to offer amendments on an appropriations
bill that would restrict the DEA from obstructing state industrial hemp
programs, and from cracking down on medical marijuana facilities. As of
Thursday evening, the only amendment that would have curbed DEA spending
was defeated by a vote of 339-66. The amendment by Rep. Jared Polis
(D-Colo.) would have reduced DEA's budget by $35 million, to the amount
of the agency's original request.
"What has the DEA done to
deserve a $35 million raise?" Polis asked on the House floor Thursday
afternoon. "Why are we singling out the DEA to receive funds above what
the DEA itself requested in the president's budget? The DEA has
demonstrated time and time again that it can't efficiently manage the
resources it already has. It's diverting funds to ridiculous things like
impounding industrial hemp seeds, which have no narcotic content,
intimidating legal marijuana businesses in states like mine, wasting
money on marijuana infractions that are legal in states where they
occur."
Polis called DEA chief Michele Leonhart "a terrible agency head" who has embarrassed herself and her agency.
But
the DEA has a strong defender in Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.), who chairs
the House appropriations subcommittee that funds the agency. Wolf, who
is retiring from Congress, gave the DEA a boost it didn't ask for on his
way out the door.
In a House appropriations subcommittee hearing
last month, Leonhart said the agency was "on track" after a hiring
freeze and would add agents graduating from three training academy
sessions this year. Wolf asked whether she could use additional funds,
telling Leonhart he "would like to [help]" increase the budget. After
consulting with an aide, Leonhart tossed out a $175 million figure that
would allow the DEA to expand, saying the agency was only hiring one
agent for every two who retired or left.
On the House floor on
Thursday, Wolf suggested that House members questioning the DEA budget
sent the wrong message to a hypothetical DEA agent watching on C-SPAN in
Afghanistan. Wolf also gave personal support to Leonhart, saying she
"has given her life to law enforcement for the last 30 years."
"I think she's represented the DEA well," Wolf said. He previously defended Leonhart in a letter to her boss, Attorney General Eric Holder, after HuffPost reported
that Holder had asked Leonhart to clarify a previous statement that
seemed to be out of line with the administration on sentencing reform.
"I
think there's been an effort by some in the administration to attack
her in a way, it almost reminds me of the Nixon administration," Wolf
said Thursday. "I was in the Nixon administration, they had policies
whereby they would go after civil servants and career people."
The
House is likely to vote on three other amendments Thursday night,
including those that would prohibit the DEA from spending money to
arrest state-licensed medical marijuana patients and providers, and to
block states from importing hemp seeds for industrial hemp research
programs made legal in the latest federal farm bill.
UPDATE:
12:40 a.m. -- The House voted early Friday to restrict the Drug
Enforcement Administration from using funds to go after medical
marijuana operations that are legal under state laws. The House also
approved two amendments to the DEA budget preventing the agency from
using funds to interfere in state-legal industrial hemp research.
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