Minneapolis Mayor Makes Psychedelics “Lowest Enforcement Priority”

Minneapolis, Minnesota Mayor Jacob Frey has issued an executive order making the possession and cultivation of psychedelics such as psilocybin the lowest law enforcement priority for city police and officials.

Minneapolis city hall.

The city’s police chief says he will follow the mayor’s order which also prevents local resources from being used to aid in any state or federal enforcement of psychedelic laws.

The move by the mayor is reminiscent of Seattle in 2003: the city made marijuana the lowest enforcement priority almost a decade before the first states legalized the plant in 2012.

“Today, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey signed an Executive Order supporting entheogenic (psychoactive) plant practices and ordering law enforcement to deprioritize investigating and arresting those who use these plant compounds”, states a press release. “This is the mayor’s first executive order in 2023 and his fifth since the new government structure took effect.”

Executive Order 2023-01 requires the investigation and arrest of people planting, cultivating, purchasing, transporting, distributing, and engaging in practices with, or possessing Entheogenic Plants or plant compounds to be the lowest priority for law enforcement in Minneapolis.

“Regardless of the stigma attached, when you look at the science behind the benefits of entheogens, it all points in one direction,” said Mayor Frey. “Experts are telling us that these plants help people, and that’s the business we should be in – helping people. With a rise in deaths of despair in our city, and in our society, the data is showing that these plants can help be a remedy. That’s the message I hope this executive order sends elsewhere.”

The press release states:

Scientific and clinical studies have shown that Entheogenic Plants have helped people with chronic depression, severe anxiety, addiction, post-traumatic stress, and other physical and mental conditions. The plants have also been found to alleviate treatment-resistant cases of opiate and methamphetamine addiction at higher rates than other treatments. However, many individuals who use these plants fear arrest and prosecution due to current legal prohibitions.

As included in the order, entheogenic plants are defined as the full spectrum of plants, fungi, and natural materials and/or their extracted compounds, limited to those containing the following types of compounds: indole amines, tryptamines, and phenethylamines; including, but not limited to, psilocybin mushrooms, ayahuasca tea, mescaline, and iboga, that can benefit psychological and physical wellness and well-being.

“This is an important first step to undo all the harms inflicted from the war on people who use drugs, which was created to target brown and black peoples,” said Jessica Nielson, PhD, Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota and founding member of the DecriMN Coalition. “These natural medicines and their use by Indigenous peoples predate any of these laws. Individual liberty over one’s own health and consciousness is essential to a well community, as is the community healing that can occur with these entheogens.”

“A generation ago these plants were carelessly condemned as part of the broader war on drugs. Science now knows better, and policymakers ought to respond by regulating these in a different way,” said Council Member Andrew Johnson, Ward 12. “Deprioritization is a great step, and it’s exciting to see Minneapolis among the leading cities [nationally] calling for a commonsense approach in light of all the data.”

Through the Executive Order, Minneapolis will join several other jurisdictions throughout the country that have deprioritized the use of government resources in the enforcement and prosecution of activities related to the possession and use of some or all entheogenic plants. Those jurisdictions include Oakland, California; San Francisco, California; Denver, Colorado; Ann Arbor, Michigan; Detroit, Michigan; Seattle, Washington; Washington D.C.; and the state of Oregon.

At the state level this legislative session, the State of Minnesota created a Psychedelic Medicine Task Force to help prepare the state for possible legalization. The task force will advise the legislature on the legal, medical, and policy issues surrounding the legalization of psychedelic medicine in the state.

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