Pubdate: Tue, 18 Jul 2000
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: John M. Glionna, Times Staff Writer

JUDGE REVERSES BAN ON POT AS MEDICINE

Law: He Says Seriously Ill Patients Can Have The Drug. But U.S. Officials 
Insist Users Are Still Subject To Arrest.

SAN FRANCISCO--In a reversal of his own 1998 order, a federal judge ruled 
on Monday that an Oakland medicinal marijuana club can dispense the drug to 
seriously ill patients.

The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer came only two days 
after San Francisco announced it will allow sick people with doctors' notes 
access to marijuana through an identification card system used in at least 
two other Northern California counties.

Advocates hailed both developments as a breakthrough for the cause of 
medicinal marijuana. "I'm glad to see that the judicial branch of 
government finally recognizes what the people in California and every other 
state already know--that patients should be able to have access to the 
medicine they need," said Robert Raich, an attorney representing the 
Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative.

Breyer's five-page ruling is the latest development in a complex legal 
battle between marijuana advocates and enforcers of strict federal drug laws.

In 1996, California voters passed Proposition 215 to permit a sick person 
to obtain marijuana under a doctor's care. Similar measures have passed in 
Alaska, Arizona, Hawaii, Maine, Nevada, Oregon and Washington state.

But federal prosecutors stepped in and closed down six cannabis buyers' 
clubs in Northern California, saying the drug is still illegal under U.S. 
law. When the Oakland club refused to close, Breyer held advocates there in 
contempt and ordered the facility forcibly shut down. The club appealed the 
injunction but Breyer denied the motion.

Last September, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said 
Breyer had denied the appeal "without weighing or considering the public 
interest."

Breyer has since said he should have considered the needs of patients who 
have no legal alternative to the drug. In his ruling Monday, Breyer said 
the federal government "has still not offered any evidence to rebut 
defendants' evidence that cannabis is medically necessarily for a group of 
seriously ill individuals."

A spokesman for the Justice Department did not return calls on Monday. But 
Clinton administration officials have said they are considering appealing 
the 9th Circuit's ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Meanwhile, they say, anyone caught using marijuana for any reason is still 
subject to federal charges, regardless of local laws--a strategy that 
angers marijuana advocates. "The federal government is fighting an 
unwinnable war on drugs, using patients as pawns," said Raich, adding that, 
in light of Monday's ruling, the Oakland cannabis club would begin 
dispensing the drug as soon as possible.

So far, state legislators have steered clear of the issue, backing away 
from a proposal for a statewide cardholder system that would allow 
registered medical marijuana users, providers and growers to avoid arrest.

Defying federal authorities, San Francisco has become the nation's largest 
city to allow sick people access to pot. The announcement of the ID card 
system Friday by maverick Dist. Atty. Terence Hallinan follows similar 
moves by officials in Santa Cruz, Arcata and Mendocino County.

"This law is tailor-made for San Francisco," said Hallinan. "Proposition 
215 passed by an 80% margin and everyone here knows somebody suffering from 
cancer or AIDS who has said that 'smoking marijuana has saved my life.' "

He added: "It's becoming more and more clear that this drug gives relief to 
people with AIDS. It boosts their appetites, makes them able to better cope 
with the disease. This program is the right thing to do."

The new ID program has yet to address how those in need will obtain the 
drug, but the San Francisco health department began issuing the ID cards 
last week.

The cards, each of which bears only a name and an identification number, 
shields holders from arrest by certifying that a bearer has a medical 
reason to use marijuana. Doctors sign a form agreeing to monitor the 
patient's medical condition. The cards are good for as long as two years.

Several district attorneys throughout California on Monday said San 
Francisco's move would have no influence on their policy against condoning 
any marijuana use.

"We look at the law quite differently than the people in San Francisco and 
don't believe the government should give its stamp of approval for 
individual possession of marijuana," said Robin Shakely, a spokeswoman for 
the Sacramento County district attorney.

She said the doctor's note system is fraught with potential problems.

"We're just not willing to take any doctor's excuse at face value," Shakely 
said. "We've found that too many doctors will make frivolous 
recommendations for medical marijuana based on little or no medical exam. 
And these doctors particularly come out of the Bay Area."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jo-D