Pubdate: Sat, 08 Apr 2000
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2000 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact:  P.O. Box 3080, Honolulu, Hawaii 96802
Fax: (808) 523-8509
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Author: Richard S. Miller, Special to the Star-Bulletin. Richard S. Miller
is professor of law emeritus at the University of Hawaii School of Law. The
views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the
views of the law school or the university.

IT’S ALREADY LEGAL TO USE MARIJUANA FOR MEDICAL NEEDS

Law has to be made workable and effective so hurting patients who need
marijuana can get it

What Hawaii legislators need to know, as they consider the medical marijuana
bills now before them, is that medical use of cannabis is already permitted
under Hawaii law. The current bills will not establish any radical new legal
rights. But they will make existing Hawaii law and legal rights workable for
the very sick and debilitated patients who need marijuana to ease their
suffering.

And they will be easily administered to ensure that those who are not sick
and debilitated will not abuse the law.

Our legislators can therefore extend the important and well-proven health
benefits of medical marijuana to qualifying Hawaii citizens without really
undermining any settled principle of Hawaii law. They will not be leading a
sharp and radical change of direction from the law of the past.

Let me explain.

Hawaii's Penal Code contains a "Choice of Evils" defense. This humane rule
allows a person to defend a criminal charge on the basis of "justification"
if the alleged criminal act was committed in order to avoid a consequence
that would be more harmful than the crime itself.

The law applies to situations where, for example, a bus driver deliberately
drives his bus full of children into a parked car, wrecking the car, in
order to stop his bus with failed brakes from continuing down a steep hill
and crashing with much more serious consequences. It applies equally well
when a person supplies or smokes marijuana in order to prevent or alleviate
severe or debilitating pain or nausea.

Under the Choice of Evils law persons charged with a marijuana offense have
a complete defense to the charge if 1) they reasonably believe that their
conduct was necessary to avoid imminent harm either to themselves or others
and, 2) the harm to be avoided is greater than the harm that the applicable
penal code provision is seeking to prevent.

Furthermore, once a defendant asserts the Choice of Evils defense, the
burden falls on the prosecution to disprove the choice of evils defense
beyond a reasonable doubt.

That is, the prosecutor bears the burden of proving, beyond a reasonable
doubt, that 1) the defendant did not have a reasonable belief that
furnishing or using the marijuana was necessary to prevent or avoid his own
or another's serious pain, nausea or other debilitating condition or, 2) the
harm created by violating the marijuana laws is as great as or greater than
the harm to the person who is using the marijuana if he or she doesn't get
the marijuana to alleviate his or her debilitating condition.

This law makes it very difficult to convict a patient with a debilitating
condition who uses marijuana only to alleviate that condition and not for
other purposes.

If this defense already exists under Hawaii law, why do we need to adopt a
special statute such as the medical marijuana bills now before the
Legislature?

The reason is clear: Currently, under the Choice of Evils defense fellow
citizens who would qualify to grow, possess, use or distribute marijuana to
alleviate a debilitating condition risk being arrested and tried in a
criminal case for promoting a detrimental drug. If they are arrested they
have to retain a lawyer to defend themselves and find a physician to testify
for them.

Further, they have to go through the pain, pressure and great delay of a
trial, and possibly an appeal. The cost, delay and anxiety, especially for
persons who are already suffering from seriously debilitating or dangerous
conditions, is more than most of them can tolerate.

In other words, while the current legislative policy is to allow the defense
of justification in such cases, the effect of current law is to undermine
that policy as a practical matter. If the purpose is to alleviate suffering
of seriously ill citizens or those with great pain who can benefit from
marijuana -- as it very clearly seems to be -- the burdens imposed by the
current procedure defeats that purpose.

The beauty of the proposed medical marijuana legislation is that it
establishes the right to use the cannabis in advance, before the drug is
used and before an arrest is made. Once they receive a recommendation from a
physician and once they register in accordance with the law, fellow citizens
are unlikely to be prosecuted unless they abuse the privilege or exceed what
the law allows.

Allowing them to ease their unbearable pain, debilitating nausea and other
terrible conditions without harassment by the police and without fear that
they will be treated like law breakers is essential if the legislative
policy implicit in the Choice of Evils defense is to be given effect. It is
also consistent with the U.S. Institute of Medicine study, funded by federal
drug czar Barry McCaffrey, which found that "there are patients with
debilitating symptoms for whom smoked marijuana might provide relief."

Furthermore, allowing our fellow citizens to use marijuana to ease terrible
pain, to overcome nausea, to prevent blindness, to alleviate AIDS wasting
syndrome and to deal with other debilitating conditions is consistent with
the views of the vast majority of our fellow citizens, as determined in
February by an independent survey of registered voters by QMARK Research.

The survey found that "a solid majority (77 percent) of Hawaii voters are in
favor of 'the Hawaii State Legislature passing a law...to allow seriously or
terminally ill patients to use marijuana for medical purposes if supported
by their medical doctor.' "

Richard S. Miller is professor of law emeritus at the University of Hawaii
School of Law. The views expressed are those of the author and do not
necessarily represent the views of the law school or the university.
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MAP posted-by: Don Beck