Pubdate: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 Source: Oakland Tribune, The (CA) Copyright: 2003 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Author: Josh Richman, Staff Writers FEDS ORDERED TO HALT POT RAIDS Appellate Judges Rule Case Fighting For Medical Marijuana Has Merit. U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft and Drug Enforcement Administration chief Asa Hutchinson should be temporarily barred from treating medical marijuana patients as criminals, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday. Lawyers for the plaintiffs -- a medical marijuana patient from Oakland, two unnamed Oakland growers who supply her and an Oroville patient who grows her own -- called the 2-1 ruling a major victory. "We feel we've been vindicated after a long, hard effort," said Oakland attorney Robert Raich, both a lawyer for and husband of Oakland plaintiff Angel McClary Raich. He said his wife "was jubilant, absolutely elated" and will "take a deep sigh of relief knowing she will finally be safe," no longer fearing she'll be denied medicine she needs to stay alive. Boston University Law Professor Randy Barnett, who argued the case to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, called this "a tremendous victory on behalf of suffering people" and proof "that federalism is not just a doctrine for political conservatives." The ruling sends the case back to U.S. District Judge Martin Jenkins of San Francisco, ordering him to issue a preliminary injunction blocking more raids until the case is tried. But the Justice Department, which doesn't comment on pending cases, could ask that Tuesday's ruling be reviewed by a larger 9th Circuit panel or by the U.S. Supreme Court. Angel Raich, Diane Monson of Oroville and the two "John Doe" growers sued Ashcroft and Hutchinson in October 2002 after a series of DEA raids against medical marijuana patients and providers. California is among 10 states with laws allowing medical marijuana use, but the federal Controlled Substances Act still bans the drug for all purposes. Raich has said she uses marijuana to combat scoliosis, temporomandibular joint disease, endometriosis, fibromyalgia, a uterine fibroid tumor and a rotator cuff injury. She also has an inoperable brain tumor and suffers post-traumatic stress disorder from childhood abuse and nonepileptic seizures. Monson's home was raided in August 2002. Local sheriff's deputies and a local prosecutor agreed her six marijuana plants were within county guidelines under state law, but DEA agents took the plants without charging her with any crime. The lawsuit claimed that the U.S. Constitution's commerce clause lets federal law regulate only interstate commerce, and that Californians' medical marijuana use neither crosses state lines nor is commerce. Jenkins in March refused to enjoin the raids, saying the plaintiffs hadn't shown sufficient likelihood that they would prevail at trial. But 9th Circuit Judge Harry Pregerson, writing for himself and Circuit Judge Richard Paez, overturned that ruling Tuesday, finding the plaintiffs likely to succeed in proving the federal law, as applied to them, is an unconstitutional use of Congress' com-merce clause authority. "We find that the appellants' class of activities -- the intrastate, noncommercial cultivation, possession and use of marijuana for personal medical purposes on the advice of a physician -- is, in fact, different in kind from drug trafficking," he In this case, a doctor's recommendation eliminates the health, safety and policy concerns usually associated with drug abuse, he wrote, and this cultivation, possession and use "does not involve sale, exchange, or distribution." So, he wrote, the federal law's application in this case fails constitutional tests set by recent U.S. Supreme Court precedent, and letting the raids continue will create a "significant hardship" for the plaintiffs. Senior Circuit Judge C. Arlen Beam dissented from Tuesday's ruling, citing the 1942 case of an Ohio wheat farmer fined for growing too much wheat for personal use in violation of a federal law meant to control the wheat market's extreme supply and price fluctuations. In this case, Beam wrote, the Controlled Substances Act "clearly reaches plaintiffs' activities, even though they grow, or take delivery of marijuana grown by surrogates, for personal consumption as medicine in the home as permitted by California, but not federal, law." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart