Pubdate: Mon, 12 May 2003
Source: Recorder, The (CA)
Copyright: 2003, NLP IP Company
Contact:  http://www.callaw.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/652
Author: Jeff Chorney
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/findUKP115 (Cannabis - California)

JOINT VENTURE

Despite His Support For Medical Marijuana, Bill Lockyer Is Taking Action 
Against A Berkeley Doctor Known For His Pot Prescriptions

SACRAMENTO - Since he became the state's top prosecutor in 1999, Attorney 
General Bill Lockyer has portrayed himself as standing fast in support of 
California's medicinal marijuana law.

He's filed amicus briefs defending the law in federal court. He founded a 
task force to create statewide standards for how much pot people can 
possess. He's even personalized the controversy over marijuana's ability to 
relieve suffering by invoking the deaths from leukemia of his mother and 
sister.

Advocates of the ballot initiative that legalized marijuana for sick 
people, 1996's Proposition 215, are glad for Lockyer's support.

But now some are questioning his sincerity.

Lockyer's office is prosecuting a 69-year-old Berkeley doctor named Tod 
Mikuriya, who, because he's written about 7,000 recommendations for the 
drug, is one of the most visible medicinal marijuana activists in the 
state, according to a member of his legal team.

Since at least 1999, Mikuriya has been under investigation by the Medical 
Board of California because of marijuana recommendations he's written. Two 
of Lockyer's deputies, Jane Zack Simon and Lawrence Mercer, are handling 
the case in their role as counsel to the board. If they get their way, 
Mikuriya will be put on probation or lose his license to practice medicine 
altogether.

"Tod is being targeted because he has given recommendations to so many 
patients outside of the Bay Area. He's got a real devotion to this kind of 
intervention," said one of Mikuriya's attorneys, Oakland solo William Simpich.

Marijuana makes up the majority of Mikuriya's practice; he also practices 
psychiatry and biofeedback. He has testified in court on behalf of people 
busted for possession and will drive to rural areas to meet with patients 
who can't get local doctors to recommend the drug, Simpich said.

Where some might see an apparent incongruity in Lockyer's support of the 
prosecution, Simpich doesn't think the AG's actions are odd at all. He 
doesn't see Lockyer as a staunch Prop 215 supporter and describes the AG's 
support of the initiative as "lukewarm" at best.

He'd like to see Lockyer not only leave Mikuriya alone, but take the 
initiative to help patients statewide who are still being busted for 
possession.

"If you are a patient in any county outside the Bay Area, you've got the 
crosshairs on your neck," Simpich said.

But Lockyer spokeswoman Hallye Jordan said Simpich is politicizing an issue 
that really has nothing to do with marijuana at all.

"Dr. Mikuriya is not being prosecuted because he recommends medicinal 
marijuana to his patients. He is being prosecuted based on the belief that 
he does not provide adequate screening," Jordan said.

That's in line with the Medical Board's chief of enforcement, David 
Thornton, who said that if the board really wanted to go after doctors just 
for recommending marijuana, it would run more than the nine investigations 
it's carried out since the initiative became law.

Of those, two doctors are now on probation and two have pending 
accusations. Mikuriya's attorneys have filed a motion to dismiss the 
charges. If that fails, his case is scheduled to go to trial in front of an 
administrative law judge in September.

The other doctor with a pending case, William Eidelman of Santa Monica, has 
already been suspended.

The case against Mikuriya is based on his visits with 16 patients between 
1998 and 2001. The board alleges that the doctor met with the new patients 
and, for $100 or $120, wrote marijuana recommendations without properly 
evaluating their medical conditions or providing follow-up.

Several of the patients had past arrests for marijuana; a few had pending 
criminal cases. The Medical Board was particularly offended at Mikuriya's 
sanctioning marijuana for a pregnant, 18-year-old anorexic.

Thornton explained that although you cannot obtain marijuana at your local 
pharmacy, the Medical Board expects doctors to treat recommendations just 
like they would prescriptions for morphine or ibuprofen, for example.

"They're well within their right to recommend marijuana. But when they put 
it in writing, they need to back that up" by conducting a "good-faith" 
examination and otherwise making sure the patient has a bona fide need for 
the drug, Thornton said.

Mikuriya's lawyers say that's exactly the rub.

According to their reply brief, "Dr. Mikuriya did not 'prescribe' medical 
marijuana, and therefore was not required to follow the record-keeping and 
physical exam requirements for 'prescribing' medication."

They also argue that the Compassionate Use Act, Health and Safety Code 
?[11362.5, grants Mikuriya absolute immunity for recommending marijuana.

Beyond this case, Simpich, the defense attorney, said he would like to see 
Lockyer act to improve the situation statewide, intervening when local 
prosecutors go after caregivers and patients.

Lockyer has already tried to improve things, but his efforts were blocked 
by Gov. Gray Davis. When Lockyer took office, he created a task force that 
explored the issue and said California should create patient identification 
cards, allow cooperative cultivation, and clear up discrepancies that make 
it hard for cities and counties to enforce the law.

Sen. John Vasconcellos, D-San Jose, has proposed several bills to carry out 
the task force wishes. But even after both houses passed his measure last 
year, the senator held onto it because Davis said he would veto.

Vasconcellos has introduced the same bill again this year as SB 420.

Simpich said none of the allegations against Mikuriya are based on 
complaints from patients. Rather, the AG's office is being manipulated by 
conservatives in law enforcement who still think the drug is the "work of 
the devil," he said.

"We think it's just been under [Lockyer's] radar. Now, we're hoping he'll 
intervene and say, 'This is stupid,'" Simpich said.

That doesn't seem very likely. AG spokeswoman Jordan said her boss is well 
aware of what's going on.

"The attorney general relies on the professionalism of these longtime 
deputy attorneys general," Jordan said. "They've got his full support."

The case is In the Matter of the Accusation Against Tod Mikuriya, M.D., 
12-1999-98783.
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