Pubdate: Thu, 22 May 2003
Source: Hartford Courant (CT)
Copyright: 2003 The Hartford Courant
Contact:  http://www.ctnow.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183
Author: Christopher Keating, Capitol Bureau Chief

MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILL DIES IN HOUSE

Detractors Keep Lid On A `Cruel Hoax'

After a spirited debate focusing on compassion and prosecution, the House 
of Representatives rejected a cutting-edge bill Wednesday that would have 
legalized the use of marijuana for medical purposes.

By a vote of 79-64, the House decided against allowing Connecticut to join 
eight other states that say marijuana can relieve pain for people suffering 
from cancer, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and severe muscle spasms.

Several legislators spoke passionately about family members who have 
suffered in their final days, while others said the bill was actually a 
back-door maneuver to open huge loopholes and lead to the legalization of a 
banned drug.

The bill would have allowed doctors to certify that a patient needed 
marijuana for medical purposes. The bill also would have allowed patients 
to cultivate a limited number of marijuana plants, but would have forbidden 
marijuana smoking in public, in the presence of minors or by anyone younger 
than 18.

Sponsors admitted they could not find a way to provide for medical users to 
legally obtain marijuana seeds for cultivation.

Rep. Robert Farr, a West Hartford Republican, said that passing the bill 
would have sent a false message that marijuana is not harmful. Another 
problem, he said, is that marijuana is not helpful for a series of 
illnesses mentioned in the bill.

"Show me a doctor who prescribes smoking marijuana for glaucoma, and I 
would like to see his medical malpractice bill," said Farr, an attorney. "I 
consider this a cruel hoax."

Some legislators questioned how patients could obtain marijuana legally. 
They charged that the patient would need to break the law in order to 
obtain the seeds to grow the marijuana plants.

"I go out on the corner with Little Johnny Junkie, and I have to deal with 
him to buy the drug," said Rep. John Wayne Fox, a Stamford Democrat. "This 
bill is about legalizing marijuana."

A freshman legislator, Penny Bacchiochi of Somers, brought the 151-member 
House chamber to silence when she said that no anti-nausea medications 
would help her husband when he was suffering from terminal bone cancer. 
After an operation, he became a paraplegic and suffered intense pain.

"A courageous doctor took us aside, and he told us that my husband needed 
to try marijuana," said Bacchiochi, 41. "It was obtained at great legal 
risk to my family, but it worked, and it worked wonders. And it gave him 
back some quality of life. I will always remember how my husband suffered, 
and I will always remember if this legislature had passed a bill like this, 
he would have suffered less."

State lawmakers waded into the highly volatile debate despite a national 
controversy and a unanimous ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court two years ago 
that made medical marijuana illegal.

The debate has a long and memorable history in Connecticut, going back to 
1981 when two young legislators named John Rowland and Moira Lyons were 
serving in their first year as lawmakers in the House. They both voted for 
a bill that allowed physicians to write prescriptions for medical 
marijuana, but no Connecticut doctors have done that in the ensuing 22 
years because federal law prevents it, lawmakers said.

During that 1981 debate, state Rep. Robert C. Sorensen of Meriden was 
credited with helping save the bill from defeat when he announced that he 
was undergoing "the horrors of chemotherapy" as the result of colon cancer. 
Several years later, his claim was discounted when he admitted that he had 
lied in another speech about having served in the Vietnam War.

Wednesday, after a 2½-hour debate, the two top House Democrats - Lyons, 
speaker of the house, and Majority Leader James Amann - both missed the 
vote on the bill because they were in a back room talking about the state 
budget and the ongoing fiscal crisis. Their absence prompted a complaint by 
deputy House Republican leader Claudia "Dolly" Powers of Greenwich, who 
said she was "embarrassed as a legislator" because the leaders were absent 
on a key issue.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart