Pubdate: Tue, 07 Jun 2005
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2005 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: David G. Savage, Times Staff Writer
Cited: Gonzales v. Raich  http://www.angeljustice.org
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Raich (Angel Raich)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

JUSTICES RULE U.S. CAN BAN MEDICAL POT

The High Court Says Federal Anti-Marijuana Statutes Override Laws In 
California and Other States That Allow the Plant's Use to Ease Illness.

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Monday upheld the federal government's 
power to seize and destroy marijuana that is used as medicine by seriously 
ill patients, ruling that strict federal drug laws trump California's 
liberalized policy on pot.

The Constitution makes the laws of the United States the "supreme law of 
the land," and "if there is any conflict between federal and state law, 
federal law shall prevail," Justice John Paul Stevens said for the court. 
It is up to Congress, he said, to change the law.

The 6-3 decision did not seek to resolve the dispute over whether marijuana 
may be good medicine. Instead, the justices focused on whether the federal 
government could enforce its zero-tolerance policy on marijuana in the 10 
states -- most of them in the West -- where voters or lawmakers had opted 
to legalize marijuana used for medical purposes.

The court's leading liberals sided with the Bush administration and its 
federal drug enforcers, while three of its more conservative members, 
including Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, joined the side of the 
California marijuana users to limit federal authority.

The decision weakens, but does not overturn, state laws that permit 
seriously ill people to use marijuana to relieve pain or nausea.

Federal drug agents, prosecutors and judges may arrest, try and punish 
those who grow or use marijuana, the court said, even in states where it is 
legal.

However, state and local police need not assist in those efforts. And since 
most law enforcement is carried out by state and local officials, the 
liberalized medical marijuana laws should continue to have practical 
significance.

But California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer said the ruling showed "the vast 
philosophical difference between the federal government and Californians on 
the rights of patients.... Taking medicine on the recommendation of a 
doctor for a legitimate illness should not be a crime."

Federal law enforcement officials sought to dispel the idea that drug 
agents would be unleashed on marijuana-using patients in California and 
other states.

"The vast majority of our cases are against those involved in trafficking, 
and major cultivation and distribution," said Karen P. Tandy, head of the 
Drug Enforcement Administration. "I don't see any significant changes in 
DEA enforcement strategies after today's decision. We don't target sick and 
dying people."

However, the case before the court was brought by two ill California women, 
one of whom had her personal marijuana confiscated by federal agents.

Angel Raich, a brain tumor patient from Oakland, urged Congress on Monday 
to rethink its policy on marijuana.

"I'm in this battle, literally, for my life," she said after the ruling. 
She called on Congress to "stop federal raids on sick and dying 
patients.... I hope for myself, for my children and for other patients out 
there that our congressional leaders put compassion first. Our lives are 
literally in their hands."

A House bill is pending, sponsored by Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), that 
would permit physicians to prescribe marijuana as medicine. But it has been 
rejected several times in the past, and its chances of becoming law are 
seen as slim.

In the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, Congress classified marijuana as 
a dangerous and illegal drug that had no benefits. Though many experts 
dispute that conclusion, Congress has made no move to amend the law. The 
statute makes it illegal to import, manufacture, distribute, possess or use 
marijuana.

But in 1996, California voters approved a measure that said "seriously ill 
Californians have the right to obtain and use marijuana for medical 
purposes" if they have a recommendation from a physician. Since then, 
Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont and 
Washington have passed similar laws.

After the approval of those measures, cooperatives were set up to act as 
dispensaries for patients seeking marijuana. In 2001, however, the high 
court ruled that federal prosecutors could get court orders to shut down 
the operations.

The case decided Monday focused on patients who grew marijuana at home for 
their own use. It tested whether Congress' power to regulate "commerce 
among the states" extended to individuals who were not buying or selling 
marijuana.

Raich sued to defend her use of marijuana as medicine. She suffers from 
serious medical conditions, including an inoperable brain tumor, chronic 
back pain and muscle spasms. She and her doctor said that cannabis was 
uniquely effective in relieving her pain. She sued along with Diane Monson 
after drug enforcement agents raided Monson's Butte County home in 2002 and 
destroyed her marijuana plants.

Their lawyers argued that homegrown marijuana did not involve interstate 
commerce and therefore was beyond the authority of the federal government. 
They cited recent high court rulings that limited Congress' power on other 
matters.

In the past, Rehnquist has said there was a crucial difference between 
national and local matters, and that the court should limit federal 
officials from meddling in local affairs. In 1995, for example, he spoke 
for a 5-4 majority that struck down the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act 
on the theory that gun possession was not commerce and therefore was beyond 
Congress' authority to regulate.

The same is true of marijuana possession, Raich's lawyers argued. They won 
in the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco two years ago. 
The "noncommercial cultivation and possession of cannabis for personal 
medical purposes" is beyond Congress' power, the appeals courts said. It is 
"different in kind from drug trafficking."

Then-U.S. Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft appealed to the Supreme Court. He argued 
that federal authorities could not eliminate the illegal national market in 
marijuana if it was legal to grow and possess the substance in 10 states.

The case posed an interesting twist for the justices. In the past, the 
liberals have favored broad federal power because it was crucial in areas 
such as the minimum wage law, civil rights enforcement and environmental 
protection. The conservatives have favored protection of states' rights and 
limits on federal power.

In the case decided Monday, both sides were true to form but with two 
exceptions.

Justices Antonin Scalia and Anthony M. Kennedy, who in the past have taken 
the side of states' rights, joined the court's liberal bloc -- Justices 
Stevens, David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer -- in 
agreeing with the Bush administration's stand against the marijuana users.

The six-member majority said Congress had the authority to police the 
nation's illegal marijuana market.

"One need not have a degree in economics to understand why a nationwide 
exemption for the vast quantity of marijuana [or other drugs] locally 
cultivated for personal use ... may have a substantial impact on the 
interstate market for this extraordinarily popular substance," Stevens wrote.

The court's majority made clear it was not endorsing the federal policy on 
marijuana. "The voices of voters allied with [these two women] may one day 
be heard in the halls of Congress," Stevens said.

Rehnquist and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Clarence Thomas dissented in 
Gonzales vs. Raich. They said the Constitution should be read to "protect 
historical spheres of state sovereignty from excessive federal encroachment."

"This case exemplifies the role of states as laboratories," O'Connor said. 
States' voters and lawmakers, she said, should be given the freedom to set 
laws regarding "the health, safety and welfare of their citizens."

Thomas questioned how a few patients could upset the national market for 
marijuana.

"Congress' goal of thwarting the interstate drug trade would not plainly be 
thwarted if it could not apply the [federal law] to patients like Monson 
and Raich," he said. "If Congress can regulate this ... then it can 
regulate virtually anything."

[sidebar]

MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAWS

The Supreme Court ruled that state laws did not protect patients from a 
federal ban on the use of marijuana.

States that allow patient use of marijuana with a doctor's consent:

Alaska

California

Colorado

Hawaii

Maine

Montana

Nevada

Oregon

Vermont

Washington

[sidebar]

EFFECTIVE DATE OF STATE'S MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW

Alaska: March 4, 1999

California: Nov. 6, 1996

Colorado: June 1, 2001

Hawaii: Dec. 28, 2001

Maine: Dec. 22, 1999

Montana: Nov. 2, 2004

Nevada: Oct. 1, 2001

Oregon: Dec. 3, 1998

Vermont: July 1, 2004

Washington: Nov. 3, 1998

Sources - National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, 
Associated Press
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake