Pubdate: Wed, 15 Jun 2005
Source: Anderson Valley Advertiser (CA)
Column: Cannabinotes
Copyright: 2005 Anderson Valley Advertiser
Contact:  http://www.theava.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2667
Author: Fred Gardner
Cited: Gonzales v. Raich ( www.angeljustice.org/ )
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

THE RAICH DECISION: ALL POWER TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

In a six-to-three vote announced June 6, the U.S. Supreme Court has denied 
Angel Raich and Diane Monson the right -established by California voters in 
1996- to obtain and use marijuana for medical purposes.

Phony Tony awards go to Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy, two of the five 
justices who advocate limits on federal power but in this case made a 
War-on-Drugs exception to their "principles." John Paul Stevens, who wrote 
the majority opinion, was joined by Kennedy, David Souter, Ruth Bader 
Ginsburg, and Steven Breyer. Scalia wrote a concurring opinion trying to 
justify his switcheroo. Kennedy didn't feel he owed the public an explanation.

Sandra Day O'Connor's dissent was joined by Chief Justice William 
Rehnquist, and Clarence Thomas, staying true to their states-rights line. 
Thomas wrote an eloquent separate dissent.

Raich and Monson are California medical marijuana users who in October, 
2002 sought to enjoin the DEA from confiscating their marijuana and raiding 
their suppliers.

They argued, among other things, that the feds had no jurisdiction to 
enforce the Controlled Substances Act against them because their activities 
don't affect interstate commerce.

After failing to get an injunction from a federal District Judge, they 
appealed to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal, which ordered that the 
injunction be granted.

The Bush Administration appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard 
arguments in November '04. The case started out as Raich et al v. Ashcroft 
et al but goes down in the books as Gonzales et al v. Raich et al.

Regulating the noncommercial cultivation and use of marijuana in California 
"is squarely within Congress's commerce power," Stevens wrote for the 
majority.  Previous cases, notably Wickard v. Filburn, had established 
"Congress's power to regulate purely local activities that are part of an 
economic 'class of activities' that have a substantial effect on interstate 
commerce." Some of Stevens's opinion seems apologetic in tone. "The case is 
made difficult by respondents' strong arguments that they will suffer 
irreparable harm because, despite a congressional finding to the contrary, 
marijuana does have valid therapeutic purposes.

The question before us, however, is not whether it is wise to enforce the 
statute in these circumstances; rather, it is whether congress' power to 
regulate interstate markets for medicinal substances encompasses the 
portions of those markets that are supplied with drugs produced and 
consumed locally.

Well-settled law controls our answer.

The CSA is a valid exercise of federal power, even as applied to the 
troubling facts of this case."

Stevens recounts the futile efforts to remove marijuana from Schedule 1 
(dangerous drugs with no medical use). "After some fleeting success in 1988 
when an Administrative Law Judge declared that the DEA would be acting in 
an 'unreasonable arbitrary, and capricious' manner if it continued to deny 
marijuana access to seriously ill patients, and concluded that it should be 
reclassified as a Schedule III substance, the campaign has proved 
unsuccessful. The DEA Administrator did not endorse the ALJ's finding, and 
since that time has routinely denied petitions to reschedule the drug. The 
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia circuit has reviewed the 
petition to reschedule marijuana on five separate occasions over the course 
of 30 years, ultimately upholding the Administrator's final order."

Stevens concludes by noting that Raich and Monson can appeal again to the 
Ninth Circuit with their due-process and medical-necessity arguments, which 
were not considered previously. They can also seek to have marijuana 
rescheduled by the DEA and/or avail themselves of "the democratic process, 
in which the voices of voters allied with these respondents may one day be 
heard in the halls of Congress."

Boalt Hall professor Robert Berring says Stevens's decision is "in the fine 
tradition of 'we are sorry that this is not the right thing to do, but we 
are bound by the law to harm you.'  The tone is so patrician and 
unrealistic. It does have a fine timeline history of drug policy in this 
country which shows it for the great muddle that it is. Suggesting that the 
plaintiffs should use the democratic process to address their problem is 
ridiculous since they HAVE used it in California.  He also uses the 
straw-man assertion that maybe marijuana should be removed from Schedule 1. 
Well, yes, but tell that to the FDA not to Ms. Raich.  I also love the way 
that they drag out an old chestnut like Wickard v. Filburn, a case about 
the wheat market in the depression, and say that it is squarely on 
point.  It makes no sense.  This is the kind of opinion that I can 
appreciate for its cranky weirdness except for the fact that it truly harms 
people.  Who would have thought that I would look to Justice Thomas for 
solace?"

Professor Berring must have missed Pebbles Trippet's recent Anderson Valley 
Advertiser column, "Clarence Thomas is our Hope."  Her prediction was 
fulfilled by Thomas's bluntly worded dissent. "If Congress can regulate 
this under the Commerce Clause, then it can regulate virtually anything," 
he wrote, "and the Federal Government is no longer one of limited and 
enumerated powers... In the early days of the republic it would have been 
unthinkable that Congress could prohibit the local cultivation, possession, 
and consumption of marijuana."

O'Connor's dissent repeated Justice Brandeis's famous line that 'a single 
courageous State may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory and try 
novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the 
country.' This case exemplifies the role of States as laboratories." 
O'Connor concluded, "If I were a California citizen, I would not have voted 
for the medical marijuana ballot initiative; if I were a California 
legislator I would not have supported the compassionate Use Act. But 
whatever the wisdom of California's experiment with medical marijuana, the 
federalism principles that have driven our commerce clause cases require 
that room for experiment be protected in this case."

Attorney Robert Raich says he was most surprised that "Stevens, who I 
thought would be our biggest supporter, ended up authoring this negative 
opinion and Rehnquist, who I thought would be our biggest opponent, ended 
up joining this terrific opinion by O'Connor... Stevens had commented about 
the issue of federalism in his concurrence in the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' 
Cooperative case.  He should have ruled for us on that basis.

It is inexplicable why that analysis is missing from his opinion." 
Stevens's hypocrisy is exposed by Thomas, who quotes his comment in the 
OCBC case (May, 2001): "The majority's rush to embrace federal power 'is 
especially unfortunate given the importance of showing respect for the 
sovereign States that comprise our Federal Union.'"

Raich says that Stevens "still could have let the federal government 
regulate all those other issues he cares about -the endangered species act, 
the clean water act-under the commerce clause, except when you have an 
actual case where a state weighs in with a specific challenge.

And those would be dealt with case by case. If you had a state trying to 
ban abortion or re-impose segregation they would be overridden because a 
state can't infringe on the right to privacy or violate the equal 
protection clause.

If a state says, 'We don't care about tailpipe emissions, we're not going 
to regulate factories.'  Well, factories and automobiles actually are 
engaged in interstate commerce.  So a state that tried to get out of 
clean-air laws would still be validly overridden by federal law under the 
commerce clause."

Attorney Bill Panzer was appalled by Scalia's opinion. "He seems to be 
saying Congress can do anything it wants under the 'necessary and proper' 
clause. If they have the right to regulate interstate commerce, they can 
regulate it any way that they want. They don't even have to show that what 
they're regulating has any substantial effect on interstate commerce... 
He's changed 'necessary and proper' to 'imagination and whim.' If congress 
can imagine that it'll help, they can do it. Scalia, supposedly the strict 
constructionist, is giving Congress incredible powers." A well-placed 
Washington source thinks Scalia was never sincere about federalism, that he 
adopted Rehnquist's line for tactical reasons, but now he's coming out for 
an all-powerful federal government (under the control of his duck-hunting 
buddy, Dick Chaney). Panzer has a simpler analysis. "I think it's more 
like: 'It's drugs, they can do anything they want.'"

Pebbles Trippet of the Medical Marijuana Patients Union would like to see 
"a new federal challenge, focusing on a full spectrum of constitutional 
violations broader than the commerce clause and states rights... We need to 
decide whether there is a compelling federal interest to outweigh the 
patient's under the Due Process Clause; whether the CSA's penalties are 
cruel and unusual punishment as applied to cannabis for medical use; and 
whether there is a rational basis for discriminating against medical 
cannabis compared to other medical treatments."

Ten Clubs Closed

Two chains of cannabis dispensaries shut down "voluntarily" the day the 
Raich decision was announced: Compassionate Caregivers, with seven 
locations (Oakland, San Francisco, Bakersfield, San Diego, Ukiah, San 
Leandro, Long Beach) and United Medical Caregivers Clinics, with two (Ukiah 
and West Hollywood). According to attorney Lenore Schefman, Compassionate 
Caregivers had been contemplating such a move since May 6, when their West 
Hollywood club, widely known as "The Yellow House," was raided by the LAPD 
and IRS. Thirteen employees and one customer were arrested.

The authorities reportedly seized 800 pounds of marijuana and $300,000 in 
cash. A police spokesperson told the West Hollywood News, "They regularly 
sold 8 ounce and one pound quantities to people who made sometimes daily 
buys. There were an average of 235 visits a day to the house.

That's drug dealing, not medicine dispensing." Bruce Margolin, who is 
representing the employees, says they were performing a legal public service.

Krystic, who had made his living for many years running a gambling 
operation in Alaska, saw California's medical marijuana law as a commercial 
opportunity and did not pretend otherwise when I interviewed him in at his 
brand new West Hollywood club in February '04. (He said he had signed a 
seven-year lease and that the yellow house had once been used as an office 
by Charlie Chaplin's production company). Although Krystic had no personal 
affinity for marijuana, he hired managers and purchasing agents who did. 
His clubs, starting with "The Third Floor" on Telegraph Ave. in Oakland, 
were known for always having a wide selection of strains, clones, and 
edibles. In addition to hiring Margolin to represent his employees and 
Schefman to be his spokesperson, Krystic has now retained a specialist to 
deal with the IRS if he gets prosecuted for tax evasion or money laundering.

Many established club proprietors resented competition from Krystic. 
Whereas they were in it for the cause, they said, he was in it for the 
money (echoing Dennis Peron's attitude towards them). Attorney Bill Panzer 
speculates,  "I guess Larry's game plan is to already be on a beach in 
South America." Schefman, who notified Compassionate Caregivers's 250 
employees not to come to work Monday, June 6, says Krystic will be 
available for an interview by June 15.

On June 8 San Bernardino sheriffs busted California Alternative Caregivers 
Christian Alliance in Big Bear Lake, the only cannabis club in the county. 
Dale Gieringer of California NORML reports, "They sent in a sheriff's 
deputy with a recommendation to buy MJ, then  arrested the proprietor for 
sales. Assistant DA James Hosking has stated that the county regards sale 
of medical marijuana to be illegal, while recognizing  that cooperative 
gardens are allowed under the law. Reports are that sheriffs deputies had 
been watching the dispensary the previous day, stopping customers as they 
left and taking their medicine."

The club closures notwithstanding, media coverage of the Raich decision in 
California has emphasized that Prop 215 remains in effect.

The pro-cannabis doctors didn't report any fall off in patients seeking 
appointments, nor did sales at dispensaries decline -in contrast to May, 
2001, when the headlines announced the Supreme Court's 9-0 ruling against 
the Oakland CBC. The Raich ruling, at 6-3, is a less definitive defeat and 
represents a shift in momentum.

Attorney General Bill Lockyer issued a strong reassertion of state law, 
which may or may not be heeded by those under him. Montana's attorney 
general, Mike McGrath, also defended his state's marijuana law, which was 
enacted by popular iniative in November, 2004. McGrath a Democrat who 
recognizes how strongly the people of Montana favor medical marijuana 
(62-38), challenged the Bush Administration to crack down.

Officials in other states haven't stood up for their constituents. 
Administrators of the Oregon medical marijuana program stopped processing 
new applications until the state attorney general could weigh in with an 
opinion on the ramifications of Raich. In Hawaii, U.S. Attorney Ed Kubo 
released the following statement: "The U.S. Supreme Court decision this 
morning is the death knell to the medical marijuana issue.

I would advise all physicians and anyone who is involved in distributing or 
helping in the distribution of any illegal narcotic to be very, very 
leery." Kubo seemed unaware that the 9th Circuit's Conant v. Walters 
ruling, which the U.S. Supreme Court chose not to review, establishes the 
unambiguous right of doctors and patients to discuss cannabis as a 
treatment option under the First Amendment.

Angel and Robert Raich are heading to Washington, where Congress is about 
to debate an amendment to an appropriations bill that would compel the feds 
to honor state medical marijuana laws. Last year the same amendment was 
introduced by Rep. Maurice Hinchey and garnered 148 votes (to 268). Now 
Hinchey is saying he hopes to "get a few votes more."  Why not aspire to 
win? Three-quarters of the American people think marijuana should be 
legalized for medical use. An insider says that Hinchey is "trying to lower 
expectations" at the urging of p.r. experts.

Don't they know about the bandwagon effect?

Just how slick do they think they are?

Bill Panzer on the Raich ruling

We asked Oakland defense specialist Bill Panzer, "In the wake of the Raich 
decision, what are you telling your clients?"

I'm telling them that from a legal standpoint, this really doesn't change 
anything. I don't think Raich in any way would have legitimized 
dispensaries.  However, from a practical standpoint, there could be some 
kind of backlash because of a misreading of it. For example, the prosecutor 
in Hawaii put out a press release.

It's like, "Hey, dude, did you ever hear of Conant v. Walters?"  The Raich 
decision has nothing to do with doctors, but this is the typical thing.

I do expect that there are going to be some raids, but I think their new 
tack is going to be financial.

I believe the IRS was involved in the shutdown of Compassionate Caregivers, 
and CHAMP is being audited.

They could say, "Okay, fine, you're paying taxes, but you deducted the cost 
of purchasing the cannabis and you can't do that because it's against 
public policy."  Somebody may have to raise the question, "How do you 
define 'public policy?'" What the public votes and wants, or what 
Washington is trying to shove down their throat?  The Supreme Court says: 
with respect to pornography, it's local community standards.

You're anticipating an argument to the IRS down the road.

Yes. "My community voted for this public policy."

What happens if a popular, well-respected club gets raided and closed by 
the DEA. Will they get a jury trial?

The question is whether the jury ever hears any of this stuff.

How they go after clubs really depends.

Whether or not the club is selling clones [starter plants] makes a huge 
difference, the reason being: the five-year mandatory minimum kicks in at 
100 plants or 100 kilos [a kilo =2.2 lbs]. A plant is defined as having 
leaves, stem, and any root structure; so most clones are plants.

If a dispensary is selling clones, the chances are pretty good that they'll 
have 100 on hand.  If they're not dealing clones, the chances that they'll 
be caught with 100 kilos are pretty slim. Other than Compassionate 
Caregivers, I can't imagine any club would have 100 kilos lying around.

My experience with the feds is if they can't get at least the five-year 
sentence, they're not going to take the case. So, most of these 
dispensaries, as long as they're not dealing clones, will not be facing a 
great risk from federal prosecution.  What's more likely is that the feds 
come in, take everything, and then don't prosecute.

That may be one of the reasons we're hearing about the IRS getting involved.

Because tax evasion is something you can prosecute on, or at least hit them 
with a big tax levy.

DEA agents in San Diego and San Francisco have said they won't be going 
after individual patients.

Do you take those reassurances at face value?

I was glad to hear those statements. In the Osburn case, which is being 
appealed,  I came up with a straight necessity defense.

Here's how it goes. California says "We're going to let patients use cannabis.

It's legal here. The feds are  saying "We're not interested in going after 
patients, we've never gone after patients." That's their policy, that's 
their deed. So, there is a discrete group of people who are going to use 
marijuana and no one's going to stop them. They've got to get it from 
somewhere.

If they get it from the black market, what does the federal government tell 
us they're doing? Supporting terrorists! Remember those commercials during 
the Super Bowl? "I smoked a joint and killed a family in 
Colombia."  They're telling us the black market directly helps the 
terrorists and there's imminent danger from the terrorists. So, to protect 
America, I have to supply the marijuana so that Al Qaeda doesn't get the 
money and crash a plane into my house tomorrow.

Is this a serious defense or a stand-up comedy routine?

When you bring a necessity defense, one of the elements is you have to show 
that there was imminent danger or that your belief in imminent danger was 
reasonable. The weak point in the defense is buying a lid on the black 
market is not really going to cause Al Qaeda to crash a plane into my house 
tomorrow. But the government is telling me that's going to happen.

So the government would have to argue, "It's not reasonable to believe us. 
Everybody knows we're bullshitting."

Pro-Cannabis Doctors Respond to Stevens's Opinion

Justice Stevens's opinion for the majority in the Raich case includes a 
paragraph that could be read as demeaning to California's small but growing 
group of openly pro-cannabis physicians:

"The exemption for physicians provides them with an economic incentive to 
grant their patients permission to use the drug. In contrast to most 
prescriptions for legal drugs, which limit the dosage and duration of the 
usage, under California law the doctor's permission to recommend marijuana 
use is open-ended. The authority to grant permission whenever the doctor 
determines that a patient is afflicted with 'any other illness for which 
marijuana provides relief,' is broad enough to allow even the most 
scrupulous doctor to conclude that some recreational uses would be 
therapeutic. And our cases have taught us that there are some unscrupulous 
physicians who overprescribe when it is sufficiently profitable to do so." 
(Funny how some fervent capitalists start tsk-tsking about profit when it"s 
cannabis-related.)

David Bearman, MD, responds: "That is an insult.

No one gets in my front door for an appointment unless they represent 
themselves on the phone as having a well-documented serious disease.

If the Medical Board and the feds had not been so damn busy harrassing and 
intimidating physicians, 10 to 20 times as many California physicians (e.g. 
15,000 to 30,000) would be making recommendations. It would take the 
patient's principal doctor (and the vast majority of my patients have one) 
an extra minute or two, and save the patient the time and trouble of having 
to seek out a cannabinologist. This is what the voters of the state of 
California had in mind when they passed 215. It's the Feds and the MBC who 
have created this economic barrier, uh oh I mean incentive."

Frank Lucido, MD, thinks Stevens misunderstands the doctor's role in 
approving a patient's request to self-medicate with cannabis.  "The more 
appropriate analogy is not to a drug prescription, which would involve an 
exact amount you are ordering the pharmacist to dispense, but to a medical 
decision of 'yes' or 'no,' such as: 'Yes, you are fit to go to camp.' 'No, 
you cannot fly a plane' (FAA physicals) 'No, you can't have insurance from 
this company that I work for.' 'Yes, you should be off work for the next 3 
days due to illness.' 'No, your injury is not work-related.' 'Yes, I 
recommend you cut back your work hours for health reasons.'"

Robert E. Sullivan, MD, says Stevens's reference to "economic incentive to 
grant their patients permission to use the drug" would apply as well to "a 
new cure for herpes, hypertension, or erectile dysfunction (talk about a 
"marketed diagnosis"). What is he thinking?

One can only conclude that he believes physicians really make decisions on 
such base motivation. Does he think they get a kickback?

Very cynical."

Sullivan also questions the accuracy of Stevens's line, "In contrast to 
most prescriptions for legal drugs, which limit the dosage and duration of 
the usage, under California law the doctor's permission to recommend 
marijuana use is open-ended." Sullivan says: "Not so. The medical board 
limited the duration of recommendations to one year, like all conventional 
Rxs. And we, at least, specify an amount (on a weekly basis) for each 
patient approved.

Most conventional Rxs for pain/spasm leave quite a range of 
dosage/frequency up to the patient.

And does he really believe the patients follow it anyway?

And, oh yes, what does this have to do with the question at hand?"

Sullivan adds: "The suspicions people reveal they have about others often 
reveal their own true motives and styles... My overall impression of the 
decision is that the 'What ifs' have taken over. 'The parade is a wonderful 
idea, but What if someone gets run over by a float?

Maybe we just better not have it.'

"What I would love to do is get Justice Stevens to go through a day at work 
with me. To meet an adult daughter who brought in her elderly mother on 
chemo, neither of whom had had any prior contact with cannabis before 
trying it and finding it worked far better than any other medicine she'd 
been given - at this point getting a frail smile from mom nodding her head 
too - and be able to inform them how they could obtain and use it in a 
manner suitable to them, and have them leave confident with an informed 
plan, professional endorsement, and ongoing support as needed.

To meet the plumber who walked in and seemed normal until telling and 
showing you a foot that'd been reconstructed thru several surgeries after 
being run over at an intersection years ago, and now it hurt all the time 
but the cannabis was the only thing that helped the pain at night, allowed 
him to sleep and wake up clear-headed so he could still work and support 
his family...  The gentle 45 y/o black man who dropped out of school in 
Texas because he just couldn't get it and was considered stupid, tried 
drugs and lots of menial jobs before self-diagnosing himself in his 30's 
with ADD from what he'd heard about it and then deliberately learned about 
it, never saw a doctor but discovered that cannabis helped him focus so he 
could finish things. Then got his G.E.D., worked thru college on the dean's 
list, and now was an electrical engineer with an LA firm. On cannabis the 
whole time.

"I'd love to have Stevens meet some of these folks, listen and look them 
over, then have the courage to go back and tell his friends about it... 
Entrenched power can see a threat to itself in its own shadow.

The fear of loss or change controls the thinking.

The only value is self; others are base, unscrupulous, expendable, totally 
amoral, and, more than  anything, bent on taking your power for themselves. 
Any little loss or change can quickly get out of hand and must be 
assiduously avoided.

We already know everything that's important so there is no need for 
new  knowledge, or perspective, or goals; indeed, these are likely to 
contain  unseen threats and should be actively stifled. 'Remember, we are 
the leaders and certainly know best.'"

And a last word from the founder of the Society of Cannabis Clinicians: "As 
the 'any other conditions' author I am responsible for this mention by 
Justice Stevens. He appears to be complaining about aesculapian hegemony 
that keeps the physician as a gatekeeper. He is correct in his complaint at 
the potential for exploitation economically but oblivious to the complexity 
of medical diagnosis and judgment.

The level of skepticism or cynicism is understandable but unfortunate when 
the court -supreme or lower-seeks to practice medicine.

The world of stipulative reality bereft of clinical medical expertise 
isprejudicial to both health and governance." -Tod Mikuriya, MD
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom