Pubdate: Tue, 25 Nov 2008
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Page: B - 1
Copyright: 2008 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact:  http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer
Referenced: The ruling 
http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/opinions/documents/S148204.PDF
Cited: Americans for Safe Access http://www.americansforsafeaccess.org/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Proposition+215
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

COURT RULING WILL LIMIT SOLO POT PROVIDERS

SAN FRANCISCO -- Someone who supplies marijuana to a patient who has 
a doctor's approval for it can be prosecuted for dealing drugs, the 
state Supreme Court ruled Monday in a narrow interpretation of 
California's medical marijuana law.

Advocates on both sides of the case agreed that the unanimous ruling 
will encourage Californians to obtain medical marijuana from patient 
cooperatives, which are authorized by a 2003 state law, rather than 
from an individual supplier.

"Ideally, it (the ruling) won't have a tremendous effect," said 
Joseph Elford, a lawyer for Americans for Safe Access, a pro-medical 
marijuana group. "Patients will now increasingly get their medication 
through collectives and cooperatives."

The 2003 law "provides an alternative outlet for patients," agreed 
Deputy Attorney General Michele Swanson, the state's lawyer. She said 
Monday's ruling applies only to a category of suppliers - those who 
are not the patient's caretaker or fellow cooperative member - whom 
the voters never intended to protect when they passed Proposition 215 in 1996.

But Lawrence Gibbs, attorney for the Santa Cruz County man who 
appealed his marijuana-dealing convictions, said the court "made it 
much, much more difficult for qualified patients to get their medical 
marijuana."

Although patients can turn to cooperatives or clubs, Gibbs said, the 
resulting centralization of cultivation and supply will make raids 
and prosecutions much easier for federal authorities, who are not 
bound by Prop. 215. President-elect Barack Obama said during the 
campaign that he supports a state's right to legalize the medical use 
of marijuana, but believes it should be subject to regulation by the 
U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The ruling is the second time this year the state Supreme Court has 
limited the scope of Prop. 215, which allowed patients to grow and 
use marijuana with a doctor's recommendation.

In January, the court ruled that employers could fire medical 
marijuana patients who tested positive for the drug after using it 
away from the workplace. A bill to overturn that decision was 
approved by the state Legislature, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed it.

Gibbs' client, Roger Mentch, was arrested in 2003 after a bank teller 
reported that the cash he had deposited over several months smelled 
strongly of marijuana.

Sheriff's deputies found nearly 200 marijuana plans growing in his 
home. He told authorities that he had a doctor's recommendation to 
take the drug, and gave or sold the rest to five other patients.

Charged with cultivation and possession for sale, Mentch argued that 
he should be immune from prosecution because he was the patients' 
"primary caregiver."

Besides being their source of medical marijuana, Mentch said, he 
advised them about growing and using the drug and occasionally took 
some of them to doctor's appointments. He also said he did not make a profit.

The judge in Mentch's trial refused to let the jury consider whether 
he was a caregiver. Mentch was convicted of cultivation and 
possession for sale and given a suspended sentence and three years of 
probation.

An appeals court in San Jose overturned his convictions and said 
jurors should have been allowed to decide whether Mentch was the 
patients' caregiver. But the state's high court disagreed.

Marijuana suppliers can qualify as primary caregivers only if they 
were already taking care of a patient - providing medical aid or 
housing - when they began furnishing the drug, Justice Kathryn Mickle 
Werdegar said in Monday's ruling.

That might apply to a nurse or a relative tending to a seriously ill 
patient whose needs included marijuana, Werdegar said, but not to 
someone like Mentch, who she said tried to "establish an 
after-the-fact caregiving relationship" to protect himself from prosecution.

The court returned the case to the San Jose appellate panel, where 
Gibbs said he would try to show that Mentch was part of a patient 
cooperative authorized by the 2003 law.

The case is People vs. Mentch, S148204.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake