Pubdate: Tue, 12 Aug 2008
Source: Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (Ontario, CA)
Copyright: 2008 Los Angeles Newspaper Group
Contact:  http://www.dailybulletin.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/871
Author: David Herrick
Note: David Herrick is a former San Bernardino County sheriff's 
deputy and resident of Riverside. He holds a county-issued medical 
marijuana ID card.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MEDICAL MARIJUANA FIGHT WASTES FUNDS

Even as California's massive budget deficit prompts new cuts to 
Medi-Cal's drug benefits for HIV/AIDS patients, county officials here 
waste precious resources in doomed legal challenges to state medical 
marijuana laws designed to help many of those very patients.

For more than two-and-a-half years, San Bernardino and San Diego 
county officials sought somebody - anybody - in the courts who might 
entertain their convoluted arguments against obeying state medical 
marijuana laws requiring an identification card system for qualified patients.

And twice - first in 2006 and then just last week by the 4th District 
Court of Appeals - the courts have quickly dismissed their arguments.

Despite coming up empty, the two county boards of supervisors must 
now decide whether to appeal their case one last time to the 
California Supreme Court. Whether out of respect for the rule of law, 
compassion for suffering medical marijuana patients or simply 
acknowledging the waste to taxpayers, the choice should be easy: It's 
time for county officials to drop their challenge, obey the law and 
move on to more important matters.

As a former San Bernardino sheriff's deputy and a licensed medical 
marijuana patient who was permanently injured in the line of duty, 
the counties' hell-bent opposition to providing qualified patients 
with some means of easily identifying themselves to police defies logic.

In fact, most local law-enforcement officers I know would welcome a 
system that allows them to easily verify valid patients. For them, 
time wasted investigating legal medical marijuana patients is time 
that could be spent pursuing actual crimes.

However, county officials' attempts to avoid their obligations under 
California law likely has less to do with legitimate legal 
disagreements than it does with sheer ideology and a knee-jerk 
reaction against medical marijuana patients.

As private citizens, board members are certainly entitled to their 
own opinions, but as public officials, they have an obligation to 
respect the rule of law, just as I did as a peace officer. The courts 
have made it clear that the counties' central argument - that federal 
law prevents the counties from establishing medical marijuana ID card 
programs - lacks merit.

By acknowledging this unavoidable reality, San Bernardino County 
officials wouldn't necessarily be abandoning their principles - 
misguided as those principles may be. They would merely be 
demonstrating that they understand the law and respect their 
constituents enough to devote their limited resources to more 
meaningful, urgent matters.

To do otherwise is cruel, arrogant and childish. With the state 
facing a $17.2 billion budget deficit, county residents - regardless 
of their personal views on medical marijuana - deserve better.

David Herrick is a former San Bernardino County sheriff's deputy and 
resident of Riverside. He holds a county-issued medical marijuana ID card.
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