Pubdate: Mon, 30 May 2011
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2011 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MEDICAL CANNABIS AMONG THE RUINS

Medical Marijuana Was the Legislative Disaster the Session. It Is Not 
Clear What Will Happen Next.

MEDICAL marijuana has been the legislative disaster of 2011. The way 
out is not yet clear. Prosecutors should tread cautiously, mindful 
not only of the letter of the law but of the public will.

In 1998 the voters of Washington voted 59 percent in favor of 
Initiative 692, to allow patients with AIDS, cancer and like diseases 
to use cannabis to ameliorate pain and nausea. The measure was vague; 
it was not clear how patients were supposed to get marijuana, because 
it was forbidden under federal law.

Washington has lived with this contradiction more than 12 years. Most 
of that time was during the Bush administration, which fought for the 
right to shut down all medical marijuana, won at the Supreme Court, 
and then did not do it.

Last year, state Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, began working on 
a bill to legalize commercial growers and dispensaries, bringing the 
entire medical-cannabis network into the open. She talked to all 
sides, and wrote many drafts. She found a Republican co-sponsor, Sen. 
Jerome Delvin of Richland.

It was a good bill, and it passed both houses and went to Gov. Chris 
Gregoire. At that point the Obama administration bared its teeth and 
Gregoire line-item-vetoed part of the bill before signing the rest into law.

Kohl-Welles' carefully constructed plan was in ruins. To save some of 
it, she filed a new, less-sweeping bill. Last week it was about to be 
approved by a Senate committee when one previous supporter changed 
his vote: Sen. Mike Hewitt, R-Walla Walla. And that killed it.

Now the ruins. The old law, which remains in effect until July 22, 
allows a dispenser to serve only one patient. Dispensers have said 
they were serving one patient at a time, the new patient replacing 
the old one. But a non-vetoed part of the new law will not allow 
this. It requires any new patient to wait 15 days.

"That really changes the law," says Dan Satterberg, the King County prosecutor.

The new law will allow "collective gardens" in which 10 or fewer 
patients grow for their own use. But commercial dispensaries, the 
Republican prosecutor says, "do not have an argument."

What to do with all the dispensaries that now exist?

"I don't know yet," Satterberg says.

"The question is, prosecutorial discretion," say Pete Holmes, 
Seattle's Democratic city attorney.

The people of Washington, and particularly the liberal voters of King 
County, do not want dispensers of medicine prosecuted for felony distribution.

The people wanted medical cannabis legal. So did the Legislature. So 
did the governor, she said.

Prosecutorial discretion should be the order of the day, while 
political minds think of a way out.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom