URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v12/n437/a04.html
Newshawk: Herb
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Sat, 01 Sep 2012
Source: Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA)
Copyright: 2012 The Spokesman-Review
Contact:
Website: http://www.spokesman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417
Author: Jim Camden
INITIATIVE OR NO, FEDERAL LAW TRUMPS STATE ON MARIJUANA
Suppose voters decided that they've had it with federal drug rules
that make marijuana an illegal substance akin to heroin or cocaine,
and they change Washington state law to make marijuana legal.
Not in all instances, not for everyone, not at any time. But for
adults, in regulated quantities, for limited uses.
While that might be a fair shorthand description of what Initiative
502 proposes this November, this isn't just a hypothetical scenario
about the future. It's also a description of the past. In 1998,
Washington voters "legalized" marijuana for medical uses, even though
the federal government said at the time, and still does, the drug
belongs on the list of controlled substances that have no legal medical use.
Fourteen years later, state officials still struggle with developing
a system to regulate medical marijuana production and sale, while the
U.S. Justice Department continues to prosecute "dispensaries" under
federal drug trafficking statutes for selling pot to state-approved
medicinal smokers unwilling or unable to grow it for themselves.
Supporters of I-502 -- which would allow for the possession and
consumption of small amounts of marijuana by adults but keep it
illegal for minors and anyone operating a vehicle -- say it will free
local law enforcement and state courts from the cost of marijuana
enforcement. The prosecution, defense, court and jail costs of those
cases cost Washington governments more than $200 million between 2000
and 2010, the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington recently estimated.
Spokane City Council President Ben Stuckart said the chance to
lighten the load on local police and avoid filling local courts and
jails makes I-502 a good choice. While there's no guarantee what
federal drug agents and prosecutors will do, the chance to begin
discussions also would be a plus, he said.
"If nobody acts, nothing's going to happen," he said.
I-502 won't stop federal officials from enforcing the law, most
concede. But it will spark discussions on how to shift from
individual users to large criminal organizations bringing drugs
across state and national borders, said Pete Holmes, the Seattle city
attorney and a supporter of the initiative.
"It would take a great deal of hubris to just brush it aside," Holmes said.
The state's federal prosecutors won't even talk about what they would
do if voters approve I-502.
"We're not making plans right now," said Mike Ormsby, U.S. attorney
for Eastern Washington, adding he's had no discussions with
supporters of the initiative and "I don't intend to have any."
Jenny Durkan, U.S. attorney for Western Washington, hasn't had any
official discussions on what actions federal law enforcement would
take if the ballot measure passes, a spokeswoman said. "We are
prohibited from commenting on Initiative 502," Emily Langlie said.
"It's possible, between now and the election, the Department of
Justice will provide further instructions."
Last year, Ormsby warned dispensaries in Spokane that they faced
federal prosecution if they didn't shut down. A letter from Ormsby
and Durkan to Gov. Chris Gregoire prompted the governor to
essentially gut a bill that legislators had hammered out to regulate
the production and sale of medical marijuana, which was called for in
the 1998 ballot measure.
"Growing, distributing and possessing marijuana in any capacity,
other than as part of a federally authorized research program, is a
violation of federal law regardless of state laws permitting such
activities," they wrote in April 2011.
I-502 calls for the state to regulate the production, processing and
sale of marijuana -- and collect taxes on it -- through the state
Liquor Control Board.
Holmes believes the passage of I-502 could actually ease the federal
pressure on medical marijuana dispensaries. It was the proliferation
of those facilities and readily available "prescriptions" that helped
spur the federal crackdown, he said.
"There are a lot of sham users of medical marijuana," he said. "The
number of dispensaries you see is quite a bit beyond what's needed
for medical marijuana."
I-502 would likely preclude the need for dispensaries because medical
patients could find the drug relatively easily, he added.
State Attorney General Rob McKenna, who is running for governor this
fall on the same ballot as I-502, said passage of the measure will
create "a serious conflict between state law and federal law." If
state and local officials don't prosecute marijuana cases, federal
prosecutors likely will, he said.
"It's not a state's rights issue," McKenna said: It's an issue where
federal law rules under the Constitution's supremacy clause.
Like his Democratic opponent for governor, Jay Inslee, Republican
McKenna opposes I-502. If the measure passes, one or the other would
be faced with dealing with the fallout, although neither has specific plans.
Inslee's campaign said simply that he would "work with legislators
and stakeholders to implement the new law."
McKenna said he believes the initiative will fail, so he won't deal
with a hypothetical like how he would deal with the U.S. Justice
Department. "I don't want to comment on what could happen on a law
that won't pass."
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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