Pubdate: Sun, 15 Dec 2013
Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
Copyright: 2013 Sun-Sentinel Company
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mVLAxQfA
Website: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159
Author: Michael Mayo

FORT LAUDERDALE STOCKBROKER 'LIVING PROOF' MEDICAL MARIJUANA WORKS

Irvin Rosenfeld is Florida's only legal pot smoker. His marijuana 
provider? The federal government. Since 1982, as part of an 
experimental drug program, Rosenfeld has received a monthly tin with 
300 fat joints- about nine ounces - grown by the feds on a farm at 
the University of Mississippi.

Rosenfeld, 60, a Fort Lauderdale stockbroker with a painful chronic 
bone tumor disorder, carries a prescription bag with his marijuana 
cigarettes to work. When I visited him at his office last week, he 
took a hit off a smokeless vapor pipe, which he sometimes uses when 
the market gets hectic. But he prefers smoking, which he says is more 
beneficial in getting the plant's full medicinal effects.

Every few hours, he ducks into a parking garage, greets the standard 
tobacco junkies puffing away during their smoke breaks, and lights up.

With the Florida Supreme Court to decide whether a constitutional 
amendment to legalize medical marijuana can appear on the November 
2014 ballot, I figured it would a good time to catch up with 
Rosenfeld. I ask him if medical marijuana works, and he says, "I'm 
living proof."

"I consider myself a very healthy disabled person- a productive 
member of society who's able to work everyday in a very stressful 
business," Rosenfeld told me.

Marijuana doesn't make him high, he says, but provides pain 
management without the harsh side effects of narcotics. When I first 
met him in 2005, he called pot "a godsend for me." After 31 years and 
more than 130,000 joints, Rosenfeld said this week that his lungs and 
mind are clear. Every six months, Rosenfeld and his sponsoring 
physician send a report to the feds about his treatment.

Rosenfeld should be Exhibit A in the fight for medical marijuana, yet 
organizers of Florida's petition drive to get the amendment on the 
2014 ballot haven't reached out to him. Rosenfeld said he has called 
John Morgan, the Tampa attorney spearheading the effort, three times 
and hasn't heard back.

"I don't feel slighted so much as disappointed that they don't use my 
expertise with everything I've been through," Rosenfeld said.

Rosenfeld is one of four surviving patients in the federal 
government's Compassionate Investigative New Drug progam, which began 
in 1976 and stopped accepting new patients in 1992. Not many people 
realize that Rosenfeld or the program exist. Especially since the 
same federal government that grows and ships Rosenfeld's supply still 
officially classifies marijuana as a dangerous drug with "no accepted 
medical use," on par with heroin and LSD.

"It's very frustrating," Rosenfeld says of the feds' inconsistency. 
Medical marijuana is now legal in 20 states and the District of 
Columbia, in direct conflict with federal law. A court battle along 
the lines of the gay-marriage fight seems inevitable.

"We trust our physicians to make decisions every day when it comes to 
prescribing narcotics," Rosenfeld said. "They should be able to do 
the same with marijuana."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom