Pubdate: Thu, 03 Apr 2014
Source: Las Vegas Review-Journal (NV)
Copyright: 2014 Las Vegas Review-Journal
Contact: http://www.reviewjournal.com/about/print/press/letterstoeditor.html
Website: http://www.lvrj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/233

PARENTS AND POT

Family Court Must Evolve on Medical Use

Nevadans legalized medical marijuana more than a decade ago. Last 
year, the Legislature finally caught up to the constitutional 
amendment by authorizing dispensaries to sell the drug to patients. 
Soon more sick Nevadans will be buying and using medical marijuana - 
fully within the law.

Government must catch up to this reality. Including Family Court.

As reported Sunday by the Review-Journal's Carri Geer Thevenot, Keith 
Patton is seeking broader parental rights over his 4-year-old son - 
preferably a custody arrangement that gives him unsupervised time 
equal to that enjoyed by the boy's mother, Erin Bersell. But Mr. 
Patton, 33, uses marijuana regularly to treat migraines and muscle 
spasms caused by a skull fracture he suffered in 2003. Mr. Patton 
claims that his medical marijuana use has led Family Court Judge 
Gayle Nathan to gradually strip him of his parental rights. "It's 
never been proven that I am unfit," Mr. Patton told Ms. Geer Thevenot.

Stacy Rocheleau, an attorney with Right Lawyers who primarily 
practices family law, said that in Nevada, there's more to any 
custody case than a single assertion. "The standard is what's in the 
best interest of the child," Ms. Rocheleau said.

At a December 2012 hearing, a test indicating Mr. Patton's marijuana 
use was presented to the court. Judge Nathan determined the father 
would be limited to supervised visits at his mother's home (Mr. 
Patton lives with his mother, who acted as the supervisor) for four 
hours each Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The judge also ordered Mr. 
Patton not to use marijuana in his son's presence, not to consume the 
drug within 48 hours of visitation, and to never drive the child 
anywhere without a further order from the court.

Mr. Patton subsequently has tested positive multiple times. After 
questions were raised about his mother's suitability as a supervisor, 
Mr. Patton's visits were limited to Donna's House, a facility where 
court-ordered supervised visits can be held. But Mr. Patton said he 
ended those visits about two months ago because his son cried every 
time they met there.

Perhaps Mr. Patton isn't fit for unsupervised visits, his legal use 
of medical marijuana notwithstanding. "This guy's not the right 
spokesman for this cause," said Ed Kainen, the attorney for Ms. Bersell.

But this is bound to come before Family Court again. And again. Mr. 
Patton's situation clearly demonstrates that, whether it's achieved 
through legislation, consistent rulings from judges or through a 
state Supreme Court ruling, Family Court needs to pay attention to 
what's going on in this state and nationwide with regard to 
marijuana. It's reasonable for the mother and the court to not want 
Mr. Patton smoking marijuana in front of his child. But if Mr. Patton 
is complying with those orders and with state law, it would appear 
he's being wrongly punished. It's time to move past the idea that a 
sick dad who smokes marijuana is not fit to take care of his child. 
People who use all kinds of prescription narcotics are not at risk of 
being stripped of parental rights. Neither are people who drink a few beers.

Medical marijuana is legal in Nevada. Last week, the state OK'd 
regulations for the operation of 66 dispensaries statewide, including 
40 in Clark County. And full legalization of marijuana is inevitable 
- - it's going to come. Just look at the tax dollars legal marijuana is 
already generating in Colorado. Judges need to come to grips with this - soon.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom