Pubdate: Mon, 20 Sep 1999
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 1999 Los Angeles Times.
Contact:  (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Mary Curtius, Times Staff Writer
Related: http://www.mcwilliams.com/

AIDS PATIENT PINS HOPES ON POT RULING

Medicine: A Laurel Canyon man says a court decision last week may save his
life. The U.S. appeals judges found that marijuana is legal for the
seriously ill.

For Peter McWilliams, a federal appellate court's ruling last week that
seriously ill people should be allowed to use marijuana with a doctor's
recommendation may be a lifeline thrown to a dying man.

For more than a year, as he has awaited trial on a variety of
marijuana-related charges, the AIDS patient has been barred by a federal
judge from smoking the medical marijuana he says he must have to survive.
McWilliams is hoping the decision by a panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court
of Appeals will persuade the judge to change his mind.

"I meet every single one of the conditions the judges set forth for when a
person should be able to argue a medical necessity defense for using
marijuana," McWilliams, 50, said in a telephone interview from his Laurel
Canyon home. "Nothing else works for me. I am in a life or death situation,
I am under a doctor's care and I have tried every available alternative."

McWilliams' attorney, Thomas Ballanco, intends to register those arguments
this week when he appears before the judge who freed McWilliams on $250,000
bail. He will ask, yet again, that the book publisher be allowed to smoke
marijuana while he awaits trial. If U.S. District Judge George King
declines, Ballanco said, he will appeal to the same three-member panel that
ruled that medical necessity is an acceptable defense in federal court.

Attorneys representing defendants in other federal marijuana cases brought
since Californians passed Proposition 215 said that they, too, plan to
mount appeals based on the 9th Circuit panel's decision. The state law
provides for patients with a doctor's recommendation to smoke marijuana for
a variety of illnesses.

The stakes are especially high in McWilliams' case.

"I worry that he won't even make it to trial, much less through trial,"
Ballanco said.

Diagnosed with AIDS in 1996, McWilliams said he tried every available
anti-nausea medication on the market before smoking marijuana to quell the
nausea caused by the combination of powerful drugs he must take to keep the
AIDS virus in check. Only marijuana, McWilliams said, made it possible for
him to keep the drugs down.

When he was arrested in July 1998, McWilliams had an undetectable AIDS
viral load in his bloodstream. But one of the terms of his bail was that he
not smoke marijuana. Another term was that he submit to random urine tests.

By last fall, McWilliams' doctor said, the publisher's viral load had
soared dramatically.

"Since he no longer had access to the drug, he reports frequent vomiting,"
said Daniel Bowers, a family physician who treats about 250 AIDS patients
at his Los Angeles clinic. "He is not keeping down his pills and his viral
load has risen to above 250,000." At that level of viral presence in the
blood, McWilliams' immune system is highly compromised, his physician says.

"He is stable at the moment, but statistically, we know that the longer the
viral load stays unchecked, the greater the risk that the condition will
deteriorate," Bowers said.

Ballanco has gone to court several times seeking to have McWilliams' bail
conditions altered so that his client can smoke marijuana. Each time, the
court has said it cannot authorize someone to break the law.

But in last week's decision involving marijuana clubs, the federal
appellate court said that a lower court erred in not allowing club
operators to offer the defense that smoking marijuana is a medical
necessity for some people.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer had ordered several Northern California
clubs closed last year after the federal government filed a lawsuit
alleging that they violated the federal Controlled Substances Act. Since
the 1996 passage of Proposition 215, federal prosecutors have maintained
that marijuana remains illegal under federal law.

Last week, the appeals court ordered Breyer to consider modifying his order
closing the Northern California clubs to allow them to sell marijuana to
seriously ill patients.

"The government . . . has yet to identify any interest it may have in
blocking the distribution of cannabis to those with medical needs," the
court said in a unanimous opinion.

"We're not going to have any comment on this week's 9th Circuit ruling,"
said Thom Mrozek, spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles,
where McWilliams' case is being handled. Mrozek said McWilliams' case is
different from those of the closed cannabis clubs. McWilliams is accused of
financing several growers, his co-defendants, who the government said were
cultivating more than 6,000 marijuana plants to sell to marijuana clubs.

"I've consistently characterized this as that of a commercial marijuana
cultivation operation. McWilliams was the money man," Mrozek said.

McWilliams denied that he was financing a marijuana growing operation and
said he will deal with the allegations in court. Until then, he said, his
primary focus is on staying alive.

He said he is now confined to a wheelchair, sleeps 18 hours a day and
rarely leaves his home.

"When your viral load is 250,000, Armageddon is being fought inside you,"
he said. 

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