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US: Medical marijuana ruling is troubling

The Jurist

Tuesday 20 Mar 2007

---
Allen St. Pierre [Executive Director, NORML, Washington, DC]: "[The
recent Ninth Circuit ruling in Raich v Gonzales (part II)] is troubling
on a few different levels. One, from a lay person’s point of view, it
appears that the court has ruled that the supremacy of the federal
government's law making abilities trumps individual's freedoms,
liberties and abilities to engage in medical self-preservation.

Second, the United States Supreme Court, along with the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals in this case, appears to have created a great
impediment for individual citizens to effectively challenge government
actions or law-making that deprive citizens of property, access to
medicine or life itself unless the aggrieved citizen can prove that
their liberty (or potential loss of such therein) is in fact a
“fundamental” liberty or one that is derived from “ordered liberty.”

The definition of ‘fundamental’ by judges is subject to extremely broad
or very narrowly constructed interpretations. One can argue that ‘Raich’
grants far too much judicial subjectivity regarding individual judges’
definition of the word ‘fundamental’ and how that interpretation casts
the citizen’s constitutional claims against an over-zealous government.

Also, the court erred in constructing the legal history of medical
cannabis in its attempt to demonstrate that the medicinal use of
cannabis was not "deeply rooted in the nation's history or traditions."

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals wrongly asserts that between 1970 and
the passage of California’s Prop 215 in 1996 there was a dearth of
concern in America and in the medical profession in researching and
employing medicinal cannabis.

The court failed to recognize the well-documented history of legal
challenges (NORML v. DEA), administrative proceedings (Gettman, NORML,
et al v DEA) and states’ legislative efforts to effectively end the
federal government’s mis-scheduling of cannabis in the Controlled
Substances Act of 1970. The court failed to recognize that medical
cannabis was only made illegal in 1937; the federal government was
successfully sued by medical cannabis patient Robert Randall, which led
to the federal government creating the Compassionate Investigative New
Drug program in 1976, a program that to this day supplies selected
medical patients with over 300 pre-rolled cannabis ‘joints’ per month;
35 state legislatures between 1982-1994 passed legislation requesting
the federal government re-schedule cannabis for medicinal purposes or,
pending amending legislation in Congress, re-scheduled cannabis at the
state level; and the legislative history in California between 1992-1996
where two medical marijuana bills passed the legislature, but were
vetoed by then Governor Wilson.

Again, it appears as if the court has effectively told Ms. Raich and
other seriously sick Americans that the federal government and its
courts can arrest sick, dying and sense-threatened medical patients,
even when those actions and prohibition of their physician-recommended
medicine are known to harm individuals and/or their health.

Rightly, confusion abounds in the legal and medical communities
post-Raich because Lawrence v. Texas in 2003 defined the liberty
unconstitutionally infringed by anti-sodomy laws quite broadly, as "a
personal relationship that, whether or not entitled to formal
recognition in the law, is within the liberty of persons to choose
without being punished as criminals."

One wonders how Ms. Raich, a seriously ill medical patient, who, with
her physician’s recommendation, needs immediate access to medicinal
cannabis, does not qualify for the same individual protections (and
liberties) aptly described in Lawrence v. Texas or the “careful”, not
narrow, description of the asserted fundamental liberty interest
described in Washington v. Glucksburg (1997)."

Opinions expressed in JURIST's Hotline are the sole responsibility of
their authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of JURIST's
editors, staff, or the University of Pittsburgh.

http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/hotline/2007/03/medical-marijuana-ruling-is-troubling.php

 

 

 

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