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US: Fed Judge Orders Gov't to Let Two Use Medical Marijuana

DrugPolicy.org

Wednesday 19 May 2004

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Two seriously ill California women, who have long been battling the federal
government for the right to use medical marijuana as permitted under state
law, now have the protection from arrest and harassment they have sought.

A landmark federal court victory, announced this week, for the first time
prohibits the federal government from interfering in any way with marijuana
use by specific patients, in this case Angel McClary Raich and Diane
Monson. The case, Raich v. Ashcroft, is funded in part by the Drug Policy
Alliance.

District Court Judge Martin J. Jenkinss injunction orders that no federal
employee, or anyone acting on behalf of the federal government, may arrest,
prosecute, seize, sanction, or otherwise penalize Raich or Monson "with
respect to the intrastate, noncommercial cultivation, possession, use, and
obtaining without charge of cannabis for personal medical purposes on the
advice of a physician and in accordance with state law, and which is not
used for distribution, sale or exchange..."

California's Proposition 215, a ballot initiative passed by state voters in
1996, exempts state residents who use medical marijuana with a valid
recommendation from a doctor from criminal penalties.

In December 2003, California's 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, also a federal
court, affirmed the right of seriously ill patients like Raich and Monson
to grow and use marijuana with a doctor's recommendation.

That ruling was an unprecedented victory for patients, their caregivers and
advocates that, together with Judge Jenkins's injunction, could further
limit the cruel arrests of medical-marijuana patients by agents of the Drug
Enforcement Administration.

"This injunction is another historic moment in the recent chain of
victories for medical marijuana patients, protecting the rights not just of
Raich and Monson, but of patients in the states in the 9th circuit with
medical marijuana laws," said Judith Appel, Acting Director of Legal Affairs
for the Drug Policy Alliance. "The Courts are sending a clear message to
the federal government that the law does not allow them to attack and
harass these patients."

Bush administration efforts to have the 9th Circuit Court reconsider its
decision in Raich v. Ashcroft failed, clearing the way for Judge Jenkins's
injunction. The federal government has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to
reconsider the 9th Circuit decision.

 

 

 

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