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US: Medicinal pot before high court

Steve Miller

The Washington Times

Monday 22 Nov 2004

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The Supreme Court next week will hear the case of an ailing woman's battle
with the federal government over her possessing marijuana to treat herself,
in a decision that could determine the direction of the medicinal pot
movement.

The case, to be heard Nov. 29, stems from the 2002 seizure by federal
agents of marijuana plants grown by a California woman who claimed the weed
was for medicinal purposes, which is legal under state law.

Diana Monson, a patient who was prescribed the marijuana to alleviate
back-spasm pain, and another medicinal patient, Angel McClary Raich, sued
the federal government. They claimed their growing and use of the drug was
not covered under the federal Controlled Substances Act.

The two won a preliminary injunction last year in the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals, which found their cultivation and use of marijuana to be
noncommercial and outside federal jurisdiction.

As voters in more states have approved measures to allow marijuana
cultivation and use for medicinal purposes, the federal government has
moved to arrest people engaging in that activity. Ten states have
medicinal-marijuana provisions. Montana most recently joined the list with
voter approval earlier this month.

"A decision that upholds the Ninth Circuit Court would allow individuals to
grow their own cannabis in states that allow it," said Randy Barnett, a
professor of constitutional law at the Boston University School of Law, who
will argue the case for Miss Raich and Miss Monson.

"But more than that, this case is about federalism and that idea that this
application of the Controlled Substances Act is an overreach of the federal
government," Mr. Barnett said. "The state has authorized the use of
marijuana for medical purposes. I am representing two clients who are
suffering. This is not a case connected to the war on drugs, because my
clients are not taking part in trafficking or using recreational drugs."

In its appeal to the Supreme Court, the federal government argues that its
actions were true to the law, saying that "Congress's conclusions that the
local manufacture, distribution, and possession of drugs, including
marijuana, are significantly linked to the commerce in drugs regulated
under the statute and that comprehensive regulation of that local activity
is essential to effectuate control of the interstate drug market."

Further, it added: "The [Controlled Substances Act] constitutionally
regulates the commercial market in marijuana, which is international and
interstate in scope."

A spokesman for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy,
which sets drug policy for the administration, declined to comment on the
pending case.

In a report published this month, though, the office said movements to
legalize marijuana for medicinal use "are led not by medical professionals
or patients-rights groups, but by pro-drug donors and organizations in a
cynical attempt to exploit the suffering of sick people."

The most outspoken supporters of medicinal marijuana are well-organized
pro-pot lobbies, including the National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws and the Marijuana Policy Project.

"There is simply no constituency in this country for arresting and jailing
people with cancer, AIDS, [multiple sclerosis] or other illnesses who find
relief from medical marijuana," said Bruce Mirken, a spokesman for the
Marijuana Policy Project. "So, whatever the Supreme Court does, the Bush
administration is on the losing side of history."


 

 

 

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