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US: DA asks judge to look again at issue of marijuana

Shiela Toomey

Anchorage Daily News

Thursday 16 Dec 2004

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Appeals court willing to reconsider Ravin conclusion if new evidence is
compelling enough


The state is going after the 1975 Alaska Supreme Court decision that says
adults can possess up to 4 ounces of marijuana for personal use in their
own homes.

In an action supported by Gov. Frank Murkowski, the Anchorage district
attorney has asked a judge to re-examine the 1975 Ravin v. state conclusion
that marijuana in small amounts is essentially harmless to adults and not
dangerous enough to override Alaska's constitutional right to privacy at home.

"The idea that marijuana is a harmless substance is contrary to all the
scientific studies that exist today," said John Novak, chief assistant
district attorney and one of the prosecutors who filed a motion Tuesday in
Anchorage Superior Court.

If the state gets its wish, Novak envisions a full-blown hearing about the
nature and effects of current marijuana use featuring experts on both sides.

The state appeals courts have already said they would be willing to
reconsider Ravin if presented with compelling new evidence that small
amounts of marijuana are harmful.

Prosecutors may also be buoyed by the 138,072-105,590 vote in last month's
election against decriminalizing all amounts of marijuana.

The vehicle chosen by prosecutors to re-examine the subject is a 2000 case
against convicted drug dealer Gerald Mahle, 64, who is currently serving a
25-year sentence on an unrelated 2002 conviction, according to assistant
district attorney Keri Brady, who prosecuted both cases.

Mahle was convicted by a jury in the 2000 case on multiple counts involving
drugs and guns. Police obtained their initial search warrant in that case
based on smelling marijuana during a conversation at Mahle's door after a
neighbor complained about drug trafficking there.

During this period, police and prosecutors were operating under the
assumption that the Ravin decision was dead because Alaskans voted in 1990
to re-criminalize possession of any amount of marijuana.

However, between Mahle's arrest in 2000 and his scheduled sentencing in
2004, the state Court of Appeals threw out a Fairbanks marijuana conviction
and a marijuana possession charge in Homer on the grounds that Ravin was
still the law and possession of less than 4 ounces at home was legal.

Ravin affirmed a constitutional protection that could not be trumped by a
ballot initiative, the court said.

The decision in the Homer case, issued this summer, directly affected
Mahle, his attorney Gene Cyrus argued in court papers. In that case, police
obtained a search warrant for the home of Lee Crocker Jr. on the grounds
that they could smell marijuana. But the court said police could not
conclude, just from the smell, that Crocker probably had more than the
legal 4 ounces.

Without probable cause, the search warrant should not have been issued, the
appeals court agreed, and the charges were dismissed.

Pointing to this decision, Cyrus has asked Superior Court Judge Dan Hensley
to reconsider the search warrant issued against Mahle back in 2000 and
declare it in violation of Ravin. This would mean dismissal of Mahle's
convictions in that case, Brady said.

The case offers the state a perfect opportunity to challenge the science
used to convince the 1975 Supreme Court that small amounts of marijuana are
not harmful, Novak said.

"We're asking the court to see if the factual underpinning of Ravin is
still valid. We've learned a lot since then."

The decision to challenge Ravin was discussed in the governor's office,
said spokeswoman Becky Hultberg. Murkowski has a long-standing concern
about the bad effects of marijuana "on our youth and our society," which
"gives the state an interest in regulating it in the home," Hultberg said.

In their request for a hearing, Novak and Brady said marijuana today is on
average six times stronger than what was available in 1975.

In 2003, "36 percent of adult males and 27 percent of adult females
arrested in Anchorage tested positive for marijuana, rising to 68.8 percent
and 42.9 percent respectively for ages 15-20," they say, citing a
University of Alaska study.

Cyrus, Mahle's attorney, did not return several calls Wednesday requesting
comment.

 

 

 

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