Pubdate: Fri, 07 Dec 2001
Source: Star-Banner, The (FL)
Copyright: 2001 The Star-Banner
Contact:  http://www.starbanner.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1533

MEDICINAL MARIJUANA USER SUES DELTA

FORT LAUDERDALE - A man who legally uses marijuana for medicinal purposes 
is suing Delta Air Lines for kicking him off a plane in March.

Irvin Rosenfeld, a stockbroker from Boca Raton in neighboring Palm Beach 
County, filed his lawsuit Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Fort 
Lauderdale under the federal Air Carriers Access Act of 1986.

Rosenfeld, 48, suffers from a rare and painful bone disease and finds 
relief in smoking marijuana, which is prescribed by a doctor and grown for 
the government. He says he is one of seven people in the United States 
permitted to smoke marijuana. Every day, he smokes up to 12 marijuana 
cigarettes, about two every two hours, to fight tumors.

Without the drug, he says, his condition would become so painful that he 
could not walk, and could suffer hemorrhaging. He says smoking the 
marijuana dulls his constant pain but does not make him euphoric.

Rosenfeld is suing over a March 26 Delta flight from Fort Lauderdale to 
Washington, D.C., where he was to attend a U.S. Supreme Court session on 
possible expansion of medicinal marijuana use. A Delta employee told him he 
could not board the plane with his canister of legal cannabis.

Rosenfeld's attorney, Christopher C. Sharp, said refusing to seat his 
client on the airliner was like kicking a diabetic off the flight for 
carrying hypodermic needles and insulin.

"We're not putting any price tag on this, but Delta's exposure in this is 
considerable," Sharp said.

Under the Air Carrier Access Act, people with disabilities are protected 
against discrimination. Violation can lead to punitive damages.

Under the law, Delta had to specify in writing why Rosenfeld could not 
board the airplane and why he was thought to be a threat to the safety of 
those on board, Sharp said.

The airline did not do that, he said.

However, a Delta spokeswoman said the law was on the airline's side.

"Under federal law, marijuana is an illegal drug, and I'm not aware of any 
medical use exception of the nature he claims or of any private citizen 
having a right to possess it in the United States," said Delta's Katie Connell.

Rosenfeld said that when Delta turned him away, he had to retrieve his 
checked luggage. He then found a flight on another airline and did not get 
to Washington until the following afternoon.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom