Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 Source: Argus Leader (SD) Copyright: 2001 Argus Leader Contact: P.O. Box 5034, Sioux Falls, SD 57117-5034 Fax: (605) 331-2294 Website: http://www.argusleader.com/ Forum: http://www.argusleader.com/info/forum.html Author: Bob Newland Note: Bob Newland, 52, is a publisher. He lives near Hermosa, in the Black Hills. Newland is the president of SoDakNORML, an affiliate of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. http://www.sodaknorml.org/ NECESSITY IS VALID DEFENSE FOR USING MARIJUANA AS MEDICINE When "spastic paralysis" spasms attack quadriplegic Matthew Duchenaux, his legs jerk so violently it makes the utensils dance across his kitchen table. Smoking marijuana makes the spasms stop. In a sane world, nothing more would need be said. Ducheneaux tried prescription remedies. Valium made him groggy, made his hair fall out, his blood pressure rise, and would have destroyed his liver and kidneys. Other legal drugs are similarly toxic. Marijuana has no known toxic side-effects. In a sane world . . . . Ducheneaux was approved by the federal government as a "compassionate use" recipient (eight people are currently supplied marijuana by the federal government). The government then required Matt to find a local pharmacy to dispense the herb, which had to provide a 24-hour armed guard for its inventory. No drugstore would accept those conditions. (No armed guard is required for the toxic mind-altering drugs pharmacies already store.) In a sane . . . . Ducheneaux had exhausted his legal remedies. He then went to the drugstore outside the drugstore, the one which requires no prescription, no ID, no trained pharmacist, and is open 24/7. For more than ten years he used marijuana to stop the life-threatening spasms. He was arrested last summer at an outdoor concert, when he had to medicate himself in public. The Minnehaha County prosecutor asked the judge to prevent Matthew from having a medical expert testify that other quadriplegics get similar relief by using marijuana. He also asked that a "medical necessity" or "prevention of greater harm" defense not be allowed. If the judge grants those motions on Jan. 11, then the trial will go like this: Matthew: "The muscle spasms, unchecked, will kill me. Prescription drugs will kill me. I use marijuana because it stops the spasms. I am alive because I use marijuana." Prosecutor: "What if just anybody decides to break his neck so he can smoke pot and not suffer consequences?" Judge: "The jury will disregard the fact that marijuana saved Ducheneaux's life and continues to do so. If he possessed marijuana knowingly, you must find him guilty." At least one juror will surely be sane enough to understand the insanity of the proceedings to that point. Surely one juror will ask himself or herself, "What would I do if I sat in Matthew's wheelchair?", will answer honestly, and will not budge from "Not guilty." Win or lose, Matthew Ducheneaux will certainly stand as an example for anyone considering severing his spinal cord so he'll be able to get high legally. Who is truly drug-crazed here? Matt? Or the prosecutor? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake