Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Don Colburn, The Oregonian staff MEDICAL MARIJUANA CARDS FALSELY ISSUED Officials Find Three Of 2,200 Or So Registrations Were Granted After A Doctor's Signature Is Apparently Forged By Patients An internal review of the state's medical marijuana program has found that the Oregon Health Division failed to follow its own rules for verifying applications from patients. Officials ordered the review after discovering three cases in which patients apparently forged a doctor's signature. The 2-year-old medical marijuana program is understaffed, regularly misses its 30-day deadline for processing applications and has no clear procedure for denying incomplete applications, the internal management review found. "Oregonians expect our agency's services to meet the highest standards," said Bobby S. Mink, director of the Oregon Department of Human Services, in releasing the review Monday. "Unfortunately, our management of this program has fallen short of this goal." Health officials last month suspended three registration cards for legal use of medical marijuana after finding that the doctor's signature on the patients' applications had been forged. It was the first suspension under Oregon's Medical Marijuana Act, which was approved by Oregon voters in November 1998. Four other applications carrying the same forged signature were caught before cards were issued to patients. All seven cases have been turned over the Oregon State Police. >From now on, every application will be verified in writing with the patient's physician, Mink said. He also pledged to eliminate the backlog of applications by beefing up staff. Gov. John Kitzhaber's proposed budget adds one permanent full-time staff member to the medical marijuana program's current support staff of one temporary half-time person. Kelly Paige, manager of the medical marijuana program, has been reassigned temporarily to another job in the Health Division, as is customary during an internal management investigation. Mink declined to say whether she would return to her old job but said she would continue working for the Health Division. About 2,200 patients have received registration cards under Oregon's medical marijuana program. Each application requires a doctor's signature to verify that the patient has a condition covered by the law, such as cancer, glaucoma, AIDS or severe pain. About 560 doctors have signed such requests. Staff members are required to confirm, by telephone or letter, the doctor's signature. That didn't happen until too late in the three cases in which cards have now been revoked, officials said. The first forgery was detected in February, when a staff member noticed that the handwriting of the doctor's on-file signature did not match the signature on the patient's application. The staff member called the doctor, who said he never signed a request for that particular patient. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek