Pubdate: Thu, 16 Aug 2001
Source: Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel (FL)
Copyright: 2001 Sun-Sentinel Company
Contact:  http://www.sun-sentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159
Author: Terri Somers

LEGAL POT SMOKER WANTS APOLOGY AFTER DELTA BOOTS HIM FROM FLIGHT

Like any pack-a-day smoker, Irvin Rosenfeld has some problems traveling by 
airplane because of the government ban on lighting up while in flight. But 
it is Rosenfeld's particular smoke -- marijuana -- and his need to light up 
once the plane touches down and during layovers that has landed him in some 
unusual situations.

Now it could land the Broward County resident in federal court, accusing 
Delta Air Lines of violating the Americans with Disabilities Act.

The 48-year-old Boca Raton stockbroker with a rare and painful bone disease 
has smoked his legally prescribed, government-grown marijuana in smoking 
lounges, medical clinics and even police substations of airports. Marijuana 
eases the constant, piercing pain of his rare disease, he said; it doesn't 
make him euphoric or "high." He needs to smoke a joint about every two 
hours, so a long layover in an airport poses a logistical challenge for 
Rosenfeld.

For the past 19 years that he has used medical marijuana, he has called 
ahead, informed Delta of his medical needs and been accommodated with a 
spot to smoke.

In March, when he had to fly to Washington, D.C., to testify before the 
U.S. Supreme Court about medical marijuana use, Rosenfeld called in 
advance, as usual. He says he left messages and never got a call back.

But on March 26, the day of the flight and about 30 minutes before takeoff, 
he was paged and asked to report to Delta's customer service counter. 
Speaking at his lawyer's office on Wednesday, Rosenfeld recalled the 
exchange like this:

"I'm sorry, you won't be allowed to board this flight," a Delta employee 
told him. "We've been informed that you're carrying marijuana."

"Yes," Rosenfeld said. "I'm the one who informed you."

Rosenfeld explained he is one of seven people in the United States 
permitted to smoke marijuana. In his case it relaxes his muscles so the 
multiple tumors that form on the long bones in his body do not rupture 
muscle and veins, which could cause him to bleed to death.

He showed airline employees the prescription pasted to the plastic bag that 
holds 12 marijuana cigarettes, his average daily dose. Each month the 
prescription is taped to the tin canister stuffed with 300 marijuana 
cigarettes he gets in the mail. He showed them his name on the brief that 
was to be argued the next day in the Supreme Court.

The Delta employees said the airline's lawyers wanted Rosenfeld to get a 
waiver from the government in each state the flight would pass over. 
Rosenfeld explained that he had never before received such a request from 
Delta.

"If I was a diabetic, would they expect me to board the plane without my 
insulin?" he asked. "They had a problem with me because my prescribed 
medication is marijuana. That's a violation of the Americans with 
Disabilities Act."

He tried to explain that the prescription, approved by the U.S. Drug 
Enforcement Administration, trumps any state requirement. Called to the 
Delta desk, a Broward sheriff's officer agreed.

Still, Rosenfeld could not get on the Delta plane. Eventually, he found a 
later flight on another carrier.

He told the Delta employees they would hear from him again. And he boarded 
the second plane without telling anyone about the marijuana.

Delta officials are investigating Rosenfeld's claim, said spokeswoman Cindi 
Kurczewski, but would not issue a comment Wednesday.

It took Rosenfeld several months to find a lawyer, Christopher Sharp of 
Fort Lauderdale, who was willing to take a case in which the client cannot 
seek a large monetary settlement. They both talk about changing behavior. 
And Sharp, Rosenfeld said, is unlike other lawyers because he was 
comfortable with supporting someone's need to take a controversial medicine.

"My wife has lupus," Sharp said. "I can appreciate what Rosenfeld goes 
through."

Sharp said he and his client are not ready to file a lawsuit just yet.

They announced Wednesday they are giving Delta 30 days to issue an apology, 
reimburse Rosenfeld the $450 it cost to buy the ticket on the other 
airline, and promise that such discrimination will never happen again.

Rosenfeld does not hide that he is an activist for the medicinal use of 
marijuana. But calling the media to his lawyer's office on Wednesday was 
about sticking up for people with disabilities, he said.

"It's important to stand up to this invidious discrimination," Sharp said.

If Delta would issue an apology, Sharp said, Rosenfeld would go back to 
flying on its planes.

His client nodded and smiled. "I have a lot of frequent flier miles," he 
explained.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens