Pubdate: Mon, 12 Nov 2001 Source: Register-Guard, The (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Register-Guard Contact: http://www.registerguard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/362 Author: William McCall (AP) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/ashcroft.htm (Ashcroft, John) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/ocbc.htm (Oakland Cannabis Court Case) ASHCROFT BASED ORDER ON POT RULING PORTLAND - Attorney General John Ashcroft has based his legal challenge to the only assisted suicide law in the nation on a Supreme Court ruling on a seemingly unrelated issue - using marijuana for medical purposes. Last week, Ashcroft said doctors in Oregon cannot legally prescribe federally controlled drugs to hasten death. The Oregon Death with Dignity Act has been twice approved by voters and since 1998 has allowed at least 70 terminally ill patients to ask their doctors for a lethal overdose of drugs to end their lives before their pain and suffering become unbearable. But Ashcroft said a unanimous Supreme Court ruling last May on medical marijuana forced him to reconsider whether the Oregon law conflicts with the federal Controlled Substances Act. The Supreme Court said federal drug law must be enforced uniformly and makes no exception for people to use marijuana for medical purposes, despite laws in eight states - including Oregon - allowing it. Ashcroft interpreted the ruling to apply to prescription drugs as well, overturning an earlier interpretation by former Attorney General Janet Reno during the Clinton administration. In a directive dated Nov. 6 and published last Friday in the Federal Register, Ashcroft said, "I hereby determine that assisting suicide is not a 'legitimate medical purpose' ... and that prescribing, dispensing, or administering federally controlled substances to assist suicide violates the CSA." The day before the directive was published, the state of Oregon sued Ashcroft and succeeded in blocking his directive from taking effect until Nov. 20, when there will be another hearing on the issue in federal court in Portland. Oregon Attorney General Hardy Myers argues that Ashcroft has exceeded the authority granted him by Congress by extending a criminal law against illegal drug sales - namely marijuana - to the medical use of carefully controlled prescription drugs. "There's a big difference - we're not talking about illegal drugs here," said James O'Fallon, a constitutional law professor at the University of Oregon. Even if the Ashcroft interpretation is allowed, Myers argues the federal government has no business interfering in medical practice in Oregon because the Constitution gives states the right to decide some laws by themselves - especially medical laws. Myers cites another recent unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision, which said there is no constitutional right to assisted suicide. But he notes that same 1997 ruling also said it was up to the individual states to decide for themselves whether to allow assisted suicide. That same year, Oregon voters overwhelming reaffirmed their assisted suicide law in a statewide ballot. O'Fallon says courts and Congress also have historically given states the responsibility for regulating doctors. "The great irony of this is that we are dealing both with an administration and ultimately a Supreme Court who purport to place great value on state sovereignty and states exercising control over the everyday lives of their people instead of having the federal government intrude," O'Fallon said. Rebecca Dresser, a law professor and bioethics expert at Washington University in St. Louis, said the Oregon law was an attempt to control what has become an "underground" practice of overprescribing pain medication for the terminally ill. "We know it goes on," Dresser said. "Doctors give patients prescriptions knowing it may end their lives, whether it's legal or not." Barbara Coombs Lee, the nurse turned attorney who is one of the chief authors of the Oregon law, defends it as a way to allow doctors and their patients to decide when all hope is exhausted and pain is simply too much to bear. But the law leaves the final decision to take the overdose up to the patient, not the doctor. Ashcroft, however, states in his directive to the DEA chief that there "are important medical, ethical, and legal distinctions between intentionally causing a patient's death and providing sufficient dosages of pain medication necessary to eliminate or alleviate pain." No matter how important Ashcroft considers those distinctions, Oregon State University political science professor Bill Lunch notes that his directive was delayed by nearly five months after his staff recommended it in June. Lunch says the delay may have been a deliberate political ploy to avoid forcing U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., to join the Bush administration effort to undermine the Oregon law at a time when Smith may have faced a tough re-election campaign against a popular Democratic challenger, Gov. John Kitzhaber, who signed the assisted suicide bill into law in 1999. Kitzhaber decided in September not to run for the Senate. Smith is being challenged by Secretary of State Bill Bradbury, who is not seen as potent a candidate in the race as Kitzhaber would have been. U.S. District Judge Robert Jones last Thursday issued a 10-day temporary injunction barring Ashcroft from putting his interpretation of federal drug law into effect, noting the five-month delay before Ashcroft issued what Jones termed an "edict for instant enforcement." Jones warned, however, that neither side should take his language or his sharp questions for attorneys as a signal to predict whether he will decide Nov. 20 to let Ashcroft's directive stand or whether he will extend the injunction barring it until the issue can be decided by a court. Nelson Lund, a George Mason University law professor and expert in assisted suicide legal issues, says the fate of the Oregon law ultimately may not rest on the medical debate or the clash of moral and ethical principles, but instead on a simple reading of the Controlled Substances Act. "I really don't think it's so much a collision of principles as it is a straightforward interpretation of what the statute means," Lund said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth