Pubdate: Mon, 19 Mar 2001
Source: MSNBC (US Web)
Copyright: 2001 MSNBC
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NOTE: Legal Documents from United States of America V. Oakland Cannabis 
Buyers' Cooperative and Jeffrey Jones are at http://www.druglibrary.org/ocbc/
Cited: Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Co-op http://www.rxcbc.org/
Department of Justice http://www.usdoj.gov/
Family Research Council http://www.frc.org/
California Medical Association http://www.cmanet.org/
Referenced:  NEJM Editorial: 'Federal Foolishness and Marijuana' 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v97/n000/a014.html
Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
http://www.mapinc.org/ocbc.htm (Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative)

FEDS AND STATE-APPROVED MEDICAL MARIJUANA

U.S. vs. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Co-op

U.S. Supreme Court Case #: 00-151

Argument date: Wednesday, March 28, 2001

CASE:

U.S. vs. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative and Jeffrey Jones

ISSUE:

Does the federal law against selling and possessing marijuana trump 
recently enacted state laws that allow the use of marijuana when it's 
deemed medically necessary?

BACKGROUND:

American public attitudes toward marijuana took a new direction in November 
1996, when California voters approved, with 56 percent of the vote, a 
change in state law to legalize the use of marijuana for medical treatment. 
Since then, eight other states -- Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, 
Nevada, Oregon, and Washington -- have adopted similar laws.

While none of the new state laws legalize marijuana outright or change the 
criminal penalties for possessing, growing, or selling marijuana for 
recreational use, they do provide an exemption from criminal penalties for 
seriously ill patents who can demonstrate a medical need for it. Under the 
California law, a doctor must determine that "the person's health would 
benefit from the use of marijuana in the treatment of cancer, anorexia, 
AIDS, chronic pain, spasticity, glaucoma, arthritis, migraine, or any other 
illness for which marijuana provides relief."

Even so, the advocates of the laws face a sobering obstacle. Federal law 
continues to ban the use of marijuana for any purpose. More than a year 
after the California law was adopted by initiative, the Justice Department 
took legal action to close down six Northern California "cannabis clubs." 
The one involved in this case, the Oakland Cannabis Buyer's Cooperative, 
operated downtown in cooperation with the city government and the police 
department.

A federal judge, Charles Breyer -- the brother of U.S. Supreme Court 
Justice Stephen Breyer -- ruled that under the Constitution's Supremacy 
Clause, federal law supersedes state law when the two conflict. While 
saying he was expressing no view on the legality of California's medical 
marijuana law, the judge nonetheless ruled that the federal government was 
well within its rights to shut the cannabis clubs down.

The judge rejected arguments from some patients that they faced a choice of 
evils: they could either obey federal law that denied them relief from 
debilitating pain, loss of sight, or serious illness, or they could use 
marijuana and thereby violate federal law.

But a federal appeals court saw the case differently. In September of 1999, 
a three judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said Judge Breyer 
failed to consider "the strong public interest in the availability of a 
doctor-prescribed treatment that would help ameliorate the condition and 
relieve the pain and suffering of a large group of persons with serious or 
fatal illnesses." The panel sent the case back for the judge to revise his 
order.

And in July 2000, Judge Breyer did just that. The cannabis clubs were still 
legally barred from growing, selling, or possessing marijuana. But he said 
his order would not apply to club members who suffer from serious medical 
conditions, need marijuana to treat their conditions, and have no 
reasonable legal alternatives that would afford the same degree of relief 
as marijuana.

The Justice Department now appeals to the US Supreme Court, which has 
stopped any sale of marijuana by the cannabis clubs, for any reason, until 
it rules on the case. Justice Stephen Breyer has decided not to participate.

ARGUMENT:

THE U.S. GOVERNMENT

Department of Justice

By passing the federal Controlled Substances Act, Congress imposed a system 
for determining the safety and effectiveness of drugs. Under that scheme, 
marijuana has been found to be a substance with high potential for abuse 
but with no currently accepted medical use for treatment in the U.S. No 
court, therefore, can exempt certain people from the federal law simply on 
the view of judges that marijuana has some medical utility.

Congress recently renewed its earlier findings about marijuana, declaring 
in 1988 legislation that it continues to "oppose efforts to circumvent this 
process by legalizing marijuana without valid scientific evidence and 
without the approval of the Food and Drug Administration." Congress has 
expressly rejected the idea that an individual who claims a medical 
necessity for marijuana is exempted from the provisions of the law. Federal 
lawmakers have furthermore declined to leave the determination of any 
drug's safety and utility to individual courts, much less to private 
organizations like the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative.

What's more, the 9th Circuit's ruling threatens to undermine the 
enforcement of federal drug laws, opening the door for producers, 
distributors, and users of other drugs not approved by the FDA to invoke 
medical necessity as a defense to the enforcement of the nation's health 
and safety laws.

The appeals court ruling cannot be reconciled with a key U.S. Supreme Court 
case. In 1979, the court held (in U.S. vs. Rutherford, 442 U.S. 544) that a 
claim of medical need cannot override Congress's judgment that a drug 
should be distributed only with a finding by FDA that it's safe and 
effective. The case involved a class of terminally ill cancer patients who 
sued to stop the government from interfering with sales of Laetrile, a drug 
that the FDA had not approved. The Supreme Court ruled that the federal 
drug laws make no special provision for drugs used to treat terminally ill 
patients.

While there is a common law defense of necessity, which permits a court to 
acquit a defendant of a criminal offense based on a finding that the 
defendant acted to prevent an evil that is greater than the one intended to 
be avoided by a law, that defense is not available if the law itself 
reflects the legislature's resolution of the conflicting values at stake. 
Here, Congress has specifically declined to permit an exception from the 
laws for medical uses of marijuana.

FOR THE OAKLAND CANNABIS COOPERATIVE AND JEFFREY JONES

Annette Carnegie, San Francisco; James Broshahan, Robert Raich, Oakland; 
Gerald Uelmen, Santa Clara University Law School; Randy Barnett, Boston 
University Law School

While the Justice Department uses heated rhetoric to argue that the appeals 
court ruling in this case would significantly impair its ability to enforce 
the law against drug traffickers who act under the guise of medical 
necessity, the government failed to present any evidence of any potential 
threat. And the trial judge has declared those fears to be "exaggerated and 
without evidentiary support."

The citizens of the states that have passed these measures, and the 
thousands of doctors who have concluded that scientific evidence supports 
the notion that marijuana has legitimate therapeutic value, are not drug 
traffickers or renegades. Even the New England Journal of Medicine has said 
that "a federal policy that prohibits physicians from alleviating suffering 
by prescribing marijuana for seriously ill patients is misguided, heavy 
handed, and inhumane." (New Eng. J. of Medicine, Jan. 30, 1977, p 366).

The limited exception to federal drug laws crafted by the trial judge in 
this case would allow a small group of patients who need medical cannabis 
to avert imminent harm such a death, starvation, or blindness. The federal 
law does not foreclose the defense of medical necessity. In placing 
marijuana on the list of controlled substances, Congress did not find that 
it had no medical use or that it could never serve any legitimate medical 
purpose.

Furthermore, interpreting federal drug laws as foreclosing a defense of 
medical necessity would run afoul of the Constitution in two ways. First, 
Congress does not have the power to regulate commerce within a state. And 
second, adopting the government's position would deprive patients of their 
fundamental liberty to have access to drugs they need.

FRIEND OF COURT BRIEFS

FOR THE UNITED STATES

Family Research Council, Washington, D.C., Janet LaRue

The harm of a medical necessity exemption for marijuana will outweigh any 
benefits. The active ingredient in marijuana, THC, is available in a pill 
called Marinol or as a suppository. Crude marijuana, by contrast, is had 
medicine with such a variable mixture of compounds that its effect cannot 
be precisely defined.

Marijuana itself harms the brain, heart, and lungs, limits learning and 
memory and clouds judgment. Permitting "medicalization" of crude marijuana 
would change public attitudes, especially the attitude of children, toward 
the perceived dangerousness of of illicit drug use. And it would make 
marijuana much more available for illegal use.

FOR THE CANNABIS BUYERS COOPERATIVE

California Medical Association and the National Pain Foundation, Catherine 
Hanson, Alice Mead, CMA, San Francisco

These groups would not support any undermining of federal drug laws. 
However, in passing general laws to protect public health and safety, 
Congress cannot have intended to prevent the courts from accommodating the 
desperate needs of individual patients. Doctors and their patients must be 
free to explore all possible avenues of medical treatment when standard 
therapies fail, and no governmental body should punish that effort.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake