Pubdate: Mon, 14 May 2001 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/27 Author: Brendan Riley, Associated Press Writer COURT RULING THREATENS NEVADA MARIJUANA PLAN Nevada's medical marijuana plan could go up in smoke as a result of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Monday -- even though the state's voters overwhelmingly favor the proposal. The high court ruled that a federal law classifying the drug as illegal makes no exception for ill patients. The court's action doesn't strike down state laws allowing medical use of marijuana, but leaves those distributing the drug for that purpose open to prosecution. In Nevada, voters by a 2-1 margin have approved medical marijuana. The task of implementing the voters' mandate was left to the Legislature. The result was AB453, to let seriously ill Nevadans grow their own marijuana for pain relief. The bill also would ease penalties for anyone caught with small amounts of the illegal weed. Also proposed was SB545, seen as a backup proposal, which would make the drug available only to a limited number of people for a marijuana research study program. Assemblywoman Chris Giunchigliani, D-Las Vegas, who proposed AB453, said the court ruling "has no affect on our bill. Not one word of the ruling diminishes the use of medical marijuana." Giunchigliani added the ruling had more to do with the distribution of marijuana for medical purposes, and her bill is safe since it doesn't deal with distribution. But Assembly Judiciary Chairman Bernie Anderson, D-Sparks, disagreed, saying AB453 is "probably not going to make it -- and it's a tragedy." Senate Judiciary Chairman Mark James, R-Las Vegas, agreed with Anderson that the Supreme Court ruling could stop the plan, although he's asking the Legislature's legal researchers for an analysis. But at this point, he said it looks like "we wouldn't process the bill. We wouldn't act on something we know to be unconstitutional." Senate Human Resources and Facilities Chairman Ray Rawson, R-Las Vegas, whose committee proposed SB545, said the bill "is the only one likely to meet the terms of the federal law. "I don't know if it will satisfy those who want to open this up," he added. "But it does open up the possibility for serious research -- and if the research shows this is good, then we're a lot farther ahead." Dan Geary, a leader of Nevadans for Medical Rights which pushed the marijuana issue onto the ballot, said the Legislature could still move ahead with Giunchigliani's bill despite the high court ruling. Geary said the ruling was limited in its scope, and in any case "the Nevada voters have spoken." He added that Nevadans for Medical Rights doesn't favor Rawson's SB545 because "it's almost a dishonest approach. It just doesn't implement the will of the people." Geary's group is part of Americans for Medical Rights, which sponsored eight successful medical marijuana initiatives around the nation. Bill Zimmerman, director of the national group, said the Supreme Court ruling rejected one form of marijuana distribution -- a cooperative arrangement with city approval -- but "does not foreclose creation of state-sponsored medical marijuana distribution systems." "Two states, Nevada and Maine, are now actively considering such legislation," he added. "The question of federal supremacy in such matters is for another day." Besides Nevada and Maine, voters in Arizona, Alaska, California, Colorado, Oregon and Washington have approved ballot initiatives allowing medical marijuana. In Hawaii, the legislature passed a similar law and the governor signed it last year. In Nevada, voters authorized use of marijuana by those suffering from cancer, AIDS, glaucoma and other painful and potentially terminal illnesses. The amendment to the Nevada Constitution easily won voter approval in 1998 and again last November. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth