Pubdate: Thu, 17 Oct 2002 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2002 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Author: Peter Rowe FEDERAL LOGIC HAS GONE TO POT Mysteries and Guidelines Steve McWilliams, the medical marijuana activist, is more provocateur than politician. The San Diegan has smoked a pile of prescription pot - sometimes on City Hall's steps. So perhaps his judgment has been dulled by doobies. But what's the Bush administration's excuse for its contradictory reasoning? While running for president, then-Gov. Bush was asked about medical marijuana. "I believe each state can choose that decision as they so choose," he said. California, then, would appear to be Bush's Exhibit A. In 1996, the voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition 215, clearing the way for doctors to prescribe pot. Last Friday, though, McWilliams was arrested for growing marijuana for patients. "The DEA is not singling these people out," Donald Thornhill Jr., a DEA spokesman, told the Union-Tribune's Jeff McDonald and Marisa Taylor. "We're just enforcing the law." Would that be the state law that Candidate Bush said should govern this issue? Or the federal law that President Bush now insists is paramount? Mysteries and guidelines If Proposition 215 runs afoul of federal statutes, it also violates common sense. While it clearly intended to allow patients the right to possess and use marijuana, the law raised more questions than the first chapter of an Agatha Christie mystery. Where were these ailing people supposed to shop for marijuana? How much could they possess? Oh, and by the way, who should receive an Rx for THC? Soon after Proposition 215's passage, McWilliams showed me his list of pot-worthy ailments. As I recall, it ranged from cancer - marijuana has been used to ease the nausea that accompanies chemotherapy - to "bad day at work." Last year, San Diego established a task force to answer these questions. This body includes doctors, lawyers and cancer survivors. For awhile it included McWilliams, but he resigned this summer. "This was his issue," said Juliana Humphrey, a lawyer and the task force's chair. "But once he got into a government arena, Steve didn't know what to do." If the task force was similarly confused, it found its way, slowly. Members paused often to consult with the City Attorney's Office and members of the Police Department's narcotics unit. Yesterday, all these deliberations resulted in a series of recommendations, delivered to a City Council subcommittee. But why bother if Washington is determined to declare Proposition 215 null and local implementation void? "I think this makes it even more important that we have guidelines," Humphrey said. "Our residents need to know where our police and our city government stand." Making a federal case Although McWilliams left the task force, his cooperative still followed that group's recommendations. His was a small operation of roughly 25 plants. Surely, no one would make a federal case over it. Wrong. The feds exhumed a 1999 case, in which police seized 448 plants from McWilliams' cooperative. Local prosecutors, no doubt aware of Proposition 215's inherent contradictions, had declined to prosecute. The feds, though, seized on that '99 bust to threaten McWilliams with a minimum five-year prison term. This isn't about justice; it's about muzzling an advocate. "This guy is violating the law, and he's flaunting it," the DEA's Thornhill said. "He brought this whole thing on himself." This, from an administration that claims to support states' rights. If McWilliams was so confused, I'd chalk it up to too many joints. But what are the feds smoking? - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart