Pubdate: Mon, 11 Aug 2003
Source: The Dominion Post (WV)
Copyright: 2003 The Dominion Post
Contact:  http://www.dominionpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1426
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?154 (Conant vs. Walters)

BUSH LAWYER COMPARES POT TO CIVIL RIGHTS

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- California and other states that want to make 
marijuana available to sick or dying patients are flouting federal drug 
laws in much the same way that Southern states defied national civil rights 
laws, a senior Bush administration lawy er said.

California is ground zero in a long tug of war with the federal government 
over the medical value of marijuana and the power of state governments and 
voters to make exceptions for people who may benefit from the illegal drug.

Five major federal lawsuits involve those who grow, use or recommend 
marijuana for medical use in California.

The Bush administration has asked the Supreme Court to settle the latest 
fight by agreeing that Washington has the power to revoke medical licenses 
of doctors who invoke state laws and recommend pot for their patients.

States cannot choose when to abide by federal law and when not to, Justice 
Department lawyer Mark Quinlivan said Saturday.

"You cannot cherry-pick," said Quinlivan, the top federal trial lawyer in 
three of the pending cases and a panelist at an American Bar Association 
discussion of medical marijuana.

California voters passed Proposition 215 in 1996, legalizing marijuana for 
medical use. Eight other states followed suit.

Federal law recognizes no medical purpose for the drug and bans its private 
production, sale or use.

"There is a basic question of what power does California have," said lawyer 
Gerald Uelman, Quinlivan's opponent in two cases. The federal law 
regulating drugs "is not a federal takeover of the medical system" or the 
duty of doctors to help the very ill, Uelman said.

Uelman and a California attorney general's office lawyer objected to the 
civil rights analogy and the notion that California is asserting the same 
kind of states' rights argument that Alabama used to try to avoid 
desegregating its schools.

When government agents shut down marijuana growers who serve sick people, 
it is "not acting with the same degree of moral propriety as it did to end 
civil rights abuses," said Taylor Carey, a California special assistant 
attorney general who wrote a friend-of-the-court brief backing medical 
marijuana.

California's fight with Washington has extended through the Democratic 
Clinton administration and the Republican Bush administration. The Supreme 
Court ruled against an Oakland marijuana distribution club two years ago, 
finding the federal drug law allows no exception for people to use pot to 
ease pain from cancer, AIDS or other illnesses.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom