Pubdate: Mon, 25 Aug 2003 Source: Daily Breeze (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Copley Press Inc. Contact: http://www.dailybreeze.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/881 Author: Tom Elias Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) PROSECUTORS PUTTING HEAT ON MEDIPOT DOCTORS When U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft asked the Supreme Court to overturn an appeals court decision blocking federal agents from punishing - or even investigating - doctors who recommend marijuana to patients, he was not doing anything unique. For California Attorney General Bill Lockyer was already moving against the most prominent medipot doctor in the nation, helping the Medical Board of California in its attempt to get the doctor's medical license lifted. The question: Is Lockyer, who says he favors medical use of marijuana to help alleviate severe pain and other conditions including nausea caused by AIDS and cancer drugs, trying to clamp down on free speech or simply trying to restrict trade in an illegal drug? Another question: How much leeway should doctors have when recommending pot use to patients? Should physicians be required to examine those patients, verifying they have the conditions they claim? All these questions are central to the case of Tod Mikuriya, a Berkeley physician revered in the medipot movement who also serves as medical coordinator for the embattled Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative. `Dr. Tod is like an emergency physician,' says Steve Kubby, a medipot user and former Libertarian Party candidate for governor who sought refuge in Canada after being convicted of possessing a single hallucinatory mushroom. `He's attempting to help a huge population of sick and disabled people who are being shunned by most other physicians. He is one of our movement's greatest heroes.' The medical board moved last spring to take away Mikuriya's license, claiming he did not take proper care in recommending pot to patients. After reviewing records of 16 of the more than 7,000 patients for whom Mikuriya has recommended marijuana, a Medical Board expert blasted his procedures. The expert, said Lockyer's court brief, `was critical of Dr. Mikuriya's failure in virtually every case to examine the patient, to obtain a history, to perform appropriate workup of the patient's symptoms and findings, or to follow up with or monitor the patients.' In short, Lockyer implies that Mikuriya essentially recommends pot to anyone who claims to have a problem which he thinks marijuana might help. The doctor, however, claims he examines each patient, spending at least 15 minutes in every case. His lawyers contend all that is irrelevant, anyway. They say the case is about free speech. The government =8B state and federal =8B is out to get doctors who recommend pot under any circumstance, they imply, with authorities disregarding the protections written into the 1996 Proposition 215, California voters' attempt to legalize medical marijuana, which passed with a 56 percent majority. Says the law, `Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no physician in this state shall be punished, or denied any right or privilege, for having recommended marijuana to a patient for medical purposes.' This section, Mikuriya's lawyers note, is silent about physical exams or checking patient histories. But that is simply standard medical practice, replies the attorney general. Without such a stricture, doctors could simply sanction use of marijuana by anyone, facilitating trade in and use of an illegal drug. Nope, say medipot advocates, doctors who make recommendations are only saying the weed can be helpful for certain conditions and recommending it for such use. What anyone does after that is not their responsibility. What's more, say Mikuriya's lawyers, the ongoing action against him, with the next hearing set for Sept. 3, is a roundabout way of getting back at patients authorities have tried and failed to convict for using pot. `The case against Dr. Mikuriya is based on the hearsay of disgruntled, sore losers: the police, deputy sheriffs and district attorneys who lost their criminal prosecutions against a bevy of medical marijuana patients,' says Mikuriya lawyer John Fleer. `They're angry because they lost their underlying prosecutions.' If Mikuriya loses his license, chances are other doctors will refuse to make many recommendations under Proposition 215, and the patients who say they desperately need marijuana will have the rug pulled from under them. Note: Tom Elias is author of The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It, now available in an updated second edition. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek