Pubdate: Wed, 08 Oct 2003 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Author: Claire Cooper, Bee Legal Affairs Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) FEDERAL COURT HEARS POT CASES Two Appeals Center On Issues Of States' And Patients' Rights. SAN FRANCISCO -- A federal appeals court took up two more medical marijuana cases Tuesday as it prepared to issue a series of critical decisions on the future of California's pot initiative in the face of federal attempts to squelch it. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel did not commit itself one way or the other on the cutting-edge states' rights and patients' rights issues. But in a narrower case heard Tuesday, the judges appeared receptive to arguments from the plaintiff, Dr. Molly Fry of Cool. Fry is suing the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to reinstate her federal certificate to prescribe drugs. It was revoked last December for prescribing pot. The DEA claimed Fry had waived her defense by not responding to an order to show cause why her registration shouldn't be lifted. Fry said her lawyer at the time, J. David Nick, was supposed to apply for a hearing. "This person was a victim of her attorney," Fry's current lawyer, Laurence Lichter, told the 9th Circuit. Mark Quinlivan, a U.S. Department of Justice lawyer representing the DEA, countered that the revocation decision was final and couldn't be reopened. He said the agency found no evidence that Nick had applied for a hearing. But Judge Harry Pregerson of Woodland Hills said, "It seems to me like she's got a valid excuse here." And he asked Quinlivan: "What's the big deal to having a hearing?" Judge Richard Paez of Pasadena observed that the DEA could reopen Fry's case for good cause, and the third member of the 9th Circuit panel, C. Arlen Beam, a visiting 8th Circuit judge, said the case could be sent to the DEA with instructions to work it out. The judges seemed more skeptical of the plaintiffs' claims in a second case, one with broad implications for the state's 1996 medical marijuana initiative. The appeal was filed by two women who want a court order to block federal raids against them or the pot they say they need for survival. Despite the legality of medical marijuana under California state law, virtually all pot cultivation and use remains illegal under the federal Controlled Substances Act of 1970. Angel Raich of Oakland and Diane Monson of Oroville claim that because they scrupulously avoid connections with interstate commerce in obtaining their pot supplies, the federal government has no power to interfere with them. Raich, who suffers from an inoperable brain tumor and other illnesses, gets her pot free from two caregivers, who use only California-produced water, nutrients, supplies and equipment in growing it, she says. Monson, who suffers from chronic pain, grows her own pot plants in her garden. Quinlivan argued in opposition to their combined appeal that the U.S. Supreme Court foreclosed any type of medical necessity justification for marijuana use when it ruled two years ago against the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative. Various other cases, involving attempts by pot cooperatives to get on legal footing, were argued before a different 9th Circuit panel last month and are awaiting decisions. But Randy Barnett, a Boston University law professor representing Raich and Monson, said there was an essential difference. "What we deal with here is completely non-economic behavior," he argued, citing a series of U.S. Supreme Court decisions limiting Congress' power to regulate in-state conduct. The judges, however, mentioned other precedents that do not support a personal right to use illegal drugs. There's no deadline for the court's decisions. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom