Pubdate: Wed, 15 Oct 2003 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2003 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Dean E. Murphy Cited: Drug Policy Alliance http://www.drugpolicy.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Conant (Walters v. Conant) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ed+Rosenthal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bill+Lockyer BACKERS OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA HAIL RULING SAN FRANCISCO - Ever since voters in California approved a 1996 ballot measure that legalized some medicinal uses of marijuana, the state has been locked in a legal and cultural battle with the federal government. Federal agents have raided farms where medicinal marijuana is grown, closed cooperatives where it is distributed and threatened to punish doctors who discussed it with their patients, all because federal law prohibits distribution or use of marijuana regardless of state law. Throughout it all, proponents of medicinal marijuana in California and more than a half dozen other states with similar laws have had little to celebrate. But on Tuesday, telephones were ringing and congratulatory e-mail flying as doctors, patients and other advocates of medicinal marijuana rejoiced at a major legal victory that effectively allows doctors to recommend the drug to patients. "I was speechless, I was thrilled when I heard the news," said Daniel J. Kane, 43, of Oakland, who first used marijuana for medicinal purposes about 10 years ago when he was suffering from AIDS wasting syndrome. "Even now, I get this sort of tingling in my body thinking about what we have achieved." The highly emotional victory came when the United States Supreme Court on Tuesday let stand a federal appeals court ruling last October that the federal government may not revoke the licenses of doctors who recommend marijuana to their patients. The Bush administration had sought to have the ruling overturned. The ruling, by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, came in a lawsuit filed in 1997 by a group of doctors and patients, including Mr. Kane, after the Clinton administration threatened to revoke doctors' licenses in such circumstances. Since Mr. Bush took office in 2001, his administration has pursued the same policy. The California law, known as Proposition 215, says doctors cannot be punished for recommending marijuana for medical purposes. Over the weekend, Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation intended to help carry out the law. "I think you will now see more movement in California and other states to make medical marijuana more of a reality," said Daniel N. Abrahamson, director of legal affairs at the Drug Policy Alliance, an advocacy group, which along with the American Civil Liberties Union represented the doctors and patients in the lawsuit. "I have heard from dozens of patients today who are breathing a huge collective sigh of relief." Nowhere was the excitement greater than in the San Francisco Bay area, where the Drug Policy Alliance estimates the vast majority of medicinal marijuana patients in the state reside - about 10,000 - and where the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and the Justice Department have concentrated their efforts to stamp out the drug's cultivation and distribution. Marijuana has been particularly popular as a pain reliever and appetite stimulant for people with H.I.V., AIDS and various forms of cancer. It can be administered in a number of ways, from smoking like a cigarette to mixing with tea. "It is a real relief," Dr. Milton Estes, the medical director of the Forensic AIDS Project at San Francisco's Department of Public Health, said of the Supreme Court's action. "I can only hope it will send a message to the federal government and the attorney general that every day people with common sense understand that this is not the place for the federal government to be wielding its weight and force against people with chronic diseases." Ed Rosenthal, the celebrity author of marijuana books and advice columns who was convicted in January in federal court of marijuana cultivation and conspiracy, said the federal government had been given "a clear signal to stay out of the state's business." Mr. Rosenthal had been growing marijuana in Oakland for medicinal purposes under the state law. "For the first time, many doctors will start writing recommendations for cannabis," Mr. Rosenthal said. "Up until this point, they have been afraid." The reaction among some patients who have used marijuana was deeply emotional. Michael Ferrucci, 51, who runs a music store in Livermore and who has had lung and testicular cancer, credits the drug with saving his life. Nonetheless, he said, it has carried a social and legal stigma that has been difficult to bear at times. "I consider this an important step in turning the attitudes of Americans around," Mr. Ferrucci said. "It has been far more beneficial to me than other medications they have recommended to me, including powerful narcotics like morphine, Demoral and codeine." Judith S. Cushner, 58, a preschool director in San Francisco who has had breast and uterine cancer, welcomed the court victory as having "separated the politics from the medicine." But Ms. Cushner said she was saddened by the time it took to resolve the matter in the courts. She said many people who might have benefited from the drug chose not to use it because they feared for their doctors. "There are people who would be alive today if they had felt comfortable discussing it with their physicians," Ms. Cushner said. "It took seven years to get this far. Cancer moves a lot faster than that." California's attorney general, Bill Lockyer, said that he hoped the court action Tuesday and the new state legislation would cause the federal government to back off its "overbearing enforcement practices." But Richard Meyer, a special agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration in San Francisco, said the federal government's basic view of marijuana had not changed. "Marijuana is still an illegal drug," Mr. Meyer said. "We will continue doing our job." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman