Pubdate: Wed, 05 Nov 2003 Source: Los Angeles Daily Journal (CA) Copyright: 2003 Daily Journals Contact: http://www.dailyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1142 Author: Steve Kubby DAVIS SIGNS ANTI PROP 215 MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW On his way out the door, and after two previous vetoes, Gov. Gray Davis has signed a controversial medical-marijuana bill, SB420 (Vasconcellos). The new bill, a radical rewrite of the state1s medical-marijuana laws, will take effect Jan. 1, 2004 much to the horror of the very patients that the new law is supposed to protect. The new law offers confidential photo identification cards, on a voluntary basis, to document patients who are registered and protected. However, the devil is in the details. For example, SB420 seems to allow prisoners and people on probation or parole to use medical cannabis =8B but not quite. Under SB420, prisoners, defendants, probationers and parolees may ask to use medical cannabis, but nothing guarantees that they will be allowed to do so. Why did drug-warrior Davis veto a needle-exchange bill but sign a medical-marijuana bill? Is it because SB420 protects patients? Or is it because it drastically reduces their rights under Proposition 215? Davis apparently liked SB420 enough to sign it, even though it would have become law without his signature. That worries California medical-pot patients. "Would you have a group of white supremacists enforcing anti-discrimination laws? Because that1s what we have right here," said noted marijuana author and activist Ed Rosenthal of Oakland. "I don1t believe that police, prosecutors or any part of the criminal-justice system are stakeholders in making the policy decisions regarding people1s health," Rosenthal added. In 1996, voters passed Proposition 215, which enacted the state1s Compassionate Use Act. Proposition 215 provided that medical-marijuana possession required only a doctor1s note. The proposition neither limited how much pot a patient could have nor specified where he or she could get it. Rosenthal and Dennis Peron, a driving force behind Proposition 215, want to keep the simply written initiative as the people of California passed it in 1996. SB420 will result in varying possession limits in different cities and counties. According to Rosenthal, varying limits mean that "there1s no equal protection under the law. Does that mean in counties allowing only six plants, that people are healthier there and need less medicine?" Rosenthal also said that the new law is "constitutionally flawed because it treats patients who use marijuana as medicine different from other patients." No ID card or registry is mandated for people using prescription painkillers, for instance. "Marijuana is not a drug. A drug is something that1s manufactured, an artifact of human intervention. Marijuana is an herb and should be regulated just for purity the way other herbs are," said Rosenthal. Sen. John Vasconcellos hotly disputes these accusations, especially with respect to the six-plant limit on mature plants in SB420. "It1s a floor, it1s not a ceiling =8B any local government can decide to increase that amount," boasts Vasconcellos. However, nowhere does the bill describe the plant limits as a "floor" or "minimum amount." Although California has vowed to protect the identity of medical-marijuana ID card holders, patients worry that U.S. drug agents will seize any list that they can get their hands on and use it as a hit list for arrests. That is certainly what has happened so far. Each time that the Drug Enforcement Administration has raided a medical-cannabis club, it has seized applications, with patient names and physician contact information. Whenever defense attorneys have asked courts to return these lists, the agency has fought and has succeeded in keeping the lists. The feds already are targeting patients for as few as six plants. Just this month, agents raided the homes of Sister Somaya in Los Angeles and Travis Paulson in Oregon, even though they were in full compliance with state laws. As medical-pot attorney Bill Panzer recently told the Los Angeles Times, SB420 is an "anti-medical marijuana law" that will "tread on the doctor-patient relationship, put an unrealistic limit on some patients most in need and embolden narcotics officers who might make more arrests in some parts of the state." Panzer knows what he is talking about. He helped write Proposition 215 and probably has defended more Proposition 215 patients successfully than any other attorney in the state. If Panzer says that this is an "anti-medical-marijuana law," then one should believe him. He is in the trenches every day, defending patients against state and federal authorities. On the day before SB420 was to come to a vote, Attorney General Bill Lockyer had a meeting with Vasconcellos and told him that the bill would not pass unless it was revised to limit possession to eight ounces and six mature and 12 immature plants. Lockyer argued that because no federal guidelines existed, SB420 would have to create new guidelines arbitrarily. However, federal medical-marijuana patients, like George McMahon and Elvy Musika, will attest that doctors have set a standard of eight to 12 pounds per year and that this is what the U.S. government gives to each of its medical-marijuana patients. Lockyer and Vasconcellos could have taken the position that doctors should set the limits, because that is what the feds do. Instead, they lied about the federal guidelines and created their own limits, based on politics, not medicine. The last-minute and arbitrary nature of those limits has angered patients, who feel betrayed by Lockyer and Vasconcellos. One thing is clear: SB420 will criminalize and endanger thousands of patients who are well outside the six-plant/eight-ounce limit and do not have sufficient support from their doctors to challenge the statewide limit. Laws enacted through the initiative process may be changed only through the initiative process. The Legislature may pass only laws that do not contradict an initiative. Proposition 215 set a medical-marijuana possession limit, and that limit is "for personal medical use." The state Supreme Court affirmed this quantity limit in People v. Mower, 28 Cal.4th 457 (2002). There, the court clearly held that the only quantity limit or requirement in Proposition 215 is "for personal medical use." SB420 plainly contradicts, and even repeals, this quantity limit. Suppose a patient has 16 ounces and possesses it "for personal medical use," even though he will not be able to use up his supply, say, within two years. SB420 will make this conduct criminal, even though it is not criminal under Proposition 215. The Compassionate Use Act was easy for voters and juries to understand. Why punish patients with all these new regulations and unrealistic limits? Bona fide medical-cannabis patients need a bill that protects patients and forces police to uphold the Compassionate Use Act as it was passed in Proposition 215. Instead, they got a law that barters away their rights and creates new crimes that will be charged against medical-cannabis patients. Steve Kubby is national director of the American Medical Marijuana Association. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek