Pubdate: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 Source: Daily Press (CA) Copyright: 2003 Daily Press Contact: http://www.vvdailypress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1061 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) OTHER VIEWS: DOPE DISTINCTIONS It's hard to know which part of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision to celebrate most: the part that grants medical marijuana users new protections from federal prosecution, or the part that uses constitutional states' rights arguments to do so. In a 2-1 decision, the court ruled that patients who use marijuana for medical purposes are free to do so, as long as the marijuana was grown themselves or was given to them by growers. In that way, the federal government would have no pretext to arrest them, given that the feds had used the Interstate Commerce Clause to justify their efforts to prosecute individuals under federal drug laws. No interstate commerce, no federal prosecution. That's great news, and experts believe it will finally make Proposition 215, the 1996 California initiative legalizing medical marijuana, a functioning law. State and local governments have generally followed the proposition, but medical-marijuana users have long feared prosecution by the feds. "Although (Tuesday's) decision simply overturned the district court's earlier denial of a preliminary injunction against the federal government, the panel found that the plaintiffs are likely to win on the merits and so are entitled to a preliminary injunction pending adjudication on the merits," explained Cato Institute Vice President Roger Pilon. A Cato attorney had presented arguments on behalf of the plaintiffs. The panel ruled "that enforcement of the act in cases like this would extend Congress' power beyond the limits authorized by the Constitution," Mr. Pilon added. "The opinion is thus consistent with the Rehnquist court's recent federalism decisions, which have sought to limit the reach of Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce." Federal drug warriors haven't looked too kindly on California's leniency toward people who use marijuana to relieve pain for medical conditions, so they invoked the Interstate Commerce Clause to justify their meddling in decisions typically afforded individual states. The feds argued that the clause applies because the marijuana could possibly be sold outside of California. But the court said: "Yet, if in seeking to prohibit some form of interstate commerce, Congress attempts to prohibit the wholly intrastate commerce of particular goods on the unsupported speculation that such goods might leak out of a state and into interstate commerce, or because there is no way to distinguish between goods produced within a state and those imported from other states, that would effectively give Congress the plenary police power over all commerce." The justices further said that, "Here the state of California, and its people through the initiative process, have determined that the health and safety of the state's citizens are best served by allowing seriously ill patients access to cannabis for medical purposes. ... (T)he court should respect the choice made by both a sovereign state and the sovereign people of the state." We wish liberal and conservative judges would consistently apply states' rights doctrine on behalf of all issues, regardless of their ideological views of those issues. Given that perfect world won't be with us anytime soon, we're happy enough when any judges make the right decision for the right reasons, regardless of their overall consistency. This was the right decision, made with the right constitutional rationale. Let's hope it withstands any further judicial scrutiny. The Orange County Register - --- MAP posted-by: Josh