Pubdate: Wed, 24 Dec 2003 Source: Los Angeles City Beat (CA) Copyright: 2003 Southland Publishing Contact: http://www.lacitybeat.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2972 Note: Also prints Los Angeles Valley Beat, often with similar content, and the same contact information. Author: Dean Kuipers HOME-GROWN VICTORY Medical marijuana advocates are celebrating more than just a little stash under the Christmas tree this week, as a recent ruling by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals may have ended federal prosecution of many prescription pot users in California. In a major victory for backers of Proposition 215, which legalized medical marijuana use in 1996 by a large majority of state voters, the three-judge panel ruled on December 17 that federal agents lacked the authority to bust two users in the case Raich v. Ashcroft. "I had been hoping, praying, and expecting this result all along," says Dale Gieringer, one of the original organizers of Proposition 215, and California coordinator for the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws, or NORML. "From the very get-go, when we first made Prop. 215, it was our view that the federal government did not have any right to overrule individual Californians ' right to use medical marijuana under Prop. 215 - at least not in the area of personal use and non-interstate commerce." In the Raich case, the court ruled that the medical marijuana use by defendants Angel Raich and Diane Monson did not fall under federal jurisdiction because the pot had never crossed state lines and no money had ever changed hands. Hundreds of medical marijuana patients grow their own marijuana or have free sources of pot for their personal use, and the court decision seems to put this activity now beyond the reach of the feds. As to whether or not this would halt federal Drug Enforcement Adminstration (DEA) raids on medical marijuana users and clubs, U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) spokesperson Charles Miller says, "I'm not aware of that. I think [the ruling] was very specifically tailored to individuals in the case. We have still not decided what actions we are going to take in this case, as I recall the ruling was very narrow." The ruling also does not address medical marijuana buyers' clubs - where users under Prop. 215 purchase pot, rather than get it for free - which have proliferated in Northern California. Clubs like the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative were early targets of then-new DOJ head John Ashcroft, who took power in 2001 with a mandate from the Bush administration to prosecute marijuana use of any kind, and it is still unclear whether this ruling would affect cases like Oakland. If the DOJ appeals, the stage would be set for a long-awaited medi-pot showdown at the U.S. Supreme Court. The Raich decision, however, is significant in that it is a rare instance of a court questioning the federal government's power to regulate drug trafficking under the so-called "commerce clause" of the U.S. Constitution. The entire U.S. Controlled Substances Act derives its constitutional authority from this clause. In many cases, federal prosecutors have stretched credibility in an effort to define such actions as growing marijuana at home as "commerce." Since a 1995 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in U.S. v. Lopez, the courts have begun to rein in these powers in significant new ways. The ruling also caps a year in which the federal courts seemed to be pushing back against Ashcroft's DOJ. In June, famed High Times columnist Ed Rosenthal was sentenced to one day (with credit for time served) by a Ninth Circuit judge, who lashed out at federal prosecutors for even bringing the case, though Rosenthal was convicted of growing thousands of plants. Officers of the Los Angeles Cannabis Resource Center received probation in a similar case in November. In October, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that medical doctors could not be federally prosecuted for prescribing medical marijuana in states where it had been legalized. In the near future, many cases on appeal may be affected by the new ruling. The case of Bryan Epis, for example - sentenced to 10 years for possession - - would apparently be affected if any amount of his home-grown marijuana were found to be for personal use. One case involving DEA raids on the Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana (WAMM) in Santa Cruz, where no money was exchanged - is also widely regarded as a natural extension of Raich. "The case covers not only the two persons in the case, but the two John Does who grew for them," says William Dolphin, spokesperson for activist group Americans for Safe Access. "Anybody who is growing marijuana for themselves or for someone else, who has a medical recommendation - if they were convicted, they now have recourse to go back to the courts and say, 'I was convicted over a non-constitutional use of this law.'" The Los Angeles U.S. Attorney's office declined to comment on the ruling. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman