Pubdate: Sun, 09 Feb 2003 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2003 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Author: Jeff McDonald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) BATTLE LINES BLURRED IN WAR OVER MEDICAL MARIJUANA Until now, the fight to decriminalize marijuana and make it available to cancer, AIDS and other patients has taken root in famously liberal venues such as Santa Cruz, Mendocino County and the San Francisco Bay Area. That changed when the San Diego City Council, on a 6-3 vote that followed hours of emotional testimony with protests on both sides, acquiesced to dozens of people who pleaded for safe access to a drug they say eases painful side effects of chronic diseases. The unlikely vote came during the same week that jurors in a Bay Area illegal cultivation case complained they were duped by a federal court and a San Diego marijuana activist pleaded guilty to a felony rather than risk years in prison. All three developments have blurred the battle lines in the war on drugs. Although more than a dozen California cities and counties have adopted medicinal marijuana provisions, San Diego is one of the nation's largest and most influential local governments yet to reject federal marijuana policy and enact standards of its own. "San Diego is solid middle America, with a lot of military and a lot of conservative politics," said R. Keith Stroup, a public-interest attorney who founded the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. "This is very significant." The council members were acting on a proposition approved by California voters in 1996 that permits seriously ill patients to grow and use marijuana with the recommendation of a physician. The state law, however, is deliberately vague on issues such as how many plants and how much dried marijuana is acceptable, in part because the law clearly clashes with federal drug rules. The U.S. government considers marijuana to be as dangerous as heroin. Activists on both sides of the debate see the San Diego case as something of a turning point in the cause. People who want to loosen the federal position on marijuana hope to capitalize on the vote, figuring that if conservative-leaning San Diego can accept marijuana use by sick patients, other cities are likely to follow. Those active in drug abuse prevention see it as a call to arms; they feel they lost the fight in a city like San Diego by taking their competition too lightly or not paying close enough attention. "Nobody believed it would happen," said John Redman of the San Diego Prevention Coalition, an alliance of drug counselors and others that lobbied furiously against the local marijuana guidelines. "It's illegal." Marijuana activists were too practiced and organized for the anti-drug-abuse coalition to have dissuaded San Diego lawmakers, Redman said. "We came on board way too late in the game," he said. A council-appointed citizens committee spent nearly two years debating whether and how the state law allowing medicinal use of marijuana should be dealt with in San Diego. Task force members decided patients should be able to grow plants outdoors and smoke anywhere cigarettes are permitted. They also said medicinal users should be able to possess three pounds of marijuana and cultivate up to 72 plants. Those recommendations were pared to one pound and 20 plants - grown indoors or inside a greenhouse only. Less-lenient restrictions also were added to prevent minors and convicts from taking advantage of the guidelines. One AIDS patient from Ocean Beach who tends a small marijuana garden in his yard welcomed the city law but said that conditions imposed by the council present serious challenges. The back yard "is the only place I really have to grow," said the man, who did not want his name published out of fear that he would be arrested. "Growing indoors involves lots of lights and, with the electricity bills, I couldn't afford that." The ordinance, which went into effect immediately, was strongly opposed by San Diego police, and by U.S. drug officials, who pledged to continue enforcing all laws. Law professor Gerald Uelmen of Santa Clara University has been pushing federal courts to render a decisive ruling on the legality of Proposition 215, the 1996 initiative that spawned California's medicinal marijuana position. According to Uelmen, who represents the operators of a cooperative marijuana garden in Santa Cruz raided by federal drug agents last September, the U.S. government has no business interfering with a state's right to develop a marijuana policy of its own choosing. The respected constitutional law expert has made only limited headway so far - - a fact he partly attributes to his whereabouts. "When we approve (medicinal marijuana laws) up here in the Bay Area, they just shrug it off as more lunacy from the lunatic fringe," Uelmen said. "But I don't think they can say that with San Diego." The top law enforcement official in California also endorsed the San Diego action. Attorney General Bill Lockyer has been feuding with his federal counterpart, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, over his state's authority to regulate marijuana. Lockyer earlier took the unusual step of recommending that locally elected officials develop their own standards on medicinal marijuana use. "We think it's very good that local communities are making decisions on how to implement something the voters of California believe is very important," said Hallye Jordan, a spokeswoman for Lockyer. Eight states in addition to California have enacted allowances for medicinal marijuana. Several others are weighing similar measures in upcoming legislative sessions. Federal officials, however, remain unmoved by the mounting number of cities, counties and states allowing seriously ill patients to grow and smoke the banned substance, even though the policy contradicts President Bush's oft-repeated support for states' rights. "We don't do science and medicine in this country by plebiscite," said Tom Riley, a spokesman for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. "We have well-regulated, well-run, science-based processes for determining and distributing medicines." The Justice Department also dismissed the concerns of jurors in Northern California who last week convicted a popular marijuana advocate of illegal cultivation. When told after their verdict that defendant Ed Rosenthal had been growing the plants for sick patients on behalf of the city of Oakland - information that was excluded by the federal judge - several jurors complained publicly that they were misled by the government. At the same time, San Diego activist Steven McWilliams pleaded guilty to a felony Friday rather than risk five years in federal prison for growing 25 marijuana plants at his Normal Heights home. Under that deal, McWilliams could receive six months in jail and spend three years on federal probation. However, in a highly unusual stipulation, prosecutors agreed to allow McWilliams to argue the constitutionality of his case before a federal appeals court. With more town halls and statehouses considering medicinal marijuana laws that conflict with federal drug policy, U.S. lawmakers might soon have little choice but to weigh a measure of their own, advocates say. So far, however, efforts in Congress to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous substance have gone nowhere, largely because many politicians fear being painted as soft on drugs. "They are not afraid of the voters," said Eric E. Sterling, president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation in suburban Washington, D.C. "They are afraid of the conventional wisdom and afraid of being ridiculed." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh