Pubdate: Thu, 24 Apr 2003 Source: Isthmus (WI) Copyright: 2003 Isthmus Contact: http://www.thedailypage.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/215 Author: Bill Lueders Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) 'THIS IS MY MEDICINE' But DA's Office Says Man's Pot Use Is A Crime, Plain And Simple During last fall's campaign for Dane County District Attorney, Brian Blanchard told a forum his office "doesn't target marijuana use as a criminal event." Stephanie Rearick of Progressive Dane's drug policy task force adds that, in discussions with her, he gave "qualified support" for the concept of letting people use medical marijuana. You couldn't prove it by Steve Wessing. Wessing, 41, is facing two misdemeanor criminal charges as the result of being busted last October with a half-pound of pot and 30 grams of hashish. His Madison home was raided after Customs Agents allegedly intercepted more than a dozen packages of hash addressed to him from Amsterdam, which he had visited. Wessing's defense, advanced by Madison attorney Peter Steinberg, is that he uses marijuana medicinally to control chronic pain, muscle spasms and headaches stemming from congenital spina bifida occulta and other ailments. Last November, two weeks after the raid on his home, Wessing was examined by Dr. Phillip Leveque, an Oregon physician sympathetic to medical marijuana patients. Leveque concluded that marijuana "gives the best pain relief" to Wessing, who has used it since age nine. "I've made it clear over the years that this is my medicine," says Wessing, who receives SSI payments on account of his disability. "I don't use any other drugs. I almost never even drink." Indeed, Wessing uses marijuana precisely it doesn't entail the debilitating narcotic effects of other medications, like Oxycodone and Darvon, that he could legally obtain. Marijuana, he says, "relieves my pain, relieves my muscle spasms, reduces my headaches." But it doesn't leave him unable to function. Wessing, who has lived in Madison since 1990 and has no non-traffic criminal record, has given up pot for months at a time, proving to himself that he is not addicted. But, he says, "my muscle spasms get worse and I have more headaches." Angela Chase, Wessing's "significant other," is a licensed social worker who has 15 years' experience dealing with mental-health and drug-and-alcohol-abuse issues. In her opinion, Wessing does not have a substance-abuse problem, because he does not use marijuana as an intoxicant. "He uses is to treat a medical problem. He uses it to decrease his pain. It's his method of pain management." But Blanchard's office is seeking to shut down Wessing's defense. Assistant District Attorney Jason Hanson recently filed a motion seeking to bar "any evidence of the defendant's medical conditions or medical use of marijuana," deeming this to be "irrelevant." The only issue, argued Hanson, is that THC is a controlled substance, and Wessing knew it. Blanchard, who knows of no other local case in which a defendant has sought to present a medical marijuana defense, says his office isn't buying it in this case because Wessing only sought a diagnosis after his arrest. And then he went to Dr. Leveque, who Blanchard calls "a semi-retired osteopath who specializes in handing out marijuana prescriptions." (Leveque, a doctor of osteopathy and longtime professor of pharmacology, has approved medical marijuana use for more than 2,000 patients, while rejecting some requests.) If Wessing's claim to marijuana use for pain management were valid, Blanchard thinks there should be other physicians willing to say so besides "this guy in Oregon." He even suggests doing so would be in keeping with their Hypocratic Oath. But Steinberg, who a few years back ran for DA on the promise that he would not prosecute marijuana cases, says patients with a valid medical need for marijuana must turn to physicians like Leveque because others are not as courageous. "I'm not aware of any doctor around here who's prepared to take those risks," says Steinberg, adding that physicians' fears of repercussions may be well-grounded. "We're dealing with a federal government that's made it plain it intends to stop this concept of medical marijuana. There's no reason to assume it won't be heavy-handed." Besides, says Steinberg, Dane County prosecutors have signaled that having a second opinion wouldn't matter anyway: "By filing a motion which says it's not a defense, they've basically said they won't accept the position of any doctor." Blanchard demurs, saying this motion was filed only because his office does not accept that Wessing has a medical need. He says he never meant to suggest, during the campaign, that his office does not treat some pot offenses as crimes, only that it does not make such cases a priority. The prosecution against Wessing is proceeding, explains Blanchard, because of the quantities and circumstances: "This case is not just someone who has a few joints in his ash tray." Steinberg says the quantity with which Wessing was caught is consistent with medical marijuana use. He's obtained an statement from Texas resident George McMahon, one of a handful of U.S. citizens whose use of marijuana for medicinal purposes in legally recognized by the federal government. McMahon goes through a half-pound of Uncle Sam's stash per month. "This is a medical case," says Steinberg of Wessing's circumstance. "It's nothing but a medical case. And the district attorney chooses not to treat it as such." Wessing, who uses marijuana three to five times a day, the level Leveque agreed was appropriate, says he has never sold or provided marijuana to others. The reason he had such a significant quantity is that supplies are never guaranteed: "I'm afraid of running out. Any time I have an opportunity to get marijuana, I get it." In January, the DA's office offered what Blanchard calls a "very reasonable" plea bargain. Wessing could avoid jail time if he agreed to 24 months probation and "the usual drug conditions," which includes regular testing. Steinberg rejected the deal, arguing that Wessing is "constitutionally entitled to make personal medical choices without interference from the state." He urged the office to dismiss the charges "on compassionate grounds." Wessing is also intent on rejecting any deal that requires him "not to use my medicine. That's not in the cards for me. I don't plan to stop using marijuana." The case is set for trial on Aug. 28. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager