Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jun 2004 Source: Santa Fe New Mexican (NM) Copyright: 2004 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.sfnewmexican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Deborah Davis Cited: Marijuana Policy Project ( www.mpp.org ) Cited: Drug Policy Alliance ( www.drugpolicy.org ) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) WILSON URGED TO APPROVE POT FOR PAIN Cherie Haymes says smoking pot provided the best relief for her chronic pain until Santa Fe police confiscated her marijuana plants last fall. A California doctor prescribed medical marijuana for Haymes, and she used it in that state for four years to soothe her colitis symptoms and arthritis pain, she said Friday at a press conference in front of the office of U.S. Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., in Albuquerque. Haymes, who now lives in Santa Fe, spoke in favor of patients being allowed to use medical marijuana. The Marijuana Policy Project and Drug Policy Alliance New Mexico is urging Wilson to vote in favor of an amendment that would prevent the federal Drug Enforcement Administration from prosecuting seriously ill patients in states that approve medical-marijuana use. Enrique Carlos Knell, Wilson's spokesman, said the Republican congresswoman opposes legislation to legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes. She is concerned it would result in increased abuse of all drugs, he said. That reasoning didn't make sense to Crawford MacCallum, a 75-year-old Tijeras resident, who attended the news conference. "That's only because it's illegal, and people have to buy it on the street where hard drugs are also sold," he said. He said the issue of medical marijuana didn't personally affect him, but he considers it a matter of personal liberty. "It makes me angry that the government thinks they know better than I do," he said. Knell said Wilson believes people should use safer and less-addictive treatments. Wilson, along with 272 other federal lawmakers, voted against a medical marijuana amendment introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives last year. The measure has not been introduced yet this year. Haymes, a 52-year-old business owner, and her musician husband, Paul Bjorgan, will appear in state District Court in July to face charges of possession of pot, conspiracy and suspicion of intent to sell. Since police seized her plants, Haymes said, she suffers from unnecessary pain, and the colitis causes spasms in her colon that pot used to keep under control. She has used natural-healing methods for the past 30 years and said marijuana is the best way to prevent spasms caused by pain. She can't use prescription drugs because they inflame her auto-immune disease, which destroys her thyroid hormone, she added. "People should not be hypercritical and realize everyone uses some kind of medication when they are in pain," she said. "How cruel to withhold what works for somebody." Bryan Krumm, a registered nurse who lives in Santa Fe, has a library of marijuana research with at least 1,000 articles, he said. As director of New Mexicans for Compassionate Use, he is involved in filing a lawsuit against the New Mexico Board of Pharmacy to allow New Mexicans to use marijuana as medicine. The lawsuit will soon be filed under an equal-protection claim that says if one person can get medical marijuana legally, everyone should be allowed access, he said. The group is suing the board rather than attempting state legislation again this year. The House defeated a medical-marijuana bill sponsored by Rep. Ken Martinez, D-Grants, earlier this year. Gov. Bill Richardson said at the beginning of the legislative session that reforming drug laws would not be a priority of his administration, but he remained open to a medical-marijuana bill. Seventy-two percent of people participating in a September 2003 poll sponsored by The New Mexican and KOB-TV said they would favor "legalizing marijuana use by those who have serious medical conditions, to alleviate pain and other symptoms." If Haymes and her husband hadn't recently bought a house and established her skin-care business on Baca Street, she probably would not stay in New Mexico, she said. "Why stay somewhere where you can't get your medicine," she said.