Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel (CA) Copyright: 2004 Santa Cruz Sentinel Contact: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/394 Author: Brian Seals, Sentinel Staff Writer Cited: Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana http://www.wamm.org/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/wamm (WAMM Raid) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?230 (Santa Cruz v. Ashcroft) DOPE'S NEW HOPE Medical Marijuana Advocates Buoyed by December Federal Appeals Court Ruling SANTA CRUZ - On a wall in the back room of her Westside office, Valerie Corral points to pictures of her deceased friends. "She died just a few months after the raid," Valerie says, pointing to a photo on the wall of a woman smoking from a glass pipe. The raid that Valerie refers to, conducted by the Drug Enforcement Agency in September of 2002, shut down the marijuana farm that she and her husband Mike had operated in Davenport. The pictures that now hang in her office, at the Wo/men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana, include photos of 20 people she says have died since the raid - after the couple could no longer provide marijuana from the farm to those who smoke the drug to help relieve various medical ailments. The deaths are not linked to the suspended marijuana supply, the Corrals acknowledge. But the final days of those suffering may have been less difficult if the drug would have been available to them, the Corrals say. "We know pain and discomfort has increased," Mike said. "We hear that on a weekly basis." The Davenport marijuana farm, which once grew 167 plants in an area not much bigger than a small back yard, now lays fallow because of the federal law criminalizing marijuana. The land that once grew the plant for about 250 people in the county, many terminally ill, has more recently grown tomatoes. But the Corrals have not given up hope that they will one day legally grow and supply medical marijuana to their ailing clients. A recent court ruling may warrant their optimism. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Dec. 16 that the 1970 Controlled Substances Act, which outlaws marijuana, may not apply to sick people who have a doctor's recommendation to use the drug. The ruling applies to the seven Western states in the 9th Circuit's jurisdiction, including California, that have approved medical marijuana laws. Under the December ruling, the three-judge panel ruled that prosecuting medical marijuana users under the Controlled Substances Act is unconstitutional if the marijuana is being used for medical purposes and is not sold or transported across state lines. That's the same argument the Corrals cite in their legal fight against the U.S. Department of Justice in response to the raid of their farm. Their lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in San Jose on behalf of WAMM in April of 2003 and calls for an injunction against future raids on medical marijuana operations. WAMM, which was founded by the Corrals in the early ' 90s, is joined by the county and city of Santa Cruz in the suit. Their legal argument is grounded in California's voter-approved Proposition 215 which, in 1996, made medical marijuana with a doctor's recommendation, in spite of federal law, legal under state law. While the December decision in federal court, upholding the use of medical marijuana, is likely to be appealed by the U.S. Department of Justice and the DEA, the Corrals think it bodes well for WAMM's case. "There's no such thing as a small victory," Valerie says. "We're pleased to see the will of the people reflected in the courts." A hard fight ahead Still, the couple isn't breathing sighs of relief. They know legal battles remain. WAMM's suit seeking an injunction from future raids, now in U.S. District Court, differs from the December ruling in that it applies to individuals rather than groups like theirs. Gerald Uelmen, a Santa Clara University law professor who is on WAMM's legal team, said, however, the concepts ruled on by the 9th Circuit Court could apply to medical pot cooperatives. "It really isn't that great an extension to apply it (the ruling) to a group like WAMM," Uelmen said. In a separate suit, now before the 9th Circuit on appeal, WAMM is seeking the return of the marijuana plants that were taken in the raid. The December ruling does not address whether the DEA must return the confiscated plants. "That (December) ruling is good, but it's sort of groundwork for future rulings," Mike said. There is also, of course, the possibility that the Supreme Court will overturn the decision of the 9th Circuit Court, leaving the Justice Department and the DEA in a position to conduct further raids. While the Corrals and WAMM find support in Santa Cruz County for the use of medical marijuana, the drug is viewed skeptically in other parts of the state and nation. A common complaint is that medical marijuana as practiced in California sends a bad message to youth. "Our main concern is marijuana is the No. 1 drug of choice for youth," said John Redman, executive director of Californians for Drug-Free Youth in San Diego. "We now have more kids in treatment for marijuana than for alcohol for the first time ever." If marijuana is to be medicine, Redman said, it should not be the domain of cooperatives and buyers' clubs, but of doctors and pharmacists. "When you don't have controls, the abuses goes even further," Redman said. Brian Blake, spokesman for the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy, commonly known as the office of the Drug Czar, declined comment on the suits initiated by WAMM, citing pending litigation. But he offered similar views as Redman on the subject of medical marijuana. Blake said the federal government would enforce marijuana statutes until laws change and the Federal Drug Administration approves the drug, no matter what voters in individual states approve. "We have the responsibility to make sure medicine is safe when it's on the market," Blake said. "Unfortunately, medicine is not created through plebiscite in the United States." Save a couple of busts in the early '90s, one with charges dropped based on a medical necessity defense and another that was never prosecuted, the Corrals and WAMM have enjoyed support from local government. The Santa Cruz City Council deputized the Corrals in late 2002, which was a symbolic vote of support for the couple's actions. That came just weeks after the council allowed a medical pot giveaway for about a dozen WAMM members on the steps of City Hall. Santa Cruz County Sheriff Mark Tracy said his office had met with WAMM over the years to talk about how to operate within the state's medical pot law. "(Proposition) 215 is the law governing medical marijuana in California," Tracy said. "By keeping communication open, it helps us allow the law to be implemented." The Corrals and medical marijuana advocates are closely watching the fed's next move in the wake of the December ruling. The U.S. Justice Department could seek a stay of the injunction at any point, meaning the December ruling would be put on hold until the Supreme Court makes a final decision. In the meantime This past year, the Corrals and WAMM members have worked with county Supervisor Mardi Wormhoudt to establish an identification card system with the county Health Services Agency. The system aims to provide legal clearances for users and let law enforcement officials know when the drug is being used legitimately. However, local marijuana advocates have not made much headway in their most basic mission of getting the drug to the ill that use it. Since the raid, WAMM members have been forced to live with less. For Hal Margolin, that means rationing supplies and waiting until later in the day before taking a puff of marijuana to help him cope with foot pain caused by a condition known as chronic peripheral neuropathy. The drug has been most commonly prescribed to those suffering from terminal illnesses or severe chronic diseases, such as epilepsy and arthritis, to ease symptoms. Margolin said he never imagined he would use marijuana, but his incessant pain prompted him to try it about five years ago. "Marijuana allows me to function despite the pain," Margolin said. To this day, the cooperative still gets calls from people wanting the drug. A 75-year-old man wants to know how to grow for his ill wife. A breast cancer patient needs relief. "We get phone calls everyday," Mike Corral said. "I hope we're going to come back to full operation and more so." While the ability to begin legally growing and distributing rests, for now, with the courts, an active year lies ahead. WAMM wants to establish its own hospice for members. The idea is to make patients as comfortable as possible in a patient's final days. "I see it as a natural evolution of our work," Valerie said. The Corrals have also been working with the city of San Francisco on ways to implement Proposition S. The ballot measure, approved in San Francisco in November 2002, re-affirms city policy stating that the city shall explore the possibility of creating a program to grow and distribute marijuana for medical use. "On the one hand we're consultants to the city of San Francisco. On the other, we were raided by the DEA," mused Mike. "The world is a strange place." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin