Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jun 2004 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2004 Newsday Inc. Contact: http://www.newsday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308 Author: Ellis Henican Cited: Drug Policy Alliance ( www.drugpolicy.org ) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) HIGH HOPES FOR POT This was a meeting in the private office of the Manhattan district attorney, involving a proposal to amend the New York State marijuana law. So of course someone had to ask the question. That someone, yesterday, turned out to be me. "Uh, Mr. Morgenthau, in your long life, what kind of, ah, personal experience have you had with marijuana? Have you ever smoked it yourself?" The soon-to-be-85-year-old district attorney looked up sternly from his chair, then cracked half a smile. "I missed that generation," he said. But wait! "Weren't you around before they made pot illegal?" That happened, if memory serves, in 1937, just as the future U.S. attorney and district attorney was packing his bags for freshman year at Amherst. "You said that," Morgenthau shot back at my calendar-counting. "I didn't." OK, then, and Bill Clinton didn't inhale! So here we have one of the little rituals of modern public life. You hold important office? You'd better have an answer to the pot question. Robert Morgenthau had called this meeting to announce that he was throwing his considerable political weight behind a bill to make marijuana legal for medical uses in New York State. Cancer patients, glaucoma sufferers and people with other dreaded diseases, he said, should not have to break the law to get the relief they so desperately need. This could soon change, thanks to a bill from Manhattan Assemb. Richard Gottfried. It would make the pain-killing properties of marijuana available with a doctor's prescription, the same way sick people can now get codeine, morphine and a whole medicine chest of potent narcotics. Montel Williams, the daytime TV host who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1999, sat beside Morgenthau yesterday. He spoke about the excruciating pain he suffers in the lower half of his body and the blessed relief he's gotten from medical marijuana. "I've tried the other drugs that are available to help me with the pain I have," the talk-show host said. "Nothing works as well." "There is absolutely no reason for not using marijuana for medical purposes," Morgenthau said. "It's another weapon in the arsenal." It is hard even to paraphrase the arguments against this. Only a dim-witted ideologue like federal drug czar John Walters will utter such drivel out loud. Something about "sending a bad message" or marijuana being a "gateway drug." Get outta here! How could any civilized person tell a cancer patient on chemotherapy, "No, we won't ease your pain!" I dare anyone to look into Montel Williams' eyes and say, "Suck it up, pal!" In fact, the odds are suddenly looking up for medical marijuana, after half a dozen failed attempts in Albany. Co-sponsors of Gottfried's bill include such conservative stalwarts as Thomas Kirwan, a hard-nosed former lieutenant in the State Police. Even State Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno, a cancer survivor himself, has given his support to the companion bill. "This is an issue that doesn't know any party," said Vince Marrone, director of New Yorkers for Compassionate Care, an advocacy group of patients, relatives and medical providers. "It just got a lot of traction really fast." Even Queens District Attorney Richard Brown, a staunch opponent of some broader drug-reform plans, told me he's all for medical marijuana. "This is more than appropriate," he said, adding, "I'm no recent convert." As counsel to Gov. Hugh Carey in 1980, Brown noted, he'd backed an earlier effort to make marijuana available for medical use. (Brown answered with a sharp, "No," when I asked about his own personal experience with the weed. "None.") At the same time the medical-marijuana bill seems to be sailing forward, drug-reform advocates are fighting for every inch as they take broader aim at the state's tough Rockefeller-era drug laws. Just about everyone agrees the laws are absurdly harsh. But no one can craft a reform plan that pleases a working majority. "Medical marijuana reminds people how inhumane our drug laws can be," said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance. "Morgenthau can be a tremendously important ally on both fronts," said Randy Credico of the William Moses Kunstler Fund, who has spent seven years organizing relatives of Rockefeller inmates. The district attorney promised more of the broader issue this week. So where is George Pataki? So far, the governor has said he is for Rockefeller reform, but he's been lukewarm to anything but the narrowest proposals. And on medical marijuana, he's expressed vague reservations without ever taking a firm stand. I was hoping to clear that up yesterday. But his criminal-justice coordinator, Chauncey Parker, was apparently too busy to return calls. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake