Pubdate: Thu, 9 Jun 2005
Source: Collegiate Times (VA Tech,  Edu)
Copyright: 2005 Collegiate Times
Contact:  http://www.collegiatetimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699
Author: Michael Krawitz
ote: Michael Krawitz is a regular columnist for the Collegiate Times.
Cited: Coalition for Rescheduling Cannabis www.drugscience.org
Cited: American Alliance for Medical Cannabis www.letfreedomgrow.com
Cited: Americans for Safe Access www.safeaccessnow.org
Cited: California NORML www.canorml.org
Cited: Drug Policy Forum of Texas www.dpft.org
Cited: National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws www.norml.org
Cited: Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative www.rxcbc.org
Cited: Patients Out of Time www.medicalcannabis.com
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Raich (Gonzales v. Raich)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MEDICAL CANNABIS USE TAKES A BLOW FROM CONGRESS

The United States Supreme Court decides medical marijuana case.

In case No. 03-1454. Argued November 29, 2004--Decided June 6, 2005

 From the United States Supreme Court Syllabus that comes along with it's 
ruling:

"California's Compassionate Use Act authorizes limited marijuana use for 
medicinal purposes. Respondents Raich and Monson are California residents 
who both use doctor-recommended marijuana for serious medical conditions. 
After federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents seized and 
destroyed all six of Monson's cannabis plants, respondents brought this 
action seeking injunctive and declaratory relief prohibiting the 
enforcement of the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA) to the extent it 
prevents them from possessing, obtaining, or manufacturing cannabis for 
their personal medical use. Respondents claim that enforcing the CSA 
against them would violate the Commerce Clause and other constitutional 
provisions. The District Court denied respondents' motion for a preliminary 
injunction, but the Ninth Circuit reversed, finding that they had 
demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on the claim that the CSA is an 
unconstitutional exercise of Congress' Commerce Clause authority as applied 
to the intrastate, noncommercial cultivation and possession of cannabis for 
personal medical purposes as recommended by a patient's physician pursuant 
to valid California state law. The court relied heavily on United States v. 
Lopez, U.S. 549, and United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 20 598, to hold 
that this separate class of purely local activities was beyond the reach of 
federal power.

Held: Congress' Commerce Clause authority includes the power to prohibit 
the local cultivation and use of marijuana in compliance with California 
law. Pp. 6-31." The reform community is in a defensive posture after a 
ruling is handed down confirming the far-reaching ability of the federal 
drug police given them by acts of congress.

It is a foregone conclusion that this loss has hit many very hard. I refer 
you to my previous column where I list individuals who may face immediate 
negative effects from this ruling. But is this loss a bad thing for the 
overall efforts to remove criminal penalties for medicinal use of Cannabis 
or against efforts to make Cannabis more available to those patients who 
need it? I don't think so.

There is an old saying in law that the best way to get rid of a bad law is 
to enforce it. Perhaps with a clear defeat here the United States Congress 
will finally get off it's high horse and correct the injustice that was 
created in 1970 when the "new" law called the CSA would, for the first time 
ever, outlaw the medicinal use of Cannabis.

There are other avenues that must be explored as well. A coalition of 
thousands of patients finds its headquarters right here in Virginia near 
Charlottesville. This coalition has as one of its leaders a renowned 
researcher, who also calls Virginia home, Jon Gettman. Jon made the 
following report in High Times magazine on October 8, 2002, "The Coalition 
for Rescheduling Cannabis, the largest coalition in the history of drug 
policy reform, has launched an extensive legal and scientific challenge to 
the Drug Enforcement Administration's prohibition of medical cannabis use 
in the United States. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) asserts 
that cannabis has no medical value and that public support for medical 
marijuana use is based on misperceptions about its safety and 
effectiveness. The DEA also asserts that cannabis has a high potential for 
abuse similar to that of cocaine and heroin. The DEA makes these claims not 
only to justify their refusal to let cannabis be used medically, but also 
to justify the arrest and harassment of patients and caregivers, both in 
states that have given legal approval to marijuana's medical use and in the 
rest of the nation."

The DEA has never provided comprehensive scientific evidence to support 
their self-serving accusations about the medical use of cannabis; they 
claim these assertions are true simply because they, the DEA, say they are 
true, as if the laws of the United States gives them the exclusive power to 
dictate what are and what are not the true findings of scientific research.

The tool with which to force the DEA to recognize and fulfill their 
statutory obligation to facilitate medical access to cannabis is an obscure 
administrative regulatory process know as "rescheduling". The process 
requires the DEA to re-evaluate, and if it can, re-justify its prohibition 
on medical access to cannabis.

The administrative petition being filed by the Coalition for Rescheduling 
Cannabis is a comprehensive review of recent scientific literature 
regarding each of these important issues. Numerous patient advocacy and 
drug policy reform organizations, along with this author and HIGH TIMES, 
have joined together in this Coalition to mount a sustained and 
comprehensive challenge to the DEA's prohibition on access to medical 
cannabis and refute the federal government's ongoing misinformation 
campaign about cannabis and the scientific record. Participating in the 
Coalition are the American Alliance for Medical Cannabis, Americans for 
Safe Access, California NORML, the Drug Policy Forum of Texas, Iowans for 
Medical Cannabis, the Los Angeles Cannabis Resource Cooperative, the 
National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws, New Mexicans for 
Compassionate Use, the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative, Patients Out of 
Time as well as other interested individuals.

As of this writing Jon's petition has passed DEA scrutiny and has been 
passed on to HHS where it now sits awaiting divine intervention.

One of the organizations leading this effort, Patients Out of Time, out of 
Howardsville, Virginia has conducted three college level courses at US 
universities with the last here in Charlottesville last year. They have 
never had one person come forward to ever dispute the truth of any of the 
hundred or so Lectures conducted at their bi-annual conferences. Patients 
Out of Times next conference will be in Santa Barbara, California in 2006 
and there is an effort being conducted to bring in state law makers from 
around the country to learn the truth about Cannabis as medicine. Please 
suggest attendance to your legislator and contact Patients Out of Time as 
well. You can find more information about the next conference at their 
website: http://www.medicalcannabis.com/

Tonite I will pray that we quickly find a way out of this dark time. I have 
spent a great deal of time volunteering with very, very sick individuals 
and I have seen Cannabis remove dozens of lines of pain from a struggling 
patients face in seconds. The DEA has a powerful weapon in their hands and 
I think their future perhaps even their soul is on the line in how they 
wield it. Dear Lord I pray that you guide the DEA to act responsibly and 
with compassion and I pray you watch over those in pain tonite so they know 
they are not alone.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake