Pubdate: Wed, 15 Feb 2006 Source: Anderson Valley Advertiser (CA) Column: Cannabinotes Copyright: 2006 Anderson Valley Advertiser Contact: http://www.theava.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2667 Author: Fred Gardner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Mikuriya (Tod Mikuriya, MD) DR MIKURIYA'S APPEAL - -A Last-Minute Twist Led by doctors who learned nothing about cannabis in medical school and never employed it in clinical practice, the Medical Board of California decided in April 2004 to discipline the state's leading authority on the subject. Tod Mikuriya, MD, was put on probation for five years, subjected to supervision by a "practice monitor," and fined $75,000 for the cost of his own prosecution. Instead of accepting the punishment, Mikuriya, 74, a Berkeley-based psychiatrist, has gone to great expense to appeal in Superior Court. "It's the principle of the thing," he says without irony. The lawyer now handling Mikuriya's appeal, Scott Candell, expected to get a ruling Feb. 10 from Sacramento Superior Court Judge Judy Holzer Hersher. On the eve of the ruling Candell said he was hopeful, not just because the Board's punishment of Mikuriya seemed outrageous as he reviewed the record, but because he had drawn a judge with a pro-patient perspective. Literally -it was Holzer Hersher who upheld the one-nurse-to-five-patient staffing ratio last year when Gov. Schwarzenegger, on behalf of California hospital owners, was pushing for one-to-six. It would be hard to overstate the importance of Mikuriya's contributions to the modern medical marijuana movement. The millions of Americans who smoked marijuana in social settings in the '60s and '70s and '80s knew virtually nothing about its history as medicine. In 1971 -as doctors who had actually prescribed cannabis-based tinctures were retiring and Prohibition was extinguishing knowledge on the subject- Mikuriya compiled and published an anthology of articles from the pre-prohibition medical literature. He kept the flame of scholarship flickering through the dark ages; and when interest was rekindled in the wake of the AIDS epidemic (marijuana enabled patients to eat and fend off nausea), it was to Mikuriya that Dennis Peron and other activists turned for education and advice. In the early 1990s Mikuriya interviewed hundreds of patients from Peron's San Francisco buyers club and began expanding the list of conditions reportedly treatable with cannabis. He encouraged Peron to add the all-important phrase "... any other condition for which marijuana provides relief" to the first sentence of Proposition 215. After it passed in November '96, Mikuriya was one of very few doctors in the state known to approve cannabis use by patients with conditions other than AIDS or cancer. He successfully urged the California Medical Association, which had opposed Prop 215, to recognize the mounting evidence as to safety and efficacy and to publish practice guidelines for doctors issuing approvals to patients. To the law-enforcement establishment that had fiercely opposed Prop 215, Mikuriya was seen as public enemy number two. (They hate Peron even more.) In December, 1996 -after urgent strategy sessions in Washington with California Attorney General Dan Lungren- Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey and other federal officials attacked Mikuriya by name at a press conference and threatened to revoke the prescription-writing privileges of any California doctor who approved cannabis use by patients. This threat was ruled illegal by a federal judge in the Spring of '97 following a suit by UCSF AIDS specialist Marcus Conant, MD. The Conant ruling was a great victory for the movement, encouraging more doctors to approve cannabis use. To the prohibitionists its implications were tactical: with the feds enjoined, it would be up to Lungren and the state medical board to punish Mikuriya and any other pro-cannabis doctors who appeared on the horizon. (It is widely assumed that whereas the feds oppose the medical use of marijuana, California officials have supported it. Not true. There has been a division of prosecutorial labor, with the feds leaving it to the state to keep the docs intimidated.) The investigation of Mikuriya went on for years. The AG's office elicited complaints against him from police, sheriffs and district attorneys in at least 11 counties, and sent an operative feigning symptoms to see him as a patient. "The investigation was fraudulent," says Mikuriya. "It was a round-up of accusations from law enforcement without any attempt to check their validity. No patients were ever questioned, no family members or caregivers were ever questioned, no attempt was made to determine if harm had ever occurred to a patient as a result of the treatment I authorized. It was an investigation in name only." At a hearing in September, 2003, the AG relied on an expert witness who had never issued a medical-marijuana approval. An administrative law judge duly determined that Mikuriya had "approved the use of a controlled substance without conducting a prior good faith examination, and failed to maintain adequate and accurate medical records in the care and treatment of 16 patients." None of the 16 patients had complained about Mikuriya; in fact, all expressed gratitude for his treatment. All the complaints had come from law enforcement and none alleged harm to a patient. Nevertheless, the medical board put Mikuriya on probation and levied the $75,000 fine. Arguments in Candell's appeal brief on behalf of Mikuriya include: * Dr. Mikuriya's speech is protected by the First Amendment, i.e. his prosecution by the state Attorney General represents an end-run around the Conant injunction. * The qualified immunity granted doctors by Prop 215 prohibits the imposition of discipline against Dr. Mikuriya under the facts of the case. * Dr. Mikuriya followed the acceptable standard of care for a medical marijuana consultant. * Dr. Mikuriya did not prescribe, dispense, or furnish marijuana. * Marijuana is not a dangerous drug as defined by the Business and Professions code. Candell recounted these arguments in a media advisory the day before the ruling was due from Holzer Hersher. So imagine his surprise (and Dr. Mikuriya's) when he arrived in court on the morning of Friday, Feb. 10, and learned that the case had been transferred from the humane Judge Judy to a Republican hack named Jack Sapunor. A presiding judge newly installed in January, Roland Candee, had made the switcheroo and nobody had informed Candell. One knew the minute one walked into Sapunor's courtroom that Mikuriya didn't have a chance. The class system in this country is now so imposing that people are generally identifiable -they signal their relationship to the system itself-by looks, attire, bearing, etc. Both standing within and attitude towards the system can be inferred from appearance. Judge Sapunor looked like a mean white man devoted to the status quo: every hair in place, tie too tight, black robe too tight, smiling prissily and showing elaborate verbal courtesy to the party he was in the process of fucking... And so, indeed, he listened politely as Mikuriya's earnest young attorney framed the issues, then ruled for the prosecution on all but one minor point (which won't affect Mikuriya's punishment and serves to create a false impression of equity). It could have been Mark Tansil in Sonoma railroading Alan Martinez, or Eric DuTemple in Sonora sitting in judgment on Robert Hemstalk. The state is filled with these heartless political clones appointed by governors who opposed Prop 215. Most owe their appointments to Gov. Pete Wilson, who vetoed medical marijuana measures that had passed the state legislature in 1994 and '95. Now, in a sense, his operatives are vetoing Prop 215. Mikuriya must decide whether to take his case to the court of appeal. His statement to C Notes: "I continue to hope that my case will expose the conspiracy between California and federal officials to block the implementation of Prop 215. No sooner had the state law been passed by the voters than Attorney General Lungren and associates went to Washington to discuss with leaders of the Drug Czar's office, the DEA, and the Department of Justice scenarios for sabotaging it. On December 30, 1996, I was attacked by name at a press conference by Gen. Barry McCaffrey and Janet Reno, and California doctors were threatened with reprisals if they approved cannabis use by patients. In response, California doctors and patients filed a suit -Conant et al vs. McCaffrey- and got an injunction preventing the feds from carrying out their unconstitutional threats. This left it up to the state to keep California doctors intimated, and the medical board and the attorney general's office have done so effectively by disciplining me and by investigating more than 12 other California doctors for issuing cannabis approvals." Mikuriya's appeal briefs and other documents related to the case can be read at http://althealthsys.net/medicolegal.html. Contributions to his cause can be made out to CCRMG (which stands for California Cannabis Research Medical Group) and sent to p.o. box 9143, Berkeley, CA 94709. The CCRMG is a 501(c)3 non-profit. Afterthought: The suit establishing the right of doctors and patients to discuss marijuana as a treatment option could have been filed as Mikuriya v. McCaffrey -it was Dr. Mikuriya, after all, that the Drug Czar had attacked-but the key organizer, Dan Abrahamson of the Drug Policy Alliance, decided that Marcus Conant would make a better lead plaintiff. Conant's name invoked the AIDS epidemic and he had good standing within the medical establishment... On the other hand, Mikuriya needed the protection in real time: a stream of Californians whose regular doctors were unwilling to approve their cannabis use - -or who were unwilling to even ask their doctors-were consulting him every day. Perhaps if the protective federal injunction had been granted in a landmark case called Mikuriya v. McCaffrey, the state medical board would have been reluctant to prosecute the lead plaintiff lest the prosecution be seen by the public as an end-run around the injunction, and/or payback. Here's another what-if: had Dennis Peron heeded Abrahamson's faction instead of Tod Mikuriya, Prop 215 would have referred to a finite list of grave medical conditions and a much smaller set of Californians would have qualified for its protection... Speaking of mean white men, Rep. Dennis Hastert has now lost all definition. The head, the jowls, the shoulders, the gut, all have slid into a big pile of glowering MWM. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom