Pubdate: Tue, 28 Mar 2006 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: A3 Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Claire Cooper, Bee Legal Affairs Writer Related: http://www.angeljustice.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Angel+Raich (Angel Raich) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) PATIENT'S POT PLEA MEETS SKEPTICISM Judges' Questions Hint They Won't Protect Medicinal Use. PASADENA - A frail medicinal pot user from Oakland took the federal government to court again Monday but left with little encouragement. Judges of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, who had ruled in favor of Angel Raich in an earlier phase of the same case, sounded skeptical this time. They questioned repeatedly why she was seeking their protection when she's never been prosecuted for using marijuana, which her doctor swears she needs to stay alive. The judges suggested that the appropriate way to assert her legal rights would be to raise a defense of medical necessity after being charged with a crime - a situation that a government lawyer called "incredibly unlikely." "The federal government always has focused on large-scale distributors and growers," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Quinlivan, who argued the case against Raich's request for an injunction. He said he knew of no federal marijuana prosecutions based solely on personal possession. Raich, now 40, was the plaintiff in last year's U.S. Supreme Court case concerning the power of the federal government to regulate marijuana within the borders of states that permit medicinal use. After winning a 2-1 decision from the 9th Circuit, she lost the states' rights argument 6-3 in the Supreme Court. But other issues raised in her case remain unresolved, including the "medical necessity" doctrine as it applies to medicinal pot users and a closely related argument that the Constitution gives people a fundamental right to make their own "life-shaping" decisions. Raich, who suffers from multiple ailments, including an inoperable brain tumor, has a sworn statement from her doctor that without pot, she'll suffer greatly and die of starvation. Her lawyer, Boston University law professor Randy Barnett, asked the judges to recognize a right to use medicinal pot only for his client and those like her, people "who will die if they don't get cannabis" because other drugs fail to control deadly conditions - the nausea associated with chemotherapy or the wasting syndrome associated with AIDS, for example. The government could require proof, he said. "It seems to me this would be a regulatory nightmare," said C. Arlen Beam, a visiting 8th Circuit judge who was assigned to the case. "How would you narrow the use of this?" asked Judge Harry Pregerson of Woodland Hills. "There are a lot of prescriptions out there. Things get abused." Judge Richard Paez of Pasadena asked whether Barnett's argument would "fit more comfortably in the context of a criminal prosecution." Barnett, however, said prosecution isn't Raich's only worry. A more likely scenario is that federal agents will confiscate her pot supply without prosecuting her. That has been the pattern in federal anti-pot enforcement in California in recent years. "Seizure is tantamount to a death sentence," Barnett argued. Although judges' questions during oral arguments are not a reliable indication of the way they will rule, Barnett seemed to fare no better with his claim that Raich has a fundamental right to use a drug that isn't overwhelmingly accepted as beneficial. Beam asked how the right could be fundamental when there's still a substantial argument. Quinlivan argued that a minority of states aren't enough to create a fundamental right. Eleven states, including seven in the 9th Circuit, have functioning medicinal marijuana laws. All of them operate in tension with the federal government's near-absolute ban on pot. The Supreme Court has ruled twice against different attempts to place pot on firmer legal footing, both times overturning the 9th Circuit. But in 2003 it let stand a 9th Circuit decision barring federal sanctions against doctors who recommend pot to their patients under the California law. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake