Pubdate: Thu, 15 Mar 2007 Source: News Tribune, The (Tacoma, WA) Copyright: 2007 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.thenewstribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/442 Author: Jesse McKinley, New York Times Alert: Medical Marijuana Across America www.mapinc.org/alert/0343.html Cited: Angel Raich http://www.angeljustice.org Cited: The Drug Law Reform Project of the American Civil Liberties Union http://www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/index.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Angel+Raich (Angel Raich) Boookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ed+Rosenthal (Ed Rosenthal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) SICK WOMAN LOSES APPEAL IN POT CASE SAN FRANCISCO -- Federal appellate judges in San Francisco ruled on Wednesday that a terminally ill woman using marijuana was not immune from federal prosecution simply because of her condition, and -- in a separate case -- a federal judge dismissed most of the charges against a prominent advocate for the drug. The woman, Angel McClary Raich, says she uses marijuana on a doctor's recommendation to treat an inoperable brain tumor and other serious ailments. Raich, 41, asserts that the drug effectively keeps her alive, by stimulating appetite and relieving pain in a way that prescription drugs do not. She wept when she heard the decision. "It's not every day in this country that someone's right to life is taken from them," said Raich, appearing frail during a news conference in Oakland, Calif., where she lives. "Today you are looking at someone who really is walking dead." In 2002, she and three other plaintiffs sued the government, seeking relief from federal laws outlawing marijuana. The case made its way to the Supreme Court, and in 2005, the court ruled against Raich, finding the federal government had the authority to prohibit and prosecute the possession and use of marijuana for medical purposes. But the justices sent elements of Raich's case back to a lower court to consider. On Wednesday, a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that while they sympathized with Raich's plight and had seen "uncontroverted evidence" that she needed marijuana to survive, she lacked the legal grounds to exempt herself from federal law. California was the first state to legalize medical marijuana, in a 1996 ballot measure. That measure set off a decade-long fight over such legal issues as state rights and so-called "common law necessity" defenses like Raich's. In the other ruling Wednesday, a judge in U.S. District Court handed a victory to marijuana advocate Ed Rosenthal. Rosenthal, 62, said federal prosecutors had targeted him with an array of drug, money laundering and tax evasion charges, many of which closely mirrored charges he was convicted of in 2003, when he was growing medical marijuana under California's law at a dispensary in Oakland. That conviction was overturned last year. Rosenthal had suggested the prosecution was being vindictive. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake