Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 2009
Source: USA Today (US)
Page: 3A
Copyright: 2009 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc
Contact:  http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/index.htm
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466
Author: William M. Welch, USA TODAY
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries

MEDICAL POT SALES BOOMING

Officials Struggle to Restrict Stores to Intent of Laws

LOS ANGELES - Almost 13 years after California became the first state 
to allow the sale of marijuana for some medical conditions storefront 
purveyors of the drug are nearly as easy to find as a taco stand.

Yet police and prosecutors say the law is vague on who can sell pot 
and in what circumstances. They worry that the state unwittingly 
created safe havens for drug pushers who are doping the population 
with immunity.

"They appear to be run by drug dealers who see an opening in the 
market and a way to make a fast buck," says San Diego district 
attorney Bonnie Dumanis, who says every pot store her office has 
looked at is operating illegally.

The tangle of regulations and alleged criminality that has followed 
in the aftermath of California's first-in-the-nation law allowing 
medical marijuana is hardly restricted to the Golden State.

Thirteen states, from New England to the Pacific Northwest, have 
passed laws by ballot or legislative action permitting marijuana 
possession for some medical reasons even though the drug is illegal 
under federal law.

Some, like Rhode Island, where a medical-marijuana law passed in 
2006, officials are still trying to figure out how to set up places 
where people can buy the drug. In Colorado, which approved sales of 
medical marijuana in 2000, cities are passing moratoriums to halt the 
blossoming of marijuana stores. New Mexico's lone non-profit licensed 
to distribute pot is overwhelmed by demand.

In Washington state, a legal dispute rages over whether the law 
permits people to just grow their own pot or also buy it from dispensaries.

Stewart Richlin, lawyer for more than 150 medical-marijuana 
collectives in Southern California, says states that legalize medical 
marijuana must accept the commerce that follows.

"Once we acknowledge patients have a right to cannabis, they have to 
get it somewhere," he says.

The medical-marijuana movement was begun by advocates who say pot can 
provide relief for a wide range of illnesses, from AIDS to arthritis. 
Why should people suffer when pot can help, they say?

"It's highly effective in certain circumstances," San Diego physician 
Bob Blake says.

Critics say a law meant to benefit a relatively few number of 
patients is being exploited by entrepreneurs who are making big money.

Los Angeles Police Lt. Paul Torrence says the department investigated 
a clinic in the fashionable Venice area that was doing up to $140,000 
in sales a month. In San Diego, where authorities this month shut 
down 14 sellers of medical marijuana, Dumanis said at least one was 
operating on that scale as well, over $700,000 in six months.

City Council members Janice Hahn and Dennis Zine, in proposing Los 
Angeles tax sales of medical marijuana, point to Oakland, where they 
say four licensed dispensaries had gross sales of $19.6 million in 2008.

"It's a very, very profitable business," says Torrence, of LAPD's 
gang and narcotics division. "That's clearly outside the boundaries 
of the voters' intention in passing Prop 215."

California voters approved that proposition in 1996. The law leaves 
regulation up to local governments, and there's a vast difference in 
how receptive each is to medicinal pot.

State Attorney General Jerry Brown issued guidelines that said 
non-profit cooperatives and collectives are legal if certain 
requirements are met.

In Los Angeles, the growth of storefronts selling marijuana has been explosive.

Torrence says there are more than 400 registered with the city. But 
there may be many more - as many as 800 applications have been filed 
and many operate without approval, says Jane Usher, special assistant 
city attorney.

"The practical reality has proven to be these facilities have by and 
large opened without any kind of registration, application, nothing," 
Usher said.

Colorado says it's beginning to see something similar. Its law 
created a state registry to track patients authorized to use medical 
marijuana but made no provision for sellers.

"They have kind of sprung up rather recently in numbers across the 
state," says Mike Saccone, spokesman for Attorney General John 
Suthers. "Law enforcement is concerned."

To qualify for medical marijuana in California, patients must have a 
doctor's "recommendation." Prescriptions for pot are prohibited by 
federal law. Advertisements abound from doctors who recommend medical 
marijuana to qualifying patients.

Blake, 60, who went into a practice devoted to medical marijuana 
after 28 years as an emergency room physician, says he doesn't use it 
himself but sees pot as a safer alternative to morphine, OxyContin 
and other conventional painkillers.

"I never saw a person die of a marijuana overdose. Narcotics 
overdose? You bet," he said.

Police are skeptical about the medical need in most cases, Torrence said.

"I have yet to see a person enter the clinic that appears to have any 
kind of medical problem," he said. "Most of the people I see going in 
are young people that appear very healthy."

[sidebar]

13 STATES IN 13 YEARS

Thirteen states have laws that legalize medical marijuana:

State 	Year passed 	How passed

California 	1996 	Ballot measure

Alaska	1998 	Ballot measure

Oregon 	1998 	Ballot measure

Washington 	1998 	Ballot measure

Maine 	1999 	Ballot measure

Colorado 	2000 	Ballot measure

Hawaii 	2000	Legislature

Nevada 	2000 	Ballot measure

Montana 	2004 	Ballot measure

Vermont 	2004 	Legislature

Rhode Island 	2006 	Legislature

New Mexico 	2007 	Legislature

Michigan 	2008 	Ballot measure

Source: ProCon.org 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake