Pubdate: Fri, 8 Oct 2010 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: 1A, Front Page Copyright: 2010 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/0n4cG7L1 Website: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Cited: Proposition 19 http://yeson19.com/ Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?272 (Proposition 19) PROP. 19 PASSAGE COULD SPARK U.S.-CALIFORNIA LEGAL WAR OVER POT Backers of California's Proposition 19 call it a landmark challenge to America's war on drugs. But passage of the initiative to legalize pot for recreational use may open up a legal war between California and the federal government. Some fear a renewed surge of federal raids, similar to actions that shut down medical pot shops, targeted suppliers and doctors after California voters passed Proposition 215, its medical marijuana law, in 1996. Even some fervent proponents of the initiative to allow anyone 21 and over to smoke pot say federal authorities would quickly sue California to overturn the new law. "I have no doubt that the feds will file suit if Proposition 19 passes," said Dale Gieringer, California director for the pro-legalization National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws. In an Aug. 24 letter, nine former administrators for the Drug Enforcement Administration urged Attorney General Eric Holder to bring suit against California -- just as the Obama administration sued Arizona when that state passed a controversial law aimed at illegal immigrants. "The California proposition is not a close call," wrote the ex-DEA administrators, including Robert Bonner, the former supervising U.S. attorney in Los Angeles. "It will be a clear conflict with established federal law." Reached Wednesday in Mexico City, where he was attending a drug policy conference, Bonner said the California measure conflicts with United Nations treaties signed to prevent the spread of psychoactive drugs. "The United States has treaties that would be violated if Proposition 19 were enacted. It would send a terrible signal to countries of the world," he said. The U.S. Justice Department isn't saying how it would respond if Proposition 19 passes. "The Department of Justice will continue to focus its enforcement resources on significant traffickers of illegal drugs, including marijuana," said Justice Department spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler in Washington, D.C. "It is premature to speculate what steps we would take in the event that California passes its ballot measure." Backlash Could Hurt Medical Pot Users Last year, Attorney General Eric Holder declared the federal government would no longer target medical marijuana operations in states permitting medical use. California and 13 other states now permit medical marijuana. And federal raids on medical pot establishments -- particularly those catering to the seriously ill -- stirred political sympathies in favor of medical marijuana. Now legal observers, such as Santa Clara University law professor Gerald Uelmen, say Proposition 19 could upset the accord that federal agents and California established with medical use. "I think it will open up a new order of conflict between the state and the feds," Uelmen said. "The feds resisted (Proposition 215) from the get-go. But I think we finally wore them down. "Now, if we open the door to lawful cultivation and distribution for recreational use, I think there will be a very strong reaction." In 2001, Uelmen unsuccessfully argued before the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative serving medical marijuana patients. The court, in a decision written by Justice Clarence Thomas, declared that marijuana was still illegal, and a "medical exception" defense for the Oakland pot club was invalid under federal law. In a 2005 case, the high court also ruled against California petitioner Angel Raich, whose six-plant medical marijuana garden was raided by DEA agents after Butte County authorities declined to file state drug charges against him. In the second ruling, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that although "California has been a pioneer in the regulation of marijuana," enforcement of Federal Controlled Substance Act prohibitions against pot remain "a valid exercise of federal power." President Barack Obama is opposed to legalizing marijuana. His 2010 National Drug Control Strategy statement declares: "This administration firmly opposes the legalization of marijuana or any other illicit drug." Still, retired Orange Superior Court Judge James Gray, a backer of Proposition 19, said he believes public acceptance of marijuana will diminish the federal response. "I cannot conceive that the Obama administration would thumb its nose at the voters of the state of California," Gray said. Passage Could Put State, Federal Law in Conflict Proposition 19 would allow Californians over 21 to possess marijuana for recreational use and permit them to grow pot in small residential spaces. It would also allow local governments to tax retail sales and production. Zenia Gilg, a San Francisco attorney who handles medical marijuana cases, said federal authorities are unlikely to target average Californians if Proposition 19 passes. But she said they may well raid large-scale marijuana producers. In Oakland, producers readying industrial growing rooms for medical pot are eying expansion into legal recreational weed. The city has already approved a conditional tax if Proposition 19 passes. Gilg says that may be a dilemma for federal agents. "If they're going to prosecute the guy at the till (of a marijuana business) and not the city or county, they run into a political quagmire," Gilg said. "Because they're not going to prosecute the city or county." In California's medical marijuana market, dispensaries account for more than $100 million in sales taxes, according to state estimates. But Uelmen said the mere act of paying taxes on recreational marijuana sales could constitute acknowledgment of a federal crime. "To pay the taxes will require us to admit that, in effect, we're violating federal law," he said. While the law may side with the federal government, Los Angeles marijuana lawyer Bruce Margolin said politics does not. He points to decreased acceptance of medical pot raids. In 2002, a DEA raid on a Santa Cruz medical pot commune for sick and dying patients produced such a backlash that the city and county sued the federal government. A court settlement banned future DEA raids as long as the operation was legal under state law. In a high-profile medical marijuana case, California cannabis growing guru Ed Rosenthal was sentenced to a single day in jail in 2007 -- despite a federal conviction for illegal cultivation. A U.S. District Court in San Francisco also stopped the DEA from punishing doctors or threatening to revoke their licenses for recommending marijuana to patients. Still, Donald Heller, a former Sacramento assistant U.S. attorney, said passage of Proposition 19 would give federal authorities no choice but to act. "I think this pushes it beyond the edge," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake