Pubdate: Wed, 21 Sep 2011 Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT) Copyright: 2011 The Billings Gazette Contact: http://billingsgazette.com/app/contact/?contact=letter Website: http://www.billingsgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/515 Author: Charles S. Johnson, Gazette State Bureau PANEL FINDS MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW MURKY HELENA -- Law enforcement officials and a criminal defense attorney said at a conference Tuesday that they find the Montana medical marijuana law ambiguous and leaving a lot open to legal interpretation because of conflicting federal law. Conference moderator Lee Banville, a University of Montana professor, asked the panelists if law enforcement had the tools "that help you sort of navigate this water between the complicated space between a federally illegal product and a state-sanctioned system." Blue Corneliusen, a deputy Cascade County sheriff and president of the Montana Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association, said law authorities have tried to figure out how to take Montana voters' mandate to legalize medical marijuana in 2004 and "put it in the scope of still fighting crime." "Initially, because it was passed by initiative, there was a lot of ambiguity in it, which led to quite a bit of gray area for the application of criminal law enforcement," the deputy sheriff said. He praised some of the changes passed by the 2011 Legislature to clarify the law. "We fight crime," Corneliusen said. "That's what law enforcement does. We don't determine what the crimes are. Those are set by the Legislature, and we enforce those." Agreeing about the ambiguity of the law was Josh Van de Wetering, a Missoula criminal defense lawyer, former federal prosecutor and adjunct professor at the University of Montana law school. "I think it's very much still a moving target," he said. "I think it's very much Alice in Wonderland. The federal patina over everything, I think, creates a lot of confusion and a lot of frustration for people." If anything, the situation is getting "more foggy," and both law enforcement and his clients want clarity, Van de Wetering said in a speech at the Burton K. Wheeler Institute's conference on medical marijuana. Retired Denver police officer Tony Ryan said the confusion is part of a much larger issue. "It is the entire war on drugs that creates this entire problem," said Ryan, who is on the board of the group known as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. "Without the War on Drugs, we wouldn't have these issues with marijuana. We wouldn't have to have the discussion about medical marijuana because people would be allowed to have it as medicine." He told how some countries had decriminalized drugs, taking crime out of the drug problem and making it a health issue instead. "Law enforcement can go out and enforce laws that mean something to people," Ryan said, drawing applause, adding: "There's rapists and child molesters and people with computers now that want to meet your 14-year-old daughter in the dark in the park, and I think that's more of a threat than somebody that wants to smoke marijuana." Ryan said he wasn't a narcotics officer but instead focused on bank robberies in his 36-year career as a Denver police officer. Van de Wetering said if people want the entire class of marijuana crimes eliminated in federal law, they must lobby their members of Congress. But he warned, "There are a lot of folks in Congress for the last 30 or 40 years that got a lot of mileage out of pushing the war on drugs, and they've gotten re-elected that way." Other possibility, Van de Wetering said, would be for Congress to pass a law to reschedule marijuana to give it a lower ranking under the controlled substances act. Another option, he said, is to establish a national medical marijuana program. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.