Pubdate: 11 August 1997 Source: The Recorder, the daily legal newspaper of California Contact: © The Recorder, Monday, August 11, 1997 Stressed Out? Get Hip to Proposition 215, Man By Robert Ablon For San Francisco criminal defense attorney J. Tony Serra, getting high ain't what it used to be. In at least one respect, it's better. Serra claims he's been getting stoned nightly for more than 30 years, smoking about three joints a day to stave off the symptoms of his "highstress lifestyle" and to stir his creative energies. But Serra says he's been forced to smoke behind closed doors, clandestinely engaging in an illegal activity. Not anymore. Emboldened by the passage last year of Proposition 215, which legalized marijuana for medical uses, Serra says he has come out of the closet to "join the thousands who have used marijuana both epistemologically and medicinally." Serra, an attorney at Serra, Lichter, Daar, Bustamante, Michael & Wilson, says that about three months ago he obtained a doctor's recommendation the prerequisite for legal usage of pot which has enabled him to get high on the up and up. "My doctor sat me down for three hours and went over my full history and lifestyle," says Serra, who declined to name the doctor. "And it was derived from that that I'm in a highstress category." San Francisco Assistant District Attorney Vernon Grigg, head of the narcotics division, says the office will not investigate whether stress is a legitimate medical condition. "This is a medical matter between Mr. Serra and his doctor," Grigg says. Serra maintains that trial lawyers in particular are plagued by alcoholism, sleeplessness, high blood pressure, ulcers, heart attacks and "in general uptight, preoccupied" personality traits. "When I was in law school, they said we'd have the lowest life span of any professional," says the 58yearold attorney. "And they were right; I've watched my contemporaries fall like flies." Serra, a member of San Francisco's Cannabis Cultivators Club, says he's been spared any major physical illnesses, and he attributes his good health to daily doses of dope. Moreover, in a press release sent out on Aug. 4, Serra urges other professionals to follow his lead. "Stockbrokers, bankers, real estate marketeers, politicians, doctors and lawyers should all seek a doctor's recommendation to avoid the psychological and physiological consequences of stress," Serra wrote. "It is time to come off the booze and get on the cannabis!" As a selfdescribed marijuana activist, Serra dismisses the notion that the drug impairs mental processes. At the same time, Serra says he limits his intake to offhours occasions. "You can't practice law stoned so I don't smoke during the day," Serra says. "But I work 6080 hours a week, I'm a workaholic, and pot has never affected my ability to concentrate. I want other people to know that."