Source: San Jose Mercury News Contact: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 Author: Sue Hutchison at the Mercury News, 310 University Ave., Palo Alto, Calif. 94301, or email CANCER VICTIM'S LEGACY HELPING POT LAW SURVIVE IT'S BEEN more than a year since cancer killed Karyn Sinunu's pal Bernie. They'd been friends for a quartercentury, since they were nextdoor neighbors consulting and commiserating over their kids' scraped knees and class field trips. They were friends long before Sinunu became assistant district attorney for Santa Clara County and before Bernie learned she'd have to raise her four daughters while battling a malignancy so vicious her entire stomach would be removed before it was all over at age 52. Sinunu doesn't mention Bernie's last name when she talks about her publicly. But she thinks it's important to talk about her because Bernie taught Sinunu something that's made the last days of life a little easier for terminally ill people in this county. Like a lot of prosecutors, Sinunu had taken a dim view of Proposition 215, the ballot measure to legalize medicinal marijuana. But when her buddy Bernie, a PTA mom who rarely had even a glass of wine, began smoking pot in the final months of her life, Sinunu reconsidered her position. When she saw that marijuana was the only thing that could ease Bernie's crippling bouts of nausea long enough to enjoy the last days with her family, Sinunu began to see Proposition 215 very differently than other California prosecutors, including the attorney general. SHE found that as one of Bernie's many friends in law enforcement, she didn't have much of a moral conflict about Bernie's smoking pot. The doctors had recommended it, but Sinunu didn't know where Bernie got it. And she didn't ask. ``Bernie was a mom from another era. To see her in those last days was like watching June Cleaver toking up,'' Sinunu said when I spoke with her in her office on Christmas Eve. ``I had thought 215 was bogus. But when I saw marijuana was the only thing that made Bernie feel better, I was ashamed.'' And that has a lot to do with why this is one of the few counties enlightened enough not to treat medicinal marijuana smokers like dope fiends. It has a lot to do with why Sinunu had AIDS patient Ed Willis' confiscated pot plants returned to his Mountain View home last spring because he had them on doctor's orders. WHEN Proposition 215 passed last year, District Attorney George Kennedy, who also knew Bernie, asked Sinunu to hammer out the county's policy on complying with the law. And what they learned from Bernie has meant the cannabis club on Meridian Avenue has not been hounded out of existence by San Jose police, despite an appeals court ruling this month banning the sale of marijuana to patients. ``That ruling was based on what goes on at the San Francisco marijuana club,'' Sinunu said. ``People are not smoking at the (San Jose) club or selling marijuana on the street. In fact, they've even turned in a couple of people to us who had phony doctors' notes.'' Politicians and prosecutors have gotten a lot of familyvalues mileage out of trumpeting a tough, uncompromising approach to the ``war on drugs.'' Maybe that's why it took a June Cleaverstyle homemaker to inspire a humane compromise. ``Hey, if people deal pot in St. James Park, we're going to prosecute,'' Sinunu said. ``But some drugs do have their place. It's a public health issue.'' And when Sinunu comes up against someone who doesn't think so, she talks about Bernie. ``I remember one time when she told me, `I couldn't get my marijuana and it ruined my whole day,' '' Sinunu said, her voice hushed. ``When you're dying, a day is a long time.''