Source: San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune (CA) Contact: http://sanluisobispo.com/ Pubdate: 16 September 1998 Author: Tom Elias Tel: 805-781-7800 POT BATTLE SHIFTS TO BALLOT BOX LOS ANGELES - Confusion reigns more than ever in California's medical marijuana wars this fall as the state's most liberal cities and counties struggle to find a legal way to distribute the weed to patients who need it, and federal and state authorities fight to close the few remaining cannabis buyers clubs. The battle figures to move both to the ballot box and a jury trial, this fall, as pot-supplying cooperatives in three Northern California cities remain open in the face of a four-month-old court order to shut down. The three face contempt of court charges and pro-marijuana activists are eager to see whether any jury will convict their leaders. The issue has only become more complicated with the city of Oakland's move to immunize officers of the local Cannabis Buyers Club by declaring them city officials. Meanwhile, regardless of how the courts or the fall election affect medical marijuana, cities like San Francisco insist they will continue trying to put pot in the hands of AIDS patients, epileptics and others whose conditions are eased by the narcotic. "It won't be an easy task to find an way to do this legally," says San Francisco District Attorney Terrence Hallinan. "But it's necessary." Adds his city's mayor, Willie Brown, "We'd be remiss if we didn't do anything. At least 10,000 people in this city need the marijuana and they've been left without a legal source since the only buyers co-op in the city was closed by the court order." Besides trying to immunize the local pot distributors, Oakland's city government also took action the other day to allow patients to grow their own marijuana. Councilmen passed an ordinance allowing patients acting on a doctor's recommendation to possess 1.5 pounds of the weed at any one time, and also to grow as many as 144 plants at a time, with 38 of them in the flowering phase when their potency is highest. Even pro-medical marijuana activists say that is about three times more than any patient should need, and it is three times the standard state Attorney General Dan Lungren set last year for legal possession by a patient. Possessing marijuana for medical reasons has been legal in California has been legal in California since Proposition 215 passed by a wide margin in 1996. But federal laws make distribution and use illegal and both Lungren and Gov. Pete Wilson have fought efforts to set up government-run distribution networks. Both insist medical marijuana is nothing more than a backdoor way to full legalization for the narcotic. Lungren is now the Republican candidate for governor and his former top deputy, David Stirling, is the GOP candidate to succeed him as attorney general. "The net effect is that we are now in legal never-never land," says Scott Imler, co-author of Proposition 215 and director of the Los Angeles Cannabis Buyers' Club, not covered by the May court order. "I'm now very disappointed we did not include distribution in the proposition. That was a political decision so that the clubs would not become a campaign issue." It also means the November election will largely decide the fate of medical marijuana. "Electing Lungren and Stirling would mean four more years of chaos, because they are adamant about not allowing any sort of distribution," Imler said. "If they're elected, the only solution would be for the federal government to declare this a prescription drug - and they haven't shown any great eagerness to do it." Meanwhile, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Gray Davis takes a noncommittal stance on medical pot, saying he's open to legalizing distribution to patients if academic studies show a true need. And state Sen. Bill Lockyer, the Democratic nominee for attorney general, never blocked passage of medical marijuana bills during his years as the Senate's president. Fellow state Sen. John Vasconcellos, a Democrat who has fought for years to legalize medical use of the weed, agrees the future of medical marijuana likely hinges on the election outcome. "We're going to present Wilson with a bill this fall to set up legal distribution," said his top aide. "But we have no illusions that he will sign it. He vetoed two medical marijuana bills before Proposition 215 passed and he wants to run for president. He'll veto this one, too." Meanwhile, six clubs still distribute marijuana to patients, with all but Imler's operating in Northern California cities. "We just don't think it's against the law to save lives and make lives more palatable," says the president of the Ukiah club, one of the three facing contempt charges. "We're confident we can win before a jury." But the real decision, as so often in this state, will be made by the voters in November. Their choices for governor and attorney general will tell, among other things, whether they were really serious or merely acting on a passing whim when they voted for Proposition 215. --------------- Elias is the author of the new book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Century's Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It." His e-mail address is - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan