Source: Willamette Week (OR) Contact: http://www.wweek.com/ Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 1998 Author: Maureen O'Hagan note: This article really ticks me off. Nowhere does the paper say that under the proposed Oregon Medical Marijuana Act, a patient has to get a doctor to endorse his or her use, particularly at trial. And if that's going to stop most marijuana prosecutions, what's the point? ] PLANTING EVIDENCE Local prosecutors say the proposed medical-marijuana law would pose big problems for law enforcement. If Multnomah County prosecutors are to be believed, the state police academy had better be prepared to start teaching classes in horticulture. According to a recent analysis by the Multnomah County District Attorney's Office, the proposed medical-marijuana law poses all sorts of problems for police and prosecutors. Under Measure 67, people with "debilitating medical conditions" would be allowed to possess and grow marijuana to help treat their illnesses. The measure requires the Oregon Health Division to issue medical-marijuana permits to people who present notes from their doctors saying that marijuana may help with their condition. Show the permit to the police, and, if you have less than one ounce of usable pot and no more than seven (four mature and three immature) plants, they're supposed to go away. That sounds pretty clear, but Mark McDonnell, who heads one of two drug units in the district attorney's office, says the law presents all sorts of loopholes and complications. Two of his points, outlined in the analysis, have the most credibility. First, McDonnell says, the measure allows people with debilitating illnesses to claim the medical defense even if they don't have the permits at the time they're busted. Others who are not ill may be growing marijuana for a sick friend, which is allowed under the measure. In either case, the measure allows a person to avoid conviction if it can be established that the pot was being used to treat a medical condition. According to McDonnell's analysis, "persons who have never obtained, or even applied for, a marijuana-use permit can wait until the day of trial and claim for the first time that they suffer from a debilitating medical condition." If the measure passes, McDonnell expects more and more marijuana defendants to claim that they were using or growing pot for medical purposes. "We'll likely see it in virtually every case," he says, "except where it's a marijuana sale to an undercover officer [the measure prohibits sales] and large commercial grows where not even a defense attorney could argue medical necessity with a straight face." Lawyers who represent marijuana defendants agree that the defense will probably be used frequently, both by people with real health problems and by others with bogus medical claims. "I think it's in people's nature, if they're in trouble, to try to get out of trouble," says defense lawyer Pat Birmingham. "Sure there's going to be people that try to abuse it." "Theoretically, I believe it is a defense that could be used," says defense lawyer Michele Kohler, although she believes that it will only be effective in cases in which the person is legitimately and obviously ill. McDonnell's second point is that even if prosecutors can weed out bogus claims, the law would suck up resources. The measure, he says, prohibits authorities from "harming" or "neglecting" any property seized by the police until the defendant's case has been resolved. McDonnell says the provision includes the plants themselves. "As a result," the analysis says, "the police will be required to maintain and care for all growing marijuana plants they seize until the defendant's case is finally resolved." McDonnell, who says that last year 7,917 marijuana plants were seized by local police, pictures a vast police greenhouse filled with the budding plants. David Fidanque, the director of the Oregon chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, which helped write the measure, says the provision was not designed to protect plants but other property that may be seized as part of a marijuana case. "I think it's a ludicrous reading of the statute," he says. If the courts do require police to care for growing marijuana plants, he adds, "I think we would be the first ones to support a clarification of that statute." To the district attorney's office, the bottom line is that the law is difficult to enforce. "The measure puts the police and prosecutors in the untenable position of trying to enforce a law with huge loopholes," McDonnell says. "What the measure really intends to do, under the guise of medical purposes, is to legalize marijuana or make it extremely difficult to prosecute these cases." While the district attorney's analysis is being criticized by proponents as an attack on medical-marijuana users, it does not directly oppose the measure. "Personally, I don't think half the DAs care one way or another," says Kohler. "But professionally it's their duty to uphold the law." originally published September 30, 1998 [these paragraphs were laid out in a separate column in the online version of this story:] Over the past three years, there have been just 19 cases in which marijuana defendants in Multnomah County claimed their pot was for medical purposes. In some of these cases, the charges were dismissed. "I think it's in people's nature, if they're in trouble, to try to get out of trouble. ...Sure there's going to be people that try to abuse it." --Pat Birmingham - --- Checked-by: Joel W. Johnson