Pubdate: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Chronicle Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Author: Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer COURT OF APPEALS URGES JUDGE TO RETHINK MEDICAL MARIJUANA The U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco raised the possibility yesterday of reopening shuttered medical marijuana clubs, saying that ``medical necessity'' could exempt seriously ill patients from federal drug laws. The court urged U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer to consider amending his injunction last year that closed several Northern California marijuana clubs, including one in Oakland. The three-judge panel said Breyer should have taken into account the needs of patients who could ``suffer imminent harm'' without marijuana and had no other legal alternative to the drug. Oakland club attorneys Robert Raich and Gerald Uelmen, a Santa Clara University law professor, had appealed Breyer's May 1998 decision. Leaders of the medical marijuana movement hailed yesterday's ruling. ``It's the greatest news I've had in a long time,'' said Dennis Peron, whose 9,000-member Cannabis Cultivators Club in San Francisco was shut down in April 1998 for violating federal law. ``I know Judge Breyer will see it our way, that in fact marijuana does save lives and that sometimes you have to break a law to save a life.'' Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, agreed, saying that the federal government would have to ``offer some positive alternatives to their current policy of zero tolerance.'' The Oakland club shut down in October because of Breyer's injunction but reopened a month later as a center for hemp products. The Justice Department was reviewing yesterday's ruling and had no immediate comment as to whether it would appeal. The court said Breyer denied the Oakland club's appeal of his injunction ``without weighing or considering the public interest,'' which constituted ``an abuse of discretion.'' The court did not overturn Breyer's injunction barring certain medical marijuana clubs from dispensing the drug, but it asked Breyer to look at the case again, taking into account the testimony he has heard from patients. The Oakland club ``submitted the declarations of many seriously ill individuals and their doctors who, despite their very real fears of criminal prosecution, came forward and attested to the need for cannabis in order to treat the debilitating and life-threatening conditions,'' the court said. In 1996, California voters approved Proposition 215, the medical marijuana initiative. Last year, the federal government filed a civil lawsuit seeking the closure of the Oakland club and five others in Northern California. In May 1998, Breyer issued an injunction barring clubs in Oakland, Santa Cruz, Fairfax, Ukiah and two in San Francisco from distributing marijuana. Of the six clubs, only those in Fairfax and Ukiah still sell medical marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea