Pubdate: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: LESLEY CLARK, Herald Capital Bureau STATE JUSTICES HEAR DEBATE ON USE OF POT FOR ILLNESSES TALLAHASSEE -- Three weeks after U.S. health experts recommended marijuana use for some patients, the Florida Supreme Court took up the issue, hearing oral arguments Wednesday on whether seriously ill people have the right to smoke pot for medicinal purposes. The Florida case involves a 61-year-old Panhandle man who smokes the illegal substance to keep his glaucoma at bay and lessen the nausea caused by transplant drugs that he must take so his body doesn't reject a kidney. ``It kills the sickness so I can eat and I can see,'' George Sowell said in a telephone interview after his lawyer pleaded his case before the high court. ``I'm a law-abiding man, but I'm not going to sit here and go blind.' Sowell was convicted of cultivating and possessing marijuana in 1995. Police said they found nearly 70 plants capable of yielding up to half a pound of smokeable pot on Sowell's property in Chipley. Sowell tried to claim the crop was medically necessary, but the trial judge refused to hear the defense. An appeals court, however, overturned his conviction, finding that Sowell could use the argument as a defense. The state attorney general appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court, which will issue a ruling later this year. The state contends the Legislature prohibited medical marijuana use in 1993, after a 1991 court case that upheld the right of an HIV-infected couple to smoke marijuana for medicinal purposes. Assistant Attorney General Giselle Lylen Rivera said the Legislature outlawed the use when it rewrote a state law, saying drugs such as marijuana have no ``medical purpose.'' She noted that the law was changed to allow patients to take a legal alternative of pot -- a synthetic version of the active component in marijuana. ``He could have gotten a doctor's prescription,' Rivera said. ``Because the Legislature has added this in, it has done away with medical necessity as a defense to smoking marijuana in this state.'' Sowell's attorney, John Daniel, said the Legislature did not wipe out the medical necessity defense when it rewrote the law. ``You're not suggesting the Legislature can't do this?'' Chief Justice Major Harding asked Daniel. `You're just saying they haven't done it?'' ``Yes, your honor,'' Daniel replied. ``And I hope they never do.'' That's unlikely. The attorney general's office predicted after the hearing that even if the court finds that medical necessity can be used as a defense for smoking marijuana, the Legislature would try to close the loophole. ``If they say the law does not have clarity, I would suspect there would be an intent by the Legislature to rule it out as a defense,'' said Carolyn Snurkowski, assistant deputy attorney general. The measure would likely get Gov. Jeb Bush's approval. A spokesman for the governor said he is ``adamantly opposed' to medical marijuana use. The justices appeared troubled that current law does not spell out that medical use of marijuana is prohibited. ``Isn't it a better policy to have the Legislature clearly state we no longer recognize this particular defense rather than speculate on what they intended?'' Justice Barbara Pariente asked. Sowell said he hopes the ambiguity in the law can be used to pry open the door for legalized use of medical marijuana. ``There's people out there that need it worse than I do, and they'd be using it if it were legal,'' Sowell said. ``They know it's just good medicine. This is medicine that God put here.'' The debate in Florida comes three weeks after the national Institute of Medicine recommended that marijuana cigarettes be made available for short periods to help cancer and AIDS patients who can find no other relief for their pain and nausea. The report from the Institute, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, found that compounds in marijuana have the potential to ease some pain and suffering associated with certain diseases. Battles over medical marijuana have been fought across the nation since 1996, when California passed a ballot initiative that removed state penalties from people who used marijuana for medicinal purposes. Since then, Arizona, Alaska, Oregon, Nevada and Washington state have passed laws permitting the use of medical marijuana. A group in Florida has tried since 1997 to collect enough signatures on a petition to legalize medical marijuana. Some mainstream medical organizations and the New England Journal of Medicine have endorsed its use. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady