Pubdate: Wed, 2 Jun 1999 Source: Fulton County Daily Report (GA) Website: http://www.dailyreportonline.com/ Copyright: 1999 American Lawyer Media Fax: (404) 523-5924 Author: Lawrence Viele COURT STRIKES DUI LAW FOR MARIJUANA USERS The state Supreme Court Monday set aside a DUI law that punishes marijuana-using motorists for even trace amounts of pot. The law violates constitutional equal protection rights by exempting prescription users of the drug, even though the effect of the drug is the same on them and on public safety as it is for recreational users, the unanimous court ruled. 'ZERO TOLERANCE' CHALLENGED In the DUI case, Everette Bryan Love, 21, challenged one of the state's so-called "zero tolerance" drug laws. This one punishes motorists who have barely detectable amounts of marijuana in their systems. The University of Georgia student was charged with DUI after a Lawrenceville policeman pulled him aside for speeding on Interstate 85. Love v. State, No. S99A0509 (Sup. Ct. Ga. June 1, 1999). Testing showed Love had trace amounts of marijuana in his system, so he was convicted of driving under the influence. The case prompted lively debate before the court in March, with one justice postulating whether he could be found guilty of DUI after being trapped in a closet with a pot smoker. Another justice wondered about the people who smoke the substance in Amsterdam, where use is tolerated, and come home sober but with a detectable amount of pot in their systems. The court found no equal protection problem in the fact that unimpaired drivers with traces of the substance in their systems can be prosecuted under the law. But the justices did find an equal protection problem on another front. Benham, who wrote for the unanimous court, said the law treats those who use marijuana for medicinal purposes differently from those who use it for mere recreation, even though the effects are the same. Benham pointed out that "the expert testimony given in this case stated that the pharmacological effects of prescribed marijuana are no different from the effect of 'recreational' use marijuana," although the statute does not apply to those who have prescriptions." "We are unable to hold that the legislative distinction between sanctioned and unsanctioned users of marijuana is directly related to the public safety purpose of the legislation ... . Accordingly we conclude that the distinction is arbitrarily drawn, and the statute is an unconstitutional denial of equal protection," Benham wrote. Love was represented by David E. Clark and Jessica R. Towne of Lawrenceville's Clark & Towne. The lawyers did not expect the court to rule in their favor, much less to agree with their argument that the law arbitrarily changes the burden of guilt for prescription marijuana users. "We didn't expect to prevail. We were extremely surprised," says Towne, speaking from Charleston Tuesday. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck