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Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jul 2003 Source: Anchorage Daily News (AK) Copyright: 2003 The Anchorage Daily News Contact: http://www.adn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/18 Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/states/ak/ (Alaska) SMALL AMOUNT OF POT IN HOME OK MARIJUANA: Judge Rules State Constitution Allows Possession If There's No Intent to Sell. FAIRBANKS -- A Superior Court judge dismissed a man's marijuana conviction, ruling that the Alaska Constitution guarantees the right to possess marijuana for personal use in the home. Judge Richard Savell of Fairbanks dismissed Scott A. Thomas' conviction. Thomas was charged with three counts of felony fourth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance for allegedly growing pot plants in his home last summer. A jury found him guilty of one count of a misdemeanor charge of sixth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance for possessing 2.6 ounces of marijuana. Lawyer Bill Satterberg filed to have the guilty verdict dismissed. He argued that Thomas' conviction was not constitutional as determined by the 1975 state Supreme Court decision in Ravin v. State. The Ravin decision made it legal for adults to possess marijuana in their homes for personal consumption as long as the amount of the drug wasn't enough to constitute "an intent to deliver." Four ounces of marijuana or more was considered the threshold. State law has since placed the amount at eight ounces. The justices ruled in the Supreme Court case that possession of pot by an adult at home was allowed as a fundamental constitutional right to privacy. However, a 1990 voter initiative changed state law to make possession of any amount of marijuana in any location illegal. In the recent case, the defense argued that the portion of the law prohibiting possession of marijuana for personal consumption by an adult in his or her home is unconstitutional. "A direct conflict in the law exists between the right to privacy guaranteed under the Alaska Constitution and the statutory prohibition .. which criminalizes the personal use of marijuana by an adult in the privacy of the home, regardless of the quantity of the prohibited substance," reads a portion of Thomas' motion to dismiss his conviction. Savell granted the motion June 25. Jim McLain, a legal clerk in Satterberg's law office who drafted the motion for dismissal, said Savell's decision does not necessarily set precedent but he expects more debate soon about whether Alaska's marijuana law is constitutional. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake