Pot times July 15, 2005
Cannabis Interrupted
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1113/a04.htmlNewshawk: End Marijuana Prohibition http://www.mpp.org
Pubdate: Wed, 13 Jul 2005 CANNABIS INTERRUPTED
Source: Nation, The (US)
Copyright: 2005 The Nation Company
Contact:
letters@thenation.com
Website: http://www.thenation.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/285
Author: Herman Schwartz
Cited: Gonzales v. Raich (www.angeljustice.org/)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm
(Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Raich
(Gonzales v. Raich)
The Supreme Court's medical marijuana decision this past June was a minor defeat
for the so-called states' rights cause but a major setback for compassion and
common sense.
It marked one of the few defeats suffered by retiring Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor in her long campaign against federal regulation of the national economy
and for the enhancement of individual rights.
This time, she should have won. Although the decision temporarily halted
the conservative assault, it allowed federal authorities to deny a locally grown
and marketed drug with proven therapeutic value to people who desperately need
it.
In Gonzales v. Raich, the Court told California and ten other states that
if they allowed their residents to use marijuana to relieve their illnesses,
those people would be violating the federal Controlled Substances Act ( CSA ),
even if the drug were taken solely for serious medical conditions under a
doctor's supervision, state law allowed it, and the growth and usage were
entirely within the same state.
A unique combination of the four liberal justices plus the ultraconservative
Antonin Scalia and the occasional swing vote Anthony Kennedy decided that the
commerce clause was broad enough to reach these purely local transactions;
Justice O'Connor, Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justice Clarence Thomas
dissented.
Plaintiffs Angel Raich and Diane Monson did not challenge the CSA itself but
only the way it was being applied to people in their circumstances, what the
lower court described as a "separate and distinct class" of users and
noncommercial activities that were never involved directly or indirectly in
interstate trade.
The amount they used, the plaintiffs argued, was too small and too localized to
"substantially affect interstate commerce," the standard for
application of the commerce clause.
Sensing a rare victory in a commerce clause case, Justice John Paul Stevens
issued an opinion that authorized the federal government to prohibit use of even
the tiniest amounts of marijuana if Congress had a "rational basis"
for thinking that federal drug laws would be undermined if exceptions were made.
That could happen if the medically authorized marijuana were diverted to the
illicit interstate market, although, as Stevens admitted, there was no evidence
of any such diversion in the Raich case. General Accounting Office studies
show that registered medical marijuana users are too few to have any substantial
effect on the interstate market.
Crafting a medical exception would not have been difficult, for as Stevens
recognized, the medical users' challenge to the CSA was "actually quite
limited." In fact, the therapeutic exemption actually reduced demand for
illegal marijuana, which is the primary federal concern, because it kept
desperate AIDS sufferers, cancer patients and others from turning to criminal
drug dealers.
There have indeed been abuses.
Two weeks after the decision, it was reported that drug dealers and crooked
doctors had used three medical marijuana dispensaries as a front to peddle
massive amounts of marijuana and other illegal drugs.
But as Kevin Ryan, the US Attorney for the Northern District of California,
said, this case was not "about ill people who may be using marijuana
[but]...about a criminal enterprise" involving a multimillion-dollar
international conspiracy. Many medical dispensaries operate properly, and
both California and federal law are available to deal with the truly criminal.
The Supreme Court decision may actually encourage abuses.
Those who need marijuana to ease their suffering will still manage to get it
from illegal sources, and federal officials have indicated they are not likely
to prosecute individual users.
But California will no longer be able to justify continuing its current efforts
to tighten dispensary regulation and to restrict access to the truly needy, for
how can a state justify regulating and implicitly approving what the Supreme
Court has found illegal?
The decision will discourage more states from permitting medical use of the
drug, no matter how carefully controlled.
This small victory for federal authority will do little to stem the right-wing
campaign to shrink federal power and undermine the welfare and regulatory
reforms initiated by the New Deal. Instead, the vital state
experimentation on a common problem, which the federal system is supposed to
encourage, will be choked off. More people will be forced into the illegal
market, and victims of cancer, AIDS and other serious illnesses will be made
even more miserable.
