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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: US Outlaws 'Medical' Marijuana
Title:US: Web: US Outlaws 'Medical' Marijuana
Published On:2001-05-14
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 20:01:40
US OUTLAWS 'MEDICAL' MARIJUANA

Studies Show The Drug Can Benefit Some Patients

The United States Supreme Court has ended a legal battle over the
medical use of marijuana, ruling that there are no circumstances which
justify it.

The ruling will disappoint sufferers of diseases such as Aids, cancer
and multiple sclerosis who claim that cannabis helps combat symptoms of
their illnesses.

In a unanimous ruling, eight Supreme Court judges said that in the
Controlled Substances Act, "Congress has made a determination that
marijuana has no medical benefits worthy of an exception."

The BBC's Jonny Dymond in Washington says that the ruling stops the
growing movement to legalise medical marijuana in its tracks.

The case, United States v Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative and
Jeffrey Jones, resulted from a government effort to shut down six
California marijuana distributors.

Cannabis-Buying Clubs

The government sued the six cooperatives, which were formed to provide
cannabis to people whose doctors had prescribed it.

Five have closed since the case first reached the courts in 1998.

The last one, the Oakland Cooperative, has restricted itself to
registering potential marijuana users while fighting the case through
the courts.

In oral arguments, the government said "there is no currently accepted
medical use for the drug, and it has a high potential for abuse".

It argued that the Cooperative's medical-necessity defence did not apply
because disease sufferers could use synthetic alternatives to the active
ingredient in marijuana.

Eight US states, including California, have held local referendums to
approve the use of cannabis for medical purposes. A ninth, Hawaii,
passed a law permitting it.

Last year, the US House of Representatives considered a national bill to
counteract the state measures, but did not pass it.

Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer - the ninth judge on the court -
disqualified himself from the case because his brother, a federal judge,
presided over the original case.
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