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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Cannabis Club Goes Before High Court
Title:US: Cannabis Club Goes Before High Court
Published On:2001-03-26
Source:Daily Herald (IL)
Fetched On:2008-01-26 20:21:37
CANNABIS CLUB GOES BEFORE HIGH COURT

OAKLAND, Calif. - (Associated Press) A few years ago, an author
writing about death asked ailing AIDS patient Michael Alcalay how he
was accepting dying.

"I'm not accepting it," Alcalay retorted.

Alcalay is alive today thanks in part, he believes, to doses of
marijuana that helped him keep his medicines down and appetite up as
he fought the disease.

On Wednesday, Alcalay will be in the audience as lawyers try to
convince the U.S. Supreme Court that federal anti-drug laws shouldn't
prevent marijuana from being given to seriously ill patients for pain
relief.

"Once the justices recognize what's really at stake in this case, if
any semblance of justice prevails then so will we," said Robert
Raich, an attorney representing the Oakland Cannabis Buyers'
Cooperative.

The cooperative is a distribution club operating under California's
Proposition 215, the voter-approved law that allows the possession
and use of marijuana for medical purposes on a doctor's
recommendation.

That's where Alcalay used to get his marijuana. But he's had to look
elsewhere since the federal government sued the cooperative and five
other California pot clubs in 1998 to prevent them from distributing
the drug.

A federal judge sided with the government. But last year, the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that "medical necessity" is a
legal defense.

California officials, including Attorney General Bill Lockyer, argue
that the state has the right to enforce its medical marijuana law,
which was approved by voters in 1996. Distribution clubs sprang up
because Proposition 215 is silent on how patients will get marijuana,
outside of growing and harvesting it themselves.

The Supreme Court is not looking directly at Proposition 215, but
rather at whether medical necessity may be used as a defense against
federal drug bans. It's unclear whether the justices will rule on
that general issue or rule more narrowly on how lower courts have
handled this case.

If the court says "Yes" to the necessity defense, it could make it
easier to distribute medical marijuana in California and the eight
other states with similar laws - Alaska, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington,
Arizona, Maine, Nevada and Colorado.

Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer has recused himself because
he is the brother of Charles Breyer, the federal district judge who
ordered the club to stop distributing marijuana.

The club remains open, but only to sell legal hemp products and
maintain a membership database.

Justice Department lawyers declined to comment on the case. They have
argued that allowing clubs to hand out marijuana compromises the
government's ability to enforce federal drug laws.

Advocates say marijuana is a reliable and nontoxic therapy that in
some cases is the only relief for suffering people.

That point of view was endorsed recently by the Institute of
Medicine. The institute, which was asked to examine the issue by the
White House drug policy office, said that because the chemicals in
marijuana ease anxiety, stimulate appetite, ease pain and reduce
nausea and vomiting, they can be helpful for people undergoing
chemotherapy and people with AIDS.

Institute officials also warned that smoking marijuana can cause
respiratory disease and recommended development of forms of the drug
that could be taken in other ways.

Alcalay, a 59-year-old physician who serves as the club's medical
director, started using marijuana to keep down his medication after
he was diagnosed with HIV in the 1980s. HIV turned into AIDS and in
the mid-1990s Alcalay almost died from an intestinal illness that ran
roughshod over his weakened immune system.

Although he lost 35 pounds off his 165-pound, 5-foot-10 frame, he
said small doses of marijuana helped make meals palatable. "I don't
like getting stoned. I like to be in control," he says.

He credits marijuana with keeping him alive until the advent of drugs
that boosted his immune system and wiped out the intestinal bug.

Alcalay didn't make it into the book about dying.

Recently, he ran into the author.

"He was surprised to see me," Alcalay said.
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