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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Editorial: DEA on the Wrong Trail
Title:US CA: Editorial: DEA on the Wrong Trail
Published On:2005-04-29
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-20 11:25:02
DEA ON THE WRONG TRAIL

When San Francisco's Board of Supervisors met Monday to discuss how to
tighten oversight of the city's 43 medical marijuana dispensaries, Bush
administration officials cheered, for all the wrong reasons.

Drug Enforcement Administration agents should have been thrilled that the
city is trying to fill the regulatory gulf created in 1996 when
Californians passed Proposition 215, vaguely sanctioning marijuana for "any
. illness for which marijuana provides relief." The DEA should be offering
to help cities draw a sharper line around legitimate medical use.

But no. DEA agents hailed the effort because, they said, it would give them
a paper trail to bust more patients and doctors.

The agents' attitude captures the administration's pot policy: Rather than
focusing on curbing harmful drug abuse, it's mounting arbitrary and
vindictive assaults on both states' rights and patient care. In the next
month, the Supreme Court is expected to rule on whether the Justice
Department has the right to prosecute patients and doctors who use medical
marijuana in California and elsewhere.

The betting is that the court will side with the administration. Pot became
a federal crime three decades ago, when Congress declared that marijuana
has no accepted medical use and put it in the same class as heroin --
illustrating how far the law can stray from common sense.

Since then, specific medical benefits, such as dimming pain and helping
AIDS and cancer patients combat nausea, have been thoroughly established.

The administration's prosecutions have punished even those using marijuana
for purposes that no medical authority would dismiss as recreational. For
example, Angel Raich, an Oakland mother of two, used the drug as a last
resort to ease the constant pain of a brain tumor. And Diane Monson of
Oroville used cannabis to help her stay mobile despite a degenerative
spinal disease.

Local officials are trying to kill obviously bad ideas -- like the medical
marijuana buyers club that opened last month in a San Francisco welfare
hotel housing substance abusers. Instead, the drug agents' threat last week
to continue their random prosecutions is likely to derail laudable efforts
to regulate Proposition 215.
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