News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Bush Escalates Marijuana War |
Title: | US: Bush Escalates Marijuana War |
Published On: | 2003-07-11 |
Source: | San Francisco Chronicle (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-24 20:24:32 |
BUSH ESCALATES MARIJUANA WAR
Supreme Court Asked to Sanction Doctors Who Recommend Pot
The Bush administration, pressing its campaign against state medical
marijuana laws, has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to let federal
authorities punish California doctors who recommend pot to their patients.
The administration would revoke the federal prescription licenses of
doctors who tell their patients marijuana would help them, a
prerequisite for obtaining the drug under the state's voter-approved
medical marijuana law.
Justice Department lawyers this week asked the high court to take up
the issue in its next term, which begins in October. The department is
appealing a ruling by an appellate court in San Francisco that said
the proposed penalties would violate the freedom of speech of both
doctors and patients.
If the justices agree to review the case, it would be their first look
at medical marijuana since May 2001, when the court upheld the federal
government's authority to close down a pot dispensary in Oakland and
others in the state.
The October decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco
"effectively licensed physicians to treat patients with prohibited
substances" and interfered with the government's authority "to enforce
the law in an area vital to the public health and safety," Justice
Department lawyers Mark Stern and Colette Matzzie wrote in court papers.
The appeal "is a sign that this administration will do everything they
can to defeat the will of the voters of California and many other
states," said Graham Boyd, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer
for doctors, patients and AIDS support groups who sued the federal
government in 1997 over the policy, which the Clinton administration
originally introduced.
State Laws Would Be Moot
If the Supreme Court takes the case and ultimately rules in the
government's favor, Boyd said, "it would make all of the states'
marijuana laws a dead letter. . . . If a physician can't recommend
marijuana, then no patient can qualify" to use it under state law.
The federal action was in response to California voters' 1996 approval
of Proposition 215. The initiative, a trailblazer for laws in eight
other states, allows seriously ill patients to use marijuana with
their doctors' approval. Prop. 215 specified that the approval would
take the form of a recommendation rather than a formal
prescription.
The federal government classifies marijuana in the same prohibited
category as heroin. Contending that the drug has no medical value, the
Clinton administration announced in January 1997 that doctors who
recommended marijuana would lose their licenses to prescribe federally
regulated narcotics. Doctors in many fields need federal licenses to
remain in practice.
The Clinton administration dropped the issue after a federal judge
barred enforcement of the policy, but the Bush administration revived
the plan and took it to the U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco,
which ruled against the government in October.
Giving Advice Ruled Legal
In the 3-0 appellate decision, Chief Judge Mary Schroeder said federal
authorities can prosecute doctors for helping patients acquire illegal
drugs, but not for simply giving medical advice that might let a
patient obtain marijuana.
She said the federal policy clashed not only with free speech but also
with the states' traditional authority over the practice of medicine.
That issue is central to another case now pending before the appeals
court, involving Attorney General John Ashcroft's attempt to punish
doctors who prescribe lethal drugs for patients under Oregon's
assisted-suicide law.
The Justice Department's Supreme Court appeal argues that a
physician's "recommendation" under California law is the equivalent of
a prescription for illegal drugs, an action the government can forbid
without violating free speech.
Department lawyers said the federal policy would not penalize a doctor
for merely discussing marijuana with a patient -- as long as the
doctor makes it clear that the drug is illegal under federal law, that
federal authorities consider it dangerous and medically useless, and
that the doctor is not recommending it.
'War Against Patients'
News of the administration's appeal dismayed two patients who are
plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
"I wish the government would stop this war against patients and
doctors," said Keith Vines, 53, a San Francisco assistant district
attorney who lost 50 pounds and nearly died from a wasting syndrome
associated with AIDS. He credits medical marijuana with restoring his
appetite and saving his life.
"Medical marijuana is keeping me with the ability to continue
treatment," said Judith Cushner, 58, director of Laurel Hill Nursery
School in San Francisco, who is undergoing chemotherapy after
suffering a relapse of breast cancer. The government's bid for Supreme
Court intervention, she said, is "absolutely frightening."
The case is Walters vs. Conant, No. 03-40.
Supreme Court Asked to Sanction Doctors Who Recommend Pot
The Bush administration, pressing its campaign against state medical
marijuana laws, has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to let federal
authorities punish California doctors who recommend pot to their patients.
The administration would revoke the federal prescription licenses of
doctors who tell their patients marijuana would help them, a
prerequisite for obtaining the drug under the state's voter-approved
medical marijuana law.
Justice Department lawyers this week asked the high court to take up
the issue in its next term, which begins in October. The department is
appealing a ruling by an appellate court in San Francisco that said
the proposed penalties would violate the freedom of speech of both
doctors and patients.
If the justices agree to review the case, it would be their first look
at medical marijuana since May 2001, when the court upheld the federal
government's authority to close down a pot dispensary in Oakland and
others in the state.
The October decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco
"effectively licensed physicians to treat patients with prohibited
substances" and interfered with the government's authority "to enforce
the law in an area vital to the public health and safety," Justice
Department lawyers Mark Stern and Colette Matzzie wrote in court papers.
The appeal "is a sign that this administration will do everything they
can to defeat the will of the voters of California and many other
states," said Graham Boyd, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer
for doctors, patients and AIDS support groups who sued the federal
government in 1997 over the policy, which the Clinton administration
originally introduced.
State Laws Would Be Moot
If the Supreme Court takes the case and ultimately rules in the
government's favor, Boyd said, "it would make all of the states'
marijuana laws a dead letter. . . . If a physician can't recommend
marijuana, then no patient can qualify" to use it under state law.
The federal action was in response to California voters' 1996 approval
of Proposition 215. The initiative, a trailblazer for laws in eight
other states, allows seriously ill patients to use marijuana with
their doctors' approval. Prop. 215 specified that the approval would
take the form of a recommendation rather than a formal
prescription.
The federal government classifies marijuana in the same prohibited
category as heroin. Contending that the drug has no medical value, the
Clinton administration announced in January 1997 that doctors who
recommended marijuana would lose their licenses to prescribe federally
regulated narcotics. Doctors in many fields need federal licenses to
remain in practice.
The Clinton administration dropped the issue after a federal judge
barred enforcement of the policy, but the Bush administration revived
the plan and took it to the U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco,
which ruled against the government in October.
Giving Advice Ruled Legal
In the 3-0 appellate decision, Chief Judge Mary Schroeder said federal
authorities can prosecute doctors for helping patients acquire illegal
drugs, but not for simply giving medical advice that might let a
patient obtain marijuana.
She said the federal policy clashed not only with free speech but also
with the states' traditional authority over the practice of medicine.
That issue is central to another case now pending before the appeals
court, involving Attorney General John Ashcroft's attempt to punish
doctors who prescribe lethal drugs for patients under Oregon's
assisted-suicide law.
The Justice Department's Supreme Court appeal argues that a
physician's "recommendation" under California law is the equivalent of
a prescription for illegal drugs, an action the government can forbid
without violating free speech.
Department lawyers said the federal policy would not penalize a doctor
for merely discussing marijuana with a patient -- as long as the
doctor makes it clear that the drug is illegal under federal law, that
federal authorities consider it dangerous and medically useless, and
that the doctor is not recommending it.
'War Against Patients'
News of the administration's appeal dismayed two patients who are
plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
"I wish the government would stop this war against patients and
doctors," said Keith Vines, 53, a San Francisco assistant district
attorney who lost 50 pounds and nearly died from a wasting syndrome
associated with AIDS. He credits medical marijuana with restoring his
appetite and saving his life.
"Medical marijuana is keeping me with the ability to continue
treatment," said Judith Cushner, 58, director of Laurel Hill Nursery
School in San Francisco, who is undergoing chemotherapy after
suffering a relapse of breast cancer. The government's bid for Supreme
Court intervention, she said, is "absolutely frightening."
The case is Walters vs. Conant, No. 03-40.
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