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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Supreme Court Is Asked To Review Ruling Favoring
Title:US CA: Supreme Court Is Asked To Review Ruling Favoring
Published On:2000-07-30
Source:San Diego Union Tribune (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-03 14:27:56
SUPREME COURT IS ASKED TO REVIEW RULING FAVORING OAKLAND POT CLUB

Justice Department Wants It Overturned

SAN FRANCISCO -- The Department of Justice asked the U.S. Supreme Court to
review a lower court ruling that would allow the Oakland Cannabis Buyers
Cooperative to resume dispensing medical marijuana to patients.

A September ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that
federal drug laws did not bar claims of "medical necessity" for patients
who require marijuana to alleviate pain.

But the Justice Department said Friday that ruling was in error, and told
the Supreme Court that such allowances for marijuana distribution would
"threaten the government's ability to enforce the federal drug laws."

The Oakland marijuana dispensary was one of five such Northern California
facilities that were ordered shut down in 1998 by U.S. District Judge
Charles Breyer in response to a Justice Department lawsuit.

The appeals court stepped in last year and asked Breyer to reconsider his
decision, adding that the Justice Department did not adequately address
evidence presented that medical marijuana was the only effective treatment
for many patients' pains.

Breyer gave the Justice Department an opportunity to present new evidence
on the claims of medical necessity but received no response. He ruled July
17 that the Oakland marijuana dispensary could resume providing dosages to
patients.

The Justice Department's appeal to the high court could gut state medical
marijuana law, passed as Proposition 215 in 1996, to enable seriously ill
patients to use the drug with a doctor's consent.

"It is disappointing that the federal government is trying to prevent
patients from having access to the medicine they require," said Robert
Raich, an attorney for the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative.

In the government's petition to the Supreme Court, it argues that marijuana
is among the Controlled Substances Act's most restricted drugs and has no
accepted medical use.

Proponents of medical marijuana say the drug helps boost their appetite and
wards off symptoms of arthritis, glaucoma and other ills.
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