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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Medical Marijuana User Banned From Regatta
Title:US FL: Medical Marijuana User Banned From Regatta
Published On:2005-09-27
Source:Palm Beach Post, The (FL)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 12:23:40
MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER BANNED FROM REGATTA

Irvin Rosenfeld, the South Florida stockbroker who gained national
attention for his fight to freely use marijuana as medicine, has run
into resistance from one of the nation's top sailing events for the
disabled and expects to be barred from next year's event.

The reason: an independent group that monitors use of drugs by
athletes won't exempt the pot Rosenfeld uses to treat tumors that
would otherwise leave him bedridden and in pain.

Rosenfeld, who has sailed in three races of the North American
Challenge Cup in 11 years, has asked the race's organizers and the
U.S. Sailing Association to overrule the United States Anti-Doping
Agency and let him sail in the 2006 regatta. He said an event that
celebrates overcoming disabilities is in effect discriminating
against a disabled person.

The USADA, the official anti-doping agency for Olympic, Pan American
and Paralympic sports, gave no reason for its rejection, Rosenfeld
said in a Friday e-mail to the sailing officials.

Travis T. Tygart, general counsel for Colorado Springs-based USADA,
said Monday the agency is bound by the standards of the World Anti-
Doping Agency, which bans marijuana. Banned drugs must meet at least
two of three standards: they enhance performance, they have
detrimental health effects, or they violate the spirit of sports. The
WADA does not specify which standards apply to marijuana, Tygart
said. He said athletes are free to appeal to WADA, and, if rejected
there, to an independent arbitrator.

Representatives of Montreal-based WADA did not return calls on Monday.

Challenge Cup Chairwoman Jennifer French couldn't be reached
Monday.U.S. Sailing spokeswoman Marlieke Eaton said from Portsmouth,
R.I., that the group is bound by the USADA's rules. But, she said,
"We do have intent to revisit this."

Seven people -- one has since died -- were given marijuana in a
federal program started in 1978. Rosenfeld joined in 1982. The U.S.
government grows marijuana on a farm in Mississippi and provides it
in cans of 300 cigarettes to Rosenfeld in care of the Bascom Palmer
Eye Institute in Miami.

Rosenfeld smokes 10 to 12 cigarettes a day of what he calls "my
medicine." He said the federal government has ruled the marijuana
does not give him an edge over other competitors. And he said that
because he has never gotten high on the drug, he has special
permission to drive and even operate machinery and would not be a
danger to other sailors.

In the 2005 regatta in Chicago, organizers allowed him to race but
said he must refrain from using his marijuana during the event. He
said he took his medicine in secret, but believes competitors and
organizers knew he was doing so, since he at times smoked it just a
few hundred yards away.

"Why don't you just tell a diabetic to stop taking his insulin for
five days?" Rosenfeld wrote.

"U.S. Sailing had some nerve to single me out for my 'BANNED
SUBSTANCE' when a lot of the other competitors were on banned
substances," Rosenfeld continued. He alleged competitors in the
Challenge Cup have never been tested for drugs, even though virtually
all of them take some sort of medicine, none of it designed to
improve their performances.

"All of us are disabled, and that's the medicines that we use,"
Rosenfeld said Monday in an interview.
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