News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Bush, Ashcroft Ask Supreme Court for Permission to Punish Doctors.... |
Title: | US: Web: Bush, Ashcroft Ask Supreme Court for Permission to Punish Doctors.... |
Published On: | 2003-07-18 |
Source: | The Week Online with DRCNet (US Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 19:01:45 |
BUSH, ASHCROFT ASK SUPREME COURT FOR PERMISSION TO PUNISH DOCTORS WHO
RECOMMEND MEDICAL MARIJUANA
The Bush administration has asked the Supreme Court to overturn a US
9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that bars the federal government
from taking prescription licenses from doctors who recommend marijuana
to patients for medical reasons.
After the passage of California's medical marijuana initiative in
1996, the Office of National Drug Control Policy (the drug czar, then
Gen. Barry McCaffrey) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
moved to strip licenses to write prescriptions for drugs from
physicians who recommended that their patients use marijuana for
medical purposes.
California doctors, patients and activists filed suit to block the
DEA, and the 9th Circuit agreed in an October 2002 ruling, finding
that forbidding physicians from writing recommendations -- not
prescriptions -- for or even discussing medical marijuana violated
their First Amendment right to freedom of speech.
The Supreme Court is not bound to hear the Justice Department's
appeal, but if it does so it will give the court the first opportunity
to revisit the medical marijuana issue since 2001, when it ruled that
federal drug laws provide no exception for medical marijuana use.
Since the laws in all nine states where medical marijuana is legal
(Maryland, the ninth state, retains a token fine for medical marijuana
users) require some sort of physician recommendation mechanism, an
adverse ruling in the Supreme Court could effectively neutralize those
laws -- if no doctor will recommend for fear of losing his
prescription license, no patient can meet that requirement. At the
least, it would have a chilling effect on doctor-patient communication
about medical marijuana. "Doctors would begin censoring their
conversations with patients," said Graham Boyd, head of the American
Civil Liberties Union Drug Policy Litigation Project, who successfully
argued the case, Conant v. McCaffrey, in the lower courts. "Important
medical information for patients who could benefit from marijuana will
not be conveyed if the government prevailed, information about dosage,
frequency, routes of administration," he told DRCNet.
On July 10, the Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to review
the case in its next session, which begins in October. The 9th
Circuit's decision barring the government from taking action against
physicians who recommend medical marijuana "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," the Justice Department
wrote in documents filed with the Supreme Court. Doctors who recommend
medical marijuana are no different than those who would dispense LSD
or heroin, argued Solicitor General Ted Olson.
Angel Raich of Oakland doesn't see it that way. "What about the health
and safety of these patients?" said Raich, 37, who relies on medical
marijuana to alleviate a litany of diagnosed maladies, including an
inoperable brain tumor, wasting syndrome, seizure disorders,
fibromyalgia, endometriosis, scoliosis, chronic pain disorders, sleep
disorders, and a heart murmur. "If I don't medicate with marijuana
every two hours, I'll lose a pound a day. If we lose this case,
doctors would not stick their necks out, my doctor could lose his license.
Patients like me would literally be dying," she told DRCNet. "They
give me my cannabis in the hospital now. This would mean no overnight
stays there, no treatments there. This would be devastating."
Dale Gieringer, head of California NORML (http://www.canorml.org),
agreed that that an adverse ruling would be bad news indeed. "A bad
ruling would be terrible," he told DRCNet, "it would basically end
access to medical cannabis." But Gieringer doesn't see that happening.
"This is pretty standard First Amendment stuff," he said, "and the
Supreme Court has backed those freedoms pretty consistently, even in
the flag burning case. Most attorneys I've talked to feel the
government has a losing case."
Boyd, who would have to argue the case if the Supreme Court accepts
it, was more circumspect. He was loathe to make predictions, he said.
Still, "every judge who has looked at the case -- five judges, three
Democrats, two Republicans, right across the political spectrum -- so
far has rejected the government's position," Boyd conceded. "It is
also notable that the government's position has drawn support from
almost no one, and opposition from many, many groups."
Angel Raich is still worried. "Conant represents so much. If we don't
do well with Conant, that's a signal that other medical marijuana
cases will fare poorly, too. This could be very devastating," said
Raich, who spent four years in a wheelchair, partially paralyzed
"until cannabis came along." She would consider emigrating, she said.
"I would hate to think I wouldn't be able to be safe in my own
country," she said, "but I would have to leave."
It may not come to that, since the Supreme Court has not yet decided
even whether to hear the government's appeal.
And, Gieringer added, if the court actually upheld the government's
position, it could be time for a new California initiative. "Cannabis
as an over-the-counter medication -- what do you think about that?" he
asked. "I think it could actually have a chance if it came to that."
RECOMMEND MEDICAL MARIJUANA
The Bush administration has asked the Supreme Court to overturn a US
9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that bars the federal government
from taking prescription licenses from doctors who recommend marijuana
to patients for medical reasons.
After the passage of California's medical marijuana initiative in
1996, the Office of National Drug Control Policy (the drug czar, then
Gen. Barry McCaffrey) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
moved to strip licenses to write prescriptions for drugs from
physicians who recommended that their patients use marijuana for
medical purposes.
California doctors, patients and activists filed suit to block the
DEA, and the 9th Circuit agreed in an October 2002 ruling, finding
that forbidding physicians from writing recommendations -- not
prescriptions -- for or even discussing medical marijuana violated
their First Amendment right to freedom of speech.
The Supreme Court is not bound to hear the Justice Department's
appeal, but if it does so it will give the court the first opportunity
to revisit the medical marijuana issue since 2001, when it ruled that
federal drug laws provide no exception for medical marijuana use.
Since the laws in all nine states where medical marijuana is legal
(Maryland, the ninth state, retains a token fine for medical marijuana
users) require some sort of physician recommendation mechanism, an
adverse ruling in the Supreme Court could effectively neutralize those
laws -- if no doctor will recommend for fear of losing his
prescription license, no patient can meet that requirement. At the
least, it would have a chilling effect on doctor-patient communication
about medical marijuana. "Doctors would begin censoring their
conversations with patients," said Graham Boyd, head of the American
Civil Liberties Union Drug Policy Litigation Project, who successfully
argued the case, Conant v. McCaffrey, in the lower courts. "Important
medical information for patients who could benefit from marijuana will
not be conveyed if the government prevailed, information about dosage,
frequency, routes of administration," he told DRCNet.
On July 10, the Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to review
the case in its next session, which begins in October. The 9th
Circuit's decision barring the government from taking action against
physicians who recommend medical marijuana "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," the Justice Department
wrote in documents filed with the Supreme Court. Doctors who recommend
medical marijuana are no different than those who would dispense LSD
or heroin, argued Solicitor General Ted Olson.
Angel Raich of Oakland doesn't see it that way. "What about the health
and safety of these patients?" said Raich, 37, who relies on medical
marijuana to alleviate a litany of diagnosed maladies, including an
inoperable brain tumor, wasting syndrome, seizure disorders,
fibromyalgia, endometriosis, scoliosis, chronic pain disorders, sleep
disorders, and a heart murmur. "If I don't medicate with marijuana
every two hours, I'll lose a pound a day. If we lose this case,
doctors would not stick their necks out, my doctor could lose his license.
Patients like me would literally be dying," she told DRCNet. "They
give me my cannabis in the hospital now. This would mean no overnight
stays there, no treatments there. This would be devastating."
Dale Gieringer, head of California NORML (http://www.canorml.org),
agreed that that an adverse ruling would be bad news indeed. "A bad
ruling would be terrible," he told DRCNet, "it would basically end
access to medical cannabis." But Gieringer doesn't see that happening.
"This is pretty standard First Amendment stuff," he said, "and the
Supreme Court has backed those freedoms pretty consistently, even in
the flag burning case. Most attorneys I've talked to feel the
government has a losing case."
Boyd, who would have to argue the case if the Supreme Court accepts
it, was more circumspect. He was loathe to make predictions, he said.
Still, "every judge who has looked at the case -- five judges, three
Democrats, two Republicans, right across the political spectrum -- so
far has rejected the government's position," Boyd conceded. "It is
also notable that the government's position has drawn support from
almost no one, and opposition from many, many groups."
Angel Raich is still worried. "Conant represents so much. If we don't
do well with Conant, that's a signal that other medical marijuana
cases will fare poorly, too. This could be very devastating," said
Raich, who spent four years in a wheelchair, partially paralyzed
"until cannabis came along." She would consider emigrating, she said.
"I would hate to think I wouldn't be able to be safe in my own
country," she said, "but I would have to leave."
It may not come to that, since the Supreme Court has not yet decided
even whether to hear the government's appeal.
And, Gieringer added, if the court actually upheld the government's
position, it could be time for a new California initiative. "Cannabis
as an over-the-counter medication -- what do you think about that?" he
asked. "I think it could actually have a chance if it came to that."
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