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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: 1 Jail Day for Marijuana Felony
Title:US CA: 1 Jail Day for Marijuana Felony
Published On:2003-06-05
Source:Washington Post (DC)
Fetched On:2008-01-20 05:22:09
1 JAIL DAY FOR MARIJUANA FELONY

Jurors Rebelled at Own Verdict on Medicinal Use Advocate

LOS ANGELES, June 4 - One of the nation's most prominent advocates of
giving chronically sick or dying patients legal access to marijuana
was sentenced today to a day in jail for the felony conviction federal
prosecutors won against him for cultivating and distributing the drug.

The case of Ed Rosenthal, 58, has become a symbol of the escalating
battle between the federal government and the eight states that have
legalized the medicinal use of marijuana.

U.S. District Judge Charles R. Breyer in San Francisco dismissed a
recommendation by prosecutors that Rosenthal be sent to prison for at
least five years and instead gave him the one-day sentence and set him
free, saying he had served the time.

In February, a federal jury convicted Rosenthal, an author and
self-proclaimed "Guru of Ganja," for growing 100 marijuana plants in
an Oakland, Calif., warehouse.

Rosenthal had been raising them for patients with the approval of
health officials in the San Francisco Bay Area, but Breyer had
forbidden that information to be introduced in court because the
federal government does not recognize marijuana as a drug that has
medical benefits. Upon learning that after the trial, jurors publicly
rebuked their verdict.

For months, groups that support using marijuana for medicinal purposes
have been campaigning to spare Rosenthal from prison. After sentencing
today, they rejoiced and said the outcome of his case will give their
movement momentum.

"For all practical purposes, Judge Breyer just overturned the federal
law banning medical marijuana," said Bruce Mirken, a spokesman for the
Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington group that promotes legalizing
the drug for medical use. "This could be the final crack in the wall
that brings the whole federal war on medical marijuana patients
crashing down, and it's about time."

Rosenthal told reporters after his sentencing that he grows and
distributes marijuana only to help people who are suffering and
predicted that laws prohibiting such steps are now "doomed."

Prosecutors in San Francisco declined comment and said they are
uncertain if they will appeal Breyer's decision. But other federal
authorities warned that crackdowns on marijuana traffickers will continue.

"It would be unfortunate if anyone misread the ruling today to mean
the federal government isn't going to enforce our laws against drug
trafficking," said Tom Riley, a spokesman for the White House Office
of National Drug Control Policy. "Marijuana is a dangerous drug.

"It would be even more unfortunate," he added, "if the ruling misled
sick people who are truly suffering and steered them away from the
best medicine and practices."

Using marijuana for medicinal purposes has been legal in California
since 1996, when voters approved the groundbreaking Proposition 215.
Since then, seven other states, mostly in the West, have adopted
similar measures. Last month, Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. (R)
signed legislation that reduces criminal penalties for the medical use
of marijuana but stops short of legalization.

Two years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that federal law bars the
distribution of marijuana even for medicinal purposes.

Since then, over the objections of many officials in California,
federal agents have been raiding marijuana farms and clinics around
the state that give marijuana to patients with serious illnesses.
Several other marijuana growers and providers are awaiting
prosecution.
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