Re-Legalizing Medical Marijuana

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Whether we accept the presumed benefits of medical marijuana as legitimate or not, Californians should at least be grateful that state and federal laws will no longer be in conflict when it comes to enforcement.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder says the U.S. will undertake a shift in federal drug laws relative to medical marijuana, widely believed to ease symptoms in cancer patients and sufferers of a wide array of other maladies.

That means raids on medical marijuana distributors licensed in California will cease or be greatly reduced.

In 1996, California became the first state to legalize the sale of cannabis to people with doctors' prescriptions. Many patients say they've been helped, but dueling jurisdictional interests have caused headaches for everyone concerned, especially for local law enforcement authorities bound by contradictory mandates.

The new administration's approach to the problem seems to come too late for eight people arrested in July 2007 at Bakersfield's Nature's Medicinal Inc., which had been operating at 323 Roberts Lane. The dispensary's co-owners, David Chavez Sr. and David Chavez Jr., face hearings this month in U.S. District Court in Fresno, as do other dispensary employees.

Several pot dispensaries in Bakersfield closed in the wake of the 2007 crackdown by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency. The DEA was working in concert with the Kern County Sheriff's Department, which issued marijuana dispensary licenses to the very same businesses it helped close.

The Obama administration's decision does not guarantee smooth sailing. On the contrary, it creates another set of challenges as law enforcement and other licensing agencies brace for the task of separating legitimate users from those without a recognized medical need. The decision also puts the ball into the court of medical licensing boards, which must help guide "pot doctors" out of the realm of perceived quackery and into the light of tightly regulated legitimacy.

We're a long way from fully understanding the practical applications of medical marijuana. This latest step clarifies the picture by getting the feds out of the game and leaving states to come up with consistent approaches. It's up to leaders from the medical community and law enforcement to take things from here, with compassion and consistency two of the key objectives.


News Hawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Bakersfield Californian, The (CA)
Copyright: 2009 The Bakersfield Californian
Contact: opinion@bakersfield.com
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That means raids on medical marijuana distributors licensed in California will cease or be greatly reduced.

or be greatly reduced? grey area....
what is "greatly" to you (or government) may be different to me


good news none the less.
:nicethread:
 
It's up to leaders from the medical community and law enforcement to take things from here, with compassion and consistency two of the key objectives.

The leaders of law enforcement should take their hands off this issue from now on which will be hard, seeing they will lose all their finances that come from illegal actions against medical marijuana patients and providers. The government also needs to untie the hands of the medical community for greater research and compassionate care.
 
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