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| International Cannabis News Marijuana News - Updated Daily! |
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Voters in seven states and legislators in an eighth have made an exception to their state drug laws for patients who use marijuana for medical purposes. To those states, the Supreme Court of the United States has now said: You've got your laws, the federal government has its laws, and Congress has not repealed the ban on sale and distribution of marijuana. Thus, we now have the specter of a California resident authorized by a physician and state law to use marijuana - to treat glaucoma or to counteract the side-effects of chemotherapy - while still being subject to criminal prosecution by the federal government. The case, United States vs. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, presented a narrow issue: Is there a "medical exception" to the federal statute outlawing the manufacture or distribution of marijuana? The court's answer: No. Although all eight justices participating in the case agreed on that narrow point, Justice John Paul Stevens, joined by two others, parted company with Justice Clarence Thomas' majority opinion, saying it went too far. Whereas the federal statute in question outlaws the manufacture and distribution of marijuana, Stevens said, the question of personal use was not an issue in the case. Stevens did not say how one might legitimately obtain a substance whose manufacture and distribution are outlawed. It is worth noting, however, that federal authorities in California got a court injunction to halt distribution of the drug to approved patients rather than charging the Oakland cooperative with a crime. In a community that overwhelmingly supported the medical-marijuana initiative, the odds weren't good for finding jurors who would vote to convict. While the California ruling does not move the ball forward on the controversy over decriminalizing marijuana, even for legitimate medical treatment, it exposes the huge divide between federal officials who write the laws and a growing body of public opinion that approves medicinal use of marijuana. Unlike Supreme Court decisions based on constitutional questions, however, Congress can easily reverse this decision by passing a simple amendment to the controlled substances act that recognizes a medical exception for marijuana. It should do just that. Newshawk: Carl Olsen Pubdate: Wed, 06 Jun 2001 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2001 The Des Moines Register. Contact: letters@news.dmreg.com Website: http://www.dmregister.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) |
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