Editorial: Medicinal Marijuana Law Remains Too Hazy

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA) - In 1998, Washington state voters approved an initiative allowing for the use of marijuana for specific medicinal purposes, but the practical application of the law has been hazy. Meanwhile, interpretation and enforcement of the law has varied widely from community to community.

Patients want marijuana for relief from the effects of glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease and other ailments. Suppliers want relief from law enforcement officers who bust them for possession and illegal sales. The conundrum lies in the fact that the law allows for marijuana's use with a medical permit, but doesn't explain how it can be legally obtained. Before November 2008, it was even unclear what amount constituted a legal 60-day supply. That was clarified by the state as 1.5 pounds.

The law says patients can grow marijuana plants, but that isn't practical for many people. Plus, it's not clear that obtaining seeds would even pass legal muster. So dispensaries have sprouted up, but Spokane law enforcement is targeting them, saying one person cannot supply another.

Scott Q. Shupe runs a Spokane dispensary but was recently busted when he traveled to Oregon to purchase marijuana. That state doesn't recognize medical permits from other states.

Compounding all of this is federal law that doesn't even acknowledge a medicinal purpose; however, federal enforcement isn't common.

We don't condone Shupe's act. The Oregon law is clear. But legalizing medicinal marijuana without laying out a reasonable way to obtain it is madness. Certainly marijuana can be abused if used foolishly and if it falls into the wrong hands. So can OxyContin, which is among a long list of prescription drugs that have become a law enforcement headache. A Shopko was recently robbed by a thief seeking the painkiller. But OxyContin can still be obtained with a prescription. Nobody has to manufacture it in their basements.

The overreaction to marijuana stems from the stigma attached to it long ago, when laws lumped it with heroin and other dangerous and illicit drugs. But we know better now. Yet, police departments assign precious resources to ensure that patients don't obtain it. Meanwhile, property crimes go uninvestigated for lack of officers.

The state Legislature needs to clarify the law so that patients with legitimate reasons to use marijuana don't have to be treated like criminals if they do. This would also make it easier for police officers and prosecutors to decide when it really is in the public's interest to intervene.


NewsHawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA)
Copyright: 2006 The Spokesman-Review
Contact: editor@spokesman.com
Website: Spokesman.com
 
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