Medical Marijuana Bill Progresses, Despite Prosecution Threats Elsewhere

Jacob Bell

New Member
Top state lawmakers in Connecticut are pushing ahead with plans to legalize marijuana for medicinal use, despite recent warnings to officials in other states of possible federal prosecution.

"States have a right to decide this for themselves," said Michael P. Lawlor, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's senior criminal justice adviser.

Malloy and Democratic leaders are proposing allowing physicians to write prescriptions that would permit their patients to grow marijuana indoors. The current bill does not provide for operation of marijuana dispensaries, as other states' laws do, but some backers are considering a dispensary amendment.

U.S. attorneys in several states, including Washington and Rhode Island, have warned state officials that while the Justice Department does not plan to prosecute sick people who use marijuana for medical purposes, it is prepared to prosecute those who grow or distribute the substance, regardless of state law.

The letters have led Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee and Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire to pull back from plans to license marijuana dispensaries in those states.

But Rep. Gerald Fox, D-Stamford and the Judiciary Committee co-chairman, said Tuesday that while he is keeping an eye on the potential legal challenges going on in other states, he does not believe that will kill the momentum of this bill.

"I don't think that will hold up the bill," said Fox, D-Stamford. "I will certainly pay attention to the federal government when something happens."

Lawlor agrees.

"The feds haven't done anything yet. We're just trying to get a sense of what these letters mean," he said. "There are definitely mixed messages coming from Washington on this."

The U.S. Attorney General's office in Oct 2009 issued a memorandum announcing the U.S. DOJ would not pursue prosecutions against cultivators, distributors, and patients as long as they adhere to state laws. But federal officials recently raided several dispensaries in Montana and Washington.

State officials say they have not received any communications on the issue from Connecticut's U.S. attorney's office. A spokesman said the office would not comment on whether it plans to pursue legal action if Connecticut lawmakers move forward with the bill.

But Rep. John Hetherington, the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee, said the law is there for a reason and it is up to state legislators to abide by it.

"We can't just disregard and ignore the laws we don't like," he said. "I'm all for making this available to people who may healthily benefit, but not when it's illegal... Are we really going to start the practice of disobeying laws?"

Members of the Public Health Committee decided Tuesday to move the proposal out of committee, but some said they are reserving judgment whether they will be able to vote for final approval with legal uncertainty hanging over it.

"There are some concerns," said Rep. Elizabeth B. Ritter, co-chairwoman of the Public Health Committee. "This is probably not the first time we've run afoul of the federal government on something."

The proposal now heads to the State Senate.


News Hawk- Jacob Ebel 420 MAGAZINE
Source: ctmirror.org
Author: Jacqueline Rabe
Contact: Contact Us
Copyright: The Connecticut News Project
Website: Medical marijuana bill progresses, despite prosecution threats elsewhere
 
On thursday 5-5-11 the house in Delaware will vote on MMJ next step after that is the governer will sign it.
 
It was passed with more restrictions.
The Delaware House approved use of marijuana for medical purposes today, but tacked on additional restrictions to require the drug is distributed in tamper-proof containers and prohibit smoking cannabis in buses and vehicles.

The House voted 24-17 on Senate Bill 17, which must go back to the Senate for the upper chamber to consider the changes.

The legislation allows Delawareans with cancer, multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS, post-traumatic stress disorder and other debilitating diseases to get a doctor's recommendation to use marijuana to treat their pain, nausea or illness.


Qualified patients would be issued a state identification card.

Three state-regulated not-for-profit dispensaries would be established in each county to sell and distribute medical marijuana to qualified patients and caregivers.

Patients would have to get a doctor’s recommendation to smoke, ingest or use a marijuana vaporizer after other medical treatment or prescription drugs failed to work, said Rep. Helene Keeley, D-Wilmington West.

“Whether you are diagnosed with cancer, whether you are diagnosed with MS, you must have tried other drugs,” Keeley said. “Those drugs must fail first.”
 
“Whether you are diagnosed with cancer, whether you are diagnosed with MS, you must have tried other drugs,” Keeley said. “Those drugs must fail first.”

We must protect big pharma because they can donate alot of money to campaigns.
 
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