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Medical Marijuana Briefing Paper - 2003
The Need to Change State and Federal Law


The Struggle in Court

In 1972, a petition was submitted to the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs -- now the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) -- to reschedule marijuana to make it available by prescription.

After 16 years of court battles, the DEA's chief administrative law judge, Francis L. Young, ruled:

"Marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known. ...

"... [T]he provisions of the [Controlled Substances] Act permit and require the transfer of marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule II.

"It would be unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious for DEA to continue to stand between those sufferers and the benefits of this substance. ..."

(September 6, 1988)
Marijuana's placement in Schedule II would enable doctors to prescribe it to their patients. But top DEA bureaucrats rejected Judge Young's ruling and refused to reschedule marijuana. Two appeals later, petitioners experienced their first defeat in the 22-year-old lawsuit. On February 18, 1994, the U.S. Court of Appeals (D.C. Circuit) ruled that the DEA is allowed to reject its judge's ruling and set its own criteria--enabling the DEA to keep marijuana in Schedule I.

However, Congress still has the power to reschedule marijuana via legislation, regardless of the DEA's wishes.


Temporary Compassion

In 1975, Robert Randall, who suffered from glaucoma, was arrested for cultivating his own marijuana. He won his case by using the "medical necessity defense," forcing the government to find a way to provide him with his medicine. As a result, the Investigational New Drug (IND) compassionate access program was established, enabling some patients to receive marijuana from the government.

The program was grossly inadequate at helping the potentially millions of people who need medical marijuana:

  • Most patients would never consider the idea that an illegal drug might be their best medicine; 

  •  
  • Most patients fortunate enough to discover marijuana's medicinal value did not discover the IND program; 

  •  
  • Most of those who did learn of the program could not find doctors willing to take on the arduous task of enrolling in and working through the IND program.
In 1992, in response to a flood of new applications from AIDS patients, the Bush administration closed the program to all new applicants. On December 1, 1999, the Clinton administration restated that the IND program would not be reopened. Consequently, the IND program remains in operation only for the seven surviving previously approved patients.


Public Opinion

There is tremendous public support for ending the prohibition of medical marijuana:
  • Since 1996, a majority of voters in Alaska, California, Colorado, the District of Columbia, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington state have voted in favor of ballot initiatives to remove criminal penalties for seriously ill people who grow or possess medical marijuana. Recent polls have shown that public approval of these laws has increased since they went into effect. 

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  • A 1990 scientific survey of oncologists (cancer specialists) found that 54% of those with an opinion favored the controlled medical availability of marijuana and 44% had already broken the law by suggesting at least once that a patient obtain marijuana illegally. [R. Doblin & M. Kleiman, "Marijuana as Antiemetic Medicine," Journal of Clinical Oncology 9 (1991): 1314-1319.] 

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  • A Pew Research poll conducted February 14-19, 2001, found that 73% of American adults supported permitting doctors to prescribe marijuana for their patients. Over the last decade, polls have consistently shown between 60% and 80% support for legal access to medical marijuana.

Changing State Laws

The federal government has no legal authority to prevent state governments from changing their laws to remove state-level criminal penalties for medical marijuana use. Indeed, Hawaii enacted a medical marijuana law via its state legislature in June 2000. State legislatures have the authority and moral responsibility to change state law to:
  • exempt seriously ill patients from state-level prosecution for marijuana possession and cultivation; and 

  •  
  • exempt doctors who recommend medical marijuana from prosecution or the denial of any right or privilege.
Even within the confines of federal law, states can enact reforms that have the practical effect of removing the fear of patients being arrested and prosecuted under state law -- as well as the symbolic effect of pushing the federal government to allow doctors to prescribe marijuana.


U.S. Congress: The Final Battleground

State governments that want to allow marijuana to be sold in pharmacies have been stymied by the federal government's overriding prohibition of marijuana.

Patients' efforts to bring change through the federal courts have made little progress, as the courts tend to defer to the DEA, which is aggressively working to keep marijuana illegal.

Efforts to obtain FDA approval of marijuana are similarly stalled. Though some small-scale studies of marijuana are now underway, the National Institute on Drug Abuse -- the only legal source of marijuana for clinical research in the U.S. -- has consistently made it difficult (and often nearly impossible) for researchers to obtain marijuana for their studies. Under the present circumstances, it is virtually impossible to do the sort of large-scale and extremely costly trials required for FDA approval.

In the meantime, patients continue to suffer. Congress has the power and the responsibility to change federal law so that seriously ill people nationwide can use medical marijuana without fear of arrest and imprisonment.

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Credit: http://www.mpp.org


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