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Medical marijuana has strong support from voters and
health organizations. The federal government, however, has resisted any change
to marijuana's illegal status at the federal level. The Supreme Court ruled in
2005 in Raich v. Gonzales that the federal government can prosecute
medical marijuana patients, even in states with compassionate use laws, and
several medical marijuana dispensaries in California have since been subject to
Drug Enforcement Administration raids.
Federal Law
In the wake of the June 2005 Supreme Court decision,
Congress had an opportunity to protect patients by passing an amendment to a
Justice Department spending bill that would have prohibited the department from
spending any money to undermine state medical marijuana laws. The amendment,
offered for the third year in a row by Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-22nd/NY) and Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher (R-46th/CA), did not pass but got 161 votes - more than it has
ever received before. This is substantial progress given that in 1998, the U.S.
House of Representatives voted 311-94 for a non-binding resolution condemning
medical marijuana.
Marijuana is classified as a Schedule I substance,
defined as having a high potential for abuse and no medicinal value. Multiple
petitions for rescheduling marijuana have been submitted by reform advocates
over the last 30 years. The most recent, submitted in 2002 by the Coalition for
Rescheduling Cannabis, calls for a full review of the scientific research and
medical practice regarding marijuana. The Food and Drug Administration has yet
to respond to this petition.
In 1978, the federal government was forced to allow some
patients access to medical marijuana after a "medical necessity" defense was
recognized in court, creating the Investigational New Drug (IND) compassionate
access program. The IND, which allowed some patients to receive medical
marijuana from the government, was closed to new patients in 1992 after it was
flooded by applications from AIDS patients. Today, seven surviving patients
still receive medical marijuana from the federal government.
State Law
The 2005 Raich Supreme Court decision does not
overturn or affect state law, and 99% of all marijuana arrests take place at the
state or local level. This means that state laws afford substantial protection
to medical marijuana patients. Currently, laws that effectively remove
state-level criminal penalties for growing and/or possessing medical marijuana
are in place in Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada,
New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. Ten states, plus the
District of Columbia, have symbolic medical marijuana laws (laws that support
medical marijuana but do not provide patients with legal protection under state
law).
New Mexico passed its medical marijuana bill in early
2007. In 1998, voters in the District of Columbia approved a medical marijuana
initiative by 69% but Congress was able to nullify the vote results because D.C.
is a federal district and not a state.
Twelve states have medical marijuana research laws, and
only fifteen states have never had a positive medical marijuana law.
The Courts
In addition to changing state laws, medical marijuana
advocates have pursued reform through the courts, most recently in the Raich
v. Ashcroft Supreme Court case. Angel Raich, a medical marijuana patient in
California, sued the federal government to stop federal raids against patients.
Though she did not win the case, the ruling left state medical marijuana laws
intact. She is now back in court with an appeal based on a different set of
arguments. The new arguments assert that she should be allowed to use medical
marijuana because she has the fundamental right to avoid death and severe pain
under the Fifth and Ninth Amendments.
In 1997, Conant v. McCaffrey, a class-action
lawsuit, was filed on behalf of physicians and seriously ill patients against
Drug Czar General Barry McCaffrey and other top federal officials who threatened
to revoke prescription licenses or criminally prosecute physicians who recommend
medical marijuana. In 2002, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals unanimously decided to uphold the right of doctors to recommend
marijuana to their patients and of patients to receive that recommendation.
Judge Mary Schroeder wrote the majority opinion, which noted that the federal
government’s policy of revoking doctors' licenses “leaves…no security for free
discussion.” A concurring opinion by Judge Alex Kozinski stepped even further,
noting the prevailing evidence on the medical usefulness of marijuana.
Public Support
Medical marijuana is one of the most widely
supported issues in drug policy reform. Numerous published studies suggest that
marijuana has medical value in treating patients with serious illnesses such as
AIDS, glaucoma, cancer, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, and chronic pain. In 1999,
the Institute of Medicine, in the most comprehensive study of medical
marijuana's efficacy to date, concluded, "Nausea, appetite loss, pain and
anxiety . . . all can be mitigated by marijuana." Allowing patients legal access
to medical marijuana has been discussed by numerous organizations, including the
AIDS Action Council, American Bar Association, American Public Health
Association, California Medical Association, National Association of Attorneys
General, and several state nurses associations.
Public opinion is also in favor of ending the prohibition
of medical marijuana. According to a 1999 Gallup poll, 73% of Americans are in
favor of "making marijuana legally available for doctors to prescribe in order
to reduce pain and suffering." In a 2004 poll commissioned by AARP, 72% of
Americans ages 45 and older thought marijuana should be legal for medicinal
purposes if recommended by a doctor. Also, since 1996, voters in eight states
plus the District of Columbia have passed favorable medical marijuana ballot
initiatives.
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