[Jun 07, 2005]
The U.S. Supreme Court on
Monday in a 6-3 decision ruled
that the federal government's
ban on marijuana trumps
provisions in state laws
allowing patients with chronic
illnesses, including HIV/AIDS
and cancer, to be exempt from
federal prosecution when using
the drug for medicinal purposes,
USA Today
reports (Biskupic, USA
Today, 6/7). Thirty-five
states have enacted legislation
recognizing marijuana's
medicinal value, and California,
Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine,
Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont
and Washington have laws
permitting the use of medical
marijuana (Kaiser
Daily HIV/AIDS Report,
11/30/04). In the case
Gonzales v. Raich, which
dealt with federal and
California laws on marijuana
use, the Supreme Court ruled
that the federal government has
the authority to regulate
interstate commerce to seize
homegrown marijuana, which is
considered illegal under federal
law but legal under some states'
laws, the
Los Angeles
Times
reports. The federal
Controlled Substances Act of
1970 classifies marijuana as a
"dangerous and illegal" drug
with no medicinal benefits,
according to the Times.
The court said federal drug
agents, prosecutors and judges
could arrest, try and punish
those who grow or use marijuana
for any purposes, but state and
local police do not need to
assist in the efforts. State
laws allowing marijuana use in
certain cases still could have
"practical significance" because
most law enforcement is carried
out by state and local
officials, the Times
reports (Savage, Los
Angeles Times, 6/7).
Federal prosecutions of
marijuana-related crimes make up
a small percentage of drug
convictions nationwide,
according to USA Today.
Reaction, House Bill
The
Department of
Justice
now must decide how aggressively
it will pursue enforcement of
federal law, and Congress could
change U.S. law to allow the use
of medical marijuana, USA
Today reports (USA
Today, 6/7). Karen Tandy,
head of the federal
Drug Enforcement
Administration,
said, "The vast majority of our
cases are against those involved
in trafficking and major
cultivation and distribution,"
adding, "I don't see any
significant changes in DEA
enforcement strategies after
today's decision. We don't
target sick and dying people." A
bill (HR
2087)
sponsored by Rep. Barney Frank
(D-Mass.) that would permit
physicians to prescribe
marijuana as medicine is pending
in the House. However, similar
measures have failed in past
sessions and the chances of the
bill's approval are "slim,"
according to the Times
(Los Angeles Times,
6/7).
NPR's "Morning
Edition"
on Tuesday reported on the
ruling. The segment includes
comments from Donald Abrams,
chief of hemotology and oncology
at
San Francisco
General Hospital
and principal investigator of
recently concluded studies on
treating HIV/AIDS and cancer
patients with marijuana; Robert
DuPont, founding director of the
National
Institute on Drug Abuse;
Charles Fried, professor at
Harvard Law
School;
Jerry Kassirer, former editor of
the New England Journal of
Medicine and professor at
Tufts University
School of Medicine;
and plaintiff Angel Raich
(Totenberg, "Morning Edition,"
NPR, 6/7). The complete segment
is available
online
in RealPlayer.
“Reprinted with permission from
kaisernetwork.org. You can view
the entire Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS
Report, search the archives, or
sign up for email delivery at
www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports.
The Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report
is published for
kaisernetwork.org, a free
service of the Kaiser Family
Foundation, by National Journal
Group Inc. © 2005 by National
Journal Group Inc. and Kaiser
Family Foundation. All rights
reserved.”