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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF
MARIJUANA LAWS
1001 CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW
SUITE 1010
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
TEL 202-483-5500 * FAX 202-483-0057
E-MAIL natlnorml@aol.com
Internet http://www.norml.org/
... a weekly service for the media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
October 19, 1995
Pierce County Superior Court Judge Rules
That Cancer Patient Should Be Allowed To Use Marijuana
October 13, 1995, Tacoma, WA: In a
decision that may be a first for the nation, Superior Court Judge
Rosanne Buckner has ruled that a cancer patient's need to use
marijuana as medicine overrides the state's interest in outlawing
its prescription.
Defendant Ralph Seeley--a former journalist, lawyer, and cancer
patient--accomplished what no one else has done in a quarter
century of attempts. Seeley filed a declaratory judgment
action in Pierce County Superior Court, asking for a ruling that
the State's Constitution's reliance on "fundamental
principles" requires that marijuana be available as a
prescription substance. This past Friday, the Honorable
Judge Buckner agreed. A final order is being prepared.
"I think, practically speaking, the effect [of this ruling]
is to put prosecutions for medical marijuana use on hold,"
Seeley said. During the court proceedings, Seeley's moving
argument contained numerous references to his own experiences as
a cancer patient, forced to choose between breaking the law or
enduring unbearable suffering. Seeley has undergone eight
surgeries on his spine, two lung surgeries--including the removal
of one lung--radiation, and several bouts of chemotherapy.
He faces another surgery next month.
Jeffrey Steinborn, a Seattle lawyer who has represented a number
of clients in medical marijuana cases, called the ruling
significant. "I think it's going to open the door to a
new wave of attempts to make this a legitimate medicine,"
commented Steinborn, who is a friend of Seeley's. "There's
a crack in the door now, a crack in the shell and I think it's
going to spread."
"It is monstrous to say [that] this substance cannot be used
as a medicine by people who are dying," Steinborn
concluded. "I challenge any federal official to come
and debate the wisdom of this."
For more information on Honorable Judge Buckner's ruling,
please contact Ralph Seeley @ (206) 383-3434 or Jeff Steinborn @
(202) 622-5117. For more information on the medical uses of
marijuana, please contact Allen St. Pierre of NORML
@ (202) 483-5500.
(As Expected) Governor Wilson Vetoes Medical
Marijuana Bill
Californians For Compassionate Use Band Together To File Medical
Marijuana Initiative
October 16, 1995, Sacramento CA:
California Governor Pete Wilson vetoed a bill (A.B. 1529) by
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos to allow for the prescribed medical
use of marijuana by the sick and terminally ill. The
legislation would have provided for the controlled compassionate use
of marijuana for those individuals diagnosed by a physician to be
suffering from the diseases of AIDS, cancer, glaucoma, and
multiple sclerosis. This is the third consecutive time that
Wilson has vetoed a medical marijuana proposal.
In reaction to Wilson's veto, a coalition of AIDS activists,
cancer survivors, seniors, nurses, and medical experts have filed
a medical marijuana initiative with the California Attorney
General's Office. Marijuana activist and head of
Californians for Compassionate Use, Dennis Peron, will be directing
the initiative drive.
The initiative maintains that any patients who possess a valid
doctor's recommendation should be allowed to use marijuana as a
therapeutic agent without fear or risk of prosecution. The initiative
also allows citizens to cultivate their own marijuana for
personal use and encourages state and federal governments to
establish a program that will provide for a safe and affordable
method of distribution. This coalition has 150 days to
collect 600,000 signatures.
"Using patients as pawns is not right," declared Anna
Boyce, RN, in response to the governor's action. Boyce is
president of the petition drive as well as an elected member of
the California Senior Legislature. "Marijuana helps
people who are suffering; it is being denied to them for purely political
reasons and that must change."
For more information on the California medical marijuana
initiative, please contact Dennis Peron of Californians for
Compassionate Use @ (415) 621-3986.
HEMPILATION CD Draws National Attention On CNN
September 13, 1993, New York City, NY:
Showbiz Today, a regular half hour program on CNN, featured a
segment on the growing controversy surrounding the release of HEMPILATION:
Freedom Is NORML. HEMPILATION is the first ever major
release devoted solely to the "wonders of weed."
The approximately two minute news segment featured positive
comments from NORML's Deputy Director Allen St. Pierre as
well as musicians Ian Moore and B-Real of Cypress Hill.
Both Moore and Cypress Hill are featured on the CD.
The CNN piece also featured criticism from David Chamberlain of
the Washington DC-based Family Research Council. Stating
that be hoped that Capricorn Records would abandon the project,
Chamberlain commented that he felt the CD would encourage
teenagers to try marijuana.
A portion of the profits of the CD go directly to benefit the
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
HEMPILATION: Freedom Is NORML hit record stores across the nation
on September 26.
Meanwhile, Drug Czar Lee Brown Is Not Amused
October 19,1995, Washington, DC: The
Washington Post recently reported that Drug Czar Lee Brown is
steaming over the release of HEMPILATION: Freedom Is NORML.
The Post quoted Brown as stating that song titles appearing on
the CD such as "I Wanna Get High" and "Who's Got
the Herb" were "enough to make one sick."
Brown is set to voice his frustration over the CD as well as what
he considers to be Hollywood's overall glorification of marijuana
in a speech to the Entertainment Industries Council in Los
Angeles.
Other prohibitionist groups who have recently voiced their ardent
disapproval over the release of the HEMPILATION CD include the
Atlanta-based Parents Resource and Information on Drug Education
(PRIDE), the Center on Addiction and Substances Abuse (CASA), and
the Family Research Council.
Alaska Court Rules Roadside Marijuana Search To Be Illegal
September 27, 1995, Anchorage, AK:
In a ruling that could cast doubt upon the legality of many
roadside searches, Alaska District Court Judge William Fuld has
dismissed charges against a man who was arrested after a state
trooper reportedly smelled marijuana and then demanded that the
defendant "hand it over." In the court's view,
the officer's phrase: "hand it over" was not a choice,
but a demand to search the defendant's vehicle. Therefore,
the court ruled that the roadside search was improper because no
valid consent was ever given by the defendant.
"The trooper was in uniform and the defendant testified that
he felt he had to respond to the officer's command,"
summarized Fuld in his court opinion. "The demand to
'hand it over' admitted to by the trooper was an illegal search
of the defendant. While the trooper smelled marijuana, he had
no right to search the passenger. ...
... The state argues that there was a valid consent to a
search. I don't think so. No choice was offered [to
the defendant.]"
For more information on this decision, please contact Don Hart
of the National Lawyers Guild @ (907) 376-2232 or Len Karpinski
of Anchorage NORML @ (907) 248-HEMP.
Sentencing Project Report Reveals That
Nearly One In Three Black Males
Are Under Criminal Justice Supervision
October 4, 1995, Washington, DC:
Nearly one in three African American males in their twenties is
either in prison, jail, on probation, or on parole, according to
report issued this month by the Washington DC-based Sentencing
Project. This figure is a significant increase over the approximately
25 percent of five years ago. The report, entitled Young
Black Americans and the Criminal Justice System: Five Years
Later, cites the federal "war on drugs" as the largest contributing
factor to the disproportionate number of young black males
currently under criminal justice supervision.
For more information or to receive a copy of the Sentencing
Project's latest report, please contact Mark Mauer of the
Sentencing Project @ (202) 628-0871.
-END-
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