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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF MARIJUANA LAWS |
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Internet http://www.norml.org
. . . a weekly service for the
media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
January 16, 1997
Class Action Suit Blocking Federal Sanctions Against Physicians Who Recommend Medical Marijuana Filed In Federal Court
January
14, 1996, Los Angeles, California: A group of
physicians and patients filed a class action suit in federal
court in San Francisco seeking an injunction to prevent federal
officials from taking any punitive action against physicians who
recommend the medical use of marijuana to their patients in
compliance with California law.
The lawsuit is a direct response to the
Clinton administration's December 30 announcement of its plan to
oppose the implementation of Proposition 215 by threatening
California doctors with a wide range of punishments if they
recommend medical marijuana. The defendants in the suit
are: Gen. Barry McCaffrey, Director of White House Drug Control
Policy; Thomas Constantine, Administrator of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration; Janet Reno, Attorney General of the
United States; and Donna Shalala, Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services. Representing the plaintiffs are
the San Francisco law firm of Altshuler, Berzon, Nussbaum, Berzon
& Rubin and the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern
California.
Graham Boyd, an attorney with the firm
said, "Our view is that the federal effort to gag physicians
is blatantly unconstitutional. Discussions between a physician
and patient about the risks and benefits of medical marijuana
constitute protected speech under the First Amendment."
Dr. Marcus Conant, a San Francisco
specialist in AIDS treatment and the lead plaintiff in the
lawsuit said, "The federal government has threatened me and
doctors like me with dire consequences simply for discussing
medical marijuana with my patients. My colleagues and I
have seen marijuana work to relieve nausea and stimulate appetite
where other drugs fail, and scores of studies support our
observations."
The lawsuit was filed by Bay Area
Physicians for Human Rights, a group of about 150 doctors who
treat AIDS; Being Alive, an organization of people with AIDS or
the AIDS virus; nine individual physicians, and four patients --
including former San Francisco police commissioner Jo Daly.
"The federal government has no right
to interfere with the privileged relationship between a seriously
ill patient and his or her physician," said NORML
Deputy Director Allen St. Pierre.
For more information, please contact
Dave Fratello of Americans for Medical Rights (AMR) @ (310)
394-2952 or Allen St. Pierre of NORML @
(202) 483-5500.
New Hampshire Legislator Introduces Marijuana Decriminalization Bill
January
16, 1996, Concord, New Hampshire: A bill has been
introduced in the New Hampshire state legislature (H.B. 118-FN)
that would reduce the penalty for possession of less than one and
one-half ounces of marijuana from a class A misdemeanor to a
violation. The measure was introduced by Rep. Tim Robertson
(18th-District) and four co-sponsors.
Under current state law, possession of
marijuana is punishable by a one-year sentence and/or $1,000
fine. Under this new measure, individuals possessing small
amounts of marijuana would receive a ticket and a small fine.
NORML Legal Committee Member Michael
Cutler, Esq. of Boston, Massachusetts, has been working with Rep.
Robertson in support of the legislation. Cutler said that
he expects the bill to be referred to a study committee before
being voted on by the legislature.
For more information, please contact R.
Keith Stroup or Allen St. Pierre of NORML @
(202) 483-5500. Rep. Robertson may be reached @ (603)
271-3529. Attorney Michael Cutler may be contacted @ (617)
439-4990.
California Doctor Threatens Drug Czar With Lawsuit
January
10, 1996, Washington, D.C.: California physician Tod
Mikuriya is demanding a formal retraction from Drug Czar Barry
McCaffrey over statements made during a December 30 press
conference. At the conference, during which Clinton
administration officials threatened to prosecute doctors who
recommend or prescribe marijuana to seriously ill patients under
state law, McCaffrey falsely identified Dr. Mikuriya as the
"Medical Advisor" for Proposition 215 and held him up
to ridicule by implying that he had recommended marijuana for the
treatment of a number of trivial ailments such as recalling
"forgotten memories," "writer's cramp," and
the "removal of corns."
Mikuriya denies that he has ever
recommended that a patient use marijuana for those specific
purposes and said that McCaffrey's statement's were derived from
a draft of a proposed book he is writing on all of
marijuana's possible and claimed uses historically. On
January 10, Attorney Rufus King of the Washington, D.C. law firm
Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe, L.L.P., delivered a letter to the
Drug Czar's office asking for a clarification, apology, and
appropriate retraction. "Apparently you were referring
to a draft of a proposed book I circulated for comment a few
months ago, but every word of your reference, and your reference
to me, was dishonest, and I charge knowingly so," wrote
Mikuriya. "You simply ignored the clear context of
what I was saying, which you could not have overlooked in good
faith.
"This gross damage to me, my
reputation and my medical practice is obvious," Mikuriya
continued. "I demand a[n] ... apology ... in a venue
and context equivalent to the initial publication."
If McCaffrey fails to respond to Dr.
Mikuriya's request by January 20, Mikuriya says that he will take
legal action against him.
For more information, please contact Dr.
Tod Mikuriya @ (510) 843-0279 or Attorney Rufus King of Berliner,
Corcoran, & Rowe, L.L.P. @ (202) 293-5555 ext. 340.
Court Ruling Allows San Francisco Cannabis Buyers' Club To Reopen
January
15, 1996, San Francisco, CA: Citing the recent passage
of Proposition 215, a Superior Court judge authorized the
not-for-profit cultivation and sale of marijuana for medical
purposes by the San Francisco Buyers' Club. The club's
founder, Dennis Peron, and five others still face felony
marijuana charges stemming from the August 4 raid by state law
enforcement on the nearly 12,000 member club. Peron
reopened the club, now known as the San Francisco Cultivators'
Club, on Wednesday.
Judge David A. Garcia lifted a five month
injunction on the club on January 8 despite objections from
California Attorney General Dan Lungren. The judge made it
clear that his ruling applied only to the San Francisco Club and
would have no legal force outside of the city. He also
mandated that the sale of marijuana be strictly non-profit for
legitimate medicinal purposes. Citing the passage of
Proposition 215, Garcia stated, "The people of California
have spoken [and] I don't think [Dan Lungren] or I are going to
say that the people of California were ineffectual."
"This is the first time that a ruling
permitting the cultivation of marijuana for medical patients has
ever been handed down by a judicial officer," said Attorney
David Nick, counsel for Peron.
"It feels like a victory," Peron
told reporters during a ribbon-cutting ceremony held to mark the
reopening of the club. "I've never seen my name with
marijuana that wasn't on an indictment."
Peron added that the new club is taking
precautions to limit membership to only those who possess a
doctor's recommendation for a legitimate medical illness.
The club says it will verify the legitimacy of the doctor by
checking the state medical board's registry of Northern
California physicians. The club will also contact the
doctor for an oral confirmation. Members will also be given
computer-generated ID cards with a photo and unique ID number.
Peron maintained that data on physicians
who recommend marijuana to their patients will not be kept on the
premises. "No matter what happens, we're going to
protect our doctors," said Peron. "If the club is
raided, our doctors will be safe."
For more information, please contact
Dennis Peron of Californians for Compassionate Use @ (415)
621-3986 or Dale Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858.
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