Newsletter
OPNews from the Ohio Patient Network is Back
The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News/Updates 11/14/08
Drug Truth Update 11/13/08
The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News/Updates 11/10/08
420 Drug News 11/10/08
Americans for Safe Access: November 2008 Activist Newsletter
ASA Court Win on San Diego ID Cards Affirmed
State Supreme Court Refuses Review, Patients Pressure Counties to Uphold Law
California counties will have to implement the state's medical marijuana identification program now that the California Supreme Court has refused to review a landmark case argued by Americans for Safe Access. The case stems from resistance in a handful of counties to provisions of California's medical marijuana law.
ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford
County officials in San Diego, San Bernardino and Merced counties filed suit against the State of California in February 2006, arguing that state law was preempted by federal law. That argument was rejected by the San Diego Superior Court in December of 2006, causing San Bernardino and Merced officials to drop their challenge. San Diego County appealed the ruling, only to be denied by the Fourth District Court of Appeals in July of this year and now by the state Supreme Court's refusal to hear their appeal. County officials have said they intend to attempt a challenge before the U.S. Supreme Court, though it has already ruled that state medical marijuana laws do not conflict with federal prohibition.
The San Diego lawsuit challenged the validity of the state identification card program, which was established by Senate Bill 420 in 2003, as well as the foundation of California's medical marijuana laws. But California courts at all levels have concluded that the ID card program and state law are valid and do not violate the state constitution.
"The San Diego case is now final under California law," said Joe Elford, Chief Counsel of Americans for Safe Access, who argued before the appellate court on behalf of patients. "The courts have made clear that federal law does not preempt state law relating to medical marijuana and that local officials must comply with California's medical marijuana laws."
In a unanimous opinion earlier this year, the Court of Appeals ruled that the federal Controlled Substances Act "signifies Congress's intent to maintain the power of states to elect 'to serve as a laboratory in the trial of novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country' by preserving all state laws that do not positively conflict with the CSA."
ASA was joined by the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project in defending the interests of patients before both the state Supreme Court and the Superior Court in San Diego. The City of San Diego registered its opposition to the County's lawsuit by filing an amicus or 'friend of the court' brief in December 2007, siding with the Attorney General and medical marijuana patient advocates in favor of implementing the law.
After the appellate court ruling, ASA put all California counties that had not yet established a voluntary patient identifcation program on notice of their obligation to implement state law, in particular the state ID card program, which both assists law enforcement and affords greater protection to patients. As a result, Fresno and Kings counties voted to issue the patient ID's almost immediately. Now, ASA is again following up with a warning for remaining California counties that refuse to obey the law.
"We expect the remaining holdout counties to implement the medical marijuana card program immediately," said Elford. "And if they continue to refuse to comply with state law, we will ask the courts to require them to do so."
For more information, see ASA's web page on the San Diego case.
Activists Protest Dispensary Owner's Conviction, Ask Congress to Intervene
A major protest by medical marijuana activists in Los Angeles this month demanded that Congress to do something about the conviction of a California man who was operating a cannabis dispensary.
Over 350 people attended a protest to support former Morro Bay dispensary collective operator Charles Lynch, whose case drew national attention when he was raided by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and prosecuted, even though he complied with state law, had a business license from the city, and was even a member of the local Chamber of Commerce.
Charlie Lynch cutting the ribbon on opening day
Organized by the Los Angeles chapter of ASA and a team of dedicated activists, the protest was attended by numerous criminal justice and patient rights organizations, and took place in front of the LA Federal Courthouse on the day Lynch was to have a hearing on a motion for a new trial. This hearing has been delayed to November 4.
Even though Lynch operated his collective within the mandates of state law and local regulation, the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff took issue with his facility and called in the DEA to close him down. Central Coast Compassionate Caregivers had been open for 11 months when federal agents raided it on March 29, 2007.
As a result of that raid, San Luis Obispo Sheriff Pat Hedges is being sued by a former patient of Lynch's for seizing her medical records and violating her privacy.
During a widely watched trial, that included segments on Reason.TV by the television host Drew Carey, the Morro Bay mayor and city attorney testified on behalf of Lynch, and he took the stand himself to describe attempts he made to operate within even federal law.
Lynch was found guilty of five federal felonies. Defense attorneys will file a motion for a new trial on November 17. Sentencing is currently scheduled for November 24 in Los Angeles.
ASA Joins Legal Fight Against Dispensary Bans
Files Amicus Brief in Suit Against Anaheim
Americans for Safe Access has thrown its support behind a dispensary that has challenged a city ban on medical marijuana patient collectives. ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, fresh off victory in the San Diego case, is filing an amicus or friend of the court brief on behalf of patients in the appeal of Qualified Patients Association v. City of Anaheim. This marks the first appeal of a dispensary ban challenge.
The suit contends that the city of Anaheim cannot legally ban all patient collectives. ASA's brief argues that such bans on medical marijuana collectives are wrong on two counts.
The first reason is that conflict with California state law, and, as a result of that conflict, local bans are preempted because the state has clearly expressed an intent that dispensaries be considered legal entities.
The second reason is that interpreting state law as requiring cities and counties to tolerate dispensaries does not create a conflict with federal law. The ruling in the case of San Diego's challenge to California's medical marijuana law makes it clear that state and federal law are separate.
"Federal authorities will do what they will do," said Elford. "But they can't conscript the state to do their work for them."
The case will be heard by the 4th Appellate District, the same court that made the landmark finding in the Garden Grove case, which established that law enforcement must return cannabis seized from qualified patients.
So far, 35 cities and counties have filed amicus briefs against Qualified Patients Association, as has the California Peace Officers Association and the California Sheriff's Association. But ASA's Elford remains confident. He believes that the decisions in Garden Grove and San Diego mean that federal pre-emption only exists when there is a positive conflict, as would be the case if state law required someone to violate the federal prohibition.
"This is yet again an example of local officials wishing to enforce federal instead of state law," said Elford. "You don't have to regulate dispensaries. You just can't ban them."
A study of local communities conducted by ASA found that not only do dispensaries pose negligible problems for the communities in which they operate, they serve a critical function for the most seriously ill of California's medical marijuana patients. That report can be downloaded at www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/dispensaries.pdf.
A decision in the case of Qualified Patients Association v. City of Anaheim is expected within the next few months.
Drug Truth 11/06/08
European Coalition for Just and Effective Drug Policies: November Bulletin
THE RIGHT TO HEALTH
While those who can are starting to enjoy the fruits of their last harvest, others continue being denied even the right of access to what is to them an essential source of well-being. The criminalization of plants whose therapeutic value is well recognized is causing the most extreme contradictions between laws, their interpretation, reality and the right to health. This problem is widespread all over Europe, where a citizen doesnât seem to be allowed to use a plant for his own personal well-being, if in fact that plant is included among those that are declared illegal ("controlled") by International Conventions. On the contrary, he risks to be considered as a criminal.
While in Sri-Lanka the Ministry of Indigenous Medicine is getting ready to cultivate 4000 kg of medicinal cannabis, the EU approves a special funding for intensive tobacco farming, that once put on the market after industrial treatment will kill millions of people, but of course guarantees healthy profits for companies and governments.

In Italy, in spite of the present governmentâs repressive and anti-scientific climate on the issue of drugs, harvest parties are still taking place in many towns. The governmentâs deplorable ignorance is well illustrated by the statement of Giovanardi, the Subsecretary to the Presidency with a special mandate on drug policy, who recently confirmed that "all drugs are equal", and that "even a single consumption will burn the userâs brain out" (enjoy the spot). The harvest parties are by contrast an attempt not to lose what in past years represented a possibility to put into practice, and to claim what should be a basic right of any citizen: to grow a plant that is part of the botanical heritage of the planet for his own personal use. In some cities, following a years-long tradition, part of the crop has been donated to patients.
The case of one of them, Fabrizio Pellegrini, a member of the Italian association P.I.C. (Pazienti Impazienti Cannabis), is a paradigm of the paradoxical situation that is currently affecting Italy. A concert pianist and a painter, suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, Fabrizio is in possession of a medical prescription for medicinal cannabis granted by the Dutch Ministry of Health (Bedrocan), so he imported it at his own expenses through the City Health Service, and could safely enjoy therapy for a few months.
But due to the high cost of this medicine, and to the variable therapeutic quality of this "institutional" cannabis, every spring he tried to grow for himself a few plants on his balcony, hardly enough for his own medical needs. He was never even allowed to see the end of the flowering process, since every year his home was the target of a police raid, a confiscation of his plants and the filing of a new criminal report. He was thus subjected to a dozen trials for cultivation, and has served 4 months in prison as a pre-trial safety measure. Just for refusing to buy cannabis on the black market (itâ s not a criminal offence, you shouldnât mind to finance mafia and to put your health at risk instead of treating your pathology), and for not being well off enough to buy Bedrocan.
Fabrizio, after the methodical destruction of his private and professional life, faces today in Italy a concrete risk of being sentenced to many years of imprisonment. Based on the current regulations, he is not considered to be an ill citizen who has rights, but rather a dangerous recidivist criminal for whom the execution of a zero tolerance approach is a must. He cultivated cannabis, and should he skip jail because of his medical needs, he could repeat the crime in order to stop his suffering, since he already did so many times and for which he has already been sentenced definitive prison terms in two criminal proceedings.
In other European Countries too we are facing a glaring discrepancy regarding the guarantee to the right to health, which is more and more becoming a right for only first class citizens. Only those who possess large economic resources and meet the requirements of a doctor are granted access to legal medicinal cannabis, whereas the great majority of patients are forced into illegality if they want to benefit from the properties of a plant that cures them.
The right to health, acknowledged as fundamental by the various national Constitutions, by many International Civil Rights Treaties such as The International Convenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of the United Nations (art.12) and well in evidence in the Constitution of the World Health Organization, seems to be absent in a large part of Europe when the substance used to maintain or improve oneâs own health is listed among "illegal" plants.
In fact, the same is true about the Coca plant, its long and proven history of medicinal and cultural use acknowledged by the UN itself in the Convention against Illicit Drug Trafficking of 1988, where Peru and Boliviaâs right to grow an amount limited to their domestic market is officially acknowledged. The possibility of utilization of mate and other products to treat cocaine addiction would be of great interest as well, since it has been noticed that cocaine craving is apparently reduced by it.
We hope that the European Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA), whose task is to monitor the human rights situation all over Europe, will put into practice the suggestion of the Commission for Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs of the European Parliament (Catania report, point 33rd), that a study on the impact of drug policies on human rights is inserted as soon as possible among its activities. We will initiate a strong lobby in order to ensure that this study is carried out.
Encod, in cooperation with the Basque government, is organizing a research program on the involvement of drug users associations in the design of drug policies in Europe. This research includes a questionnaire that usersâ organizations are invited to answer, and a round table discussion to be held in Vitoria, Basque Country, Spain, on November 21 - 23. In collaboration with other organizations, the preparation of the Cannabis Tribunal in The Hague on December 1st and 2nd is also progressing.

Regarding Fabrizio, support actions are being prepared as well as a solidarity web auction for his paintings, in order to collect the necessary funds for this basic campaign. His next court hearing in Chieti has been scheduled a few days after December 10th, the international day for human rights, when he will be present at the dedication for his inclusion among the metallic templates comprising the monument "All potential targets" on a main square in Rome.
In order not to close this bulletin with a bitter taste in the mouth, we end with some recent good news for Italy, where two recent developments may provide a glimpse of hope at the judiciary level. The first is the re-opening by the court of Perugiaof the case of Aldo Bianzino] who misteriously died in prison the day after he was arrested for cultivating cannabis. The second might lead to the reconsideration of the sentence that was issued in April 2008 by the Cassation Court in which the equivalent relation between growing exclusively for personal consumption and simple possession was simply denied. But recently, a judge acquitted the members of a community inspired by American Indian culture of any charge for growing 79 cannabis plants. This fact may produce new opportunities to re-open the Cannabis Social Club debate on a national level.
An important judgment came from the Netherlands too, where the Supreme Court acquitted a Dutch citizen suffering from multiple sclerosis of the cultivation charge. But there, the patientâs appeal was against a 250 ⬠fine...
By: Alessandra Viazzi
The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News/Updates 10/31/08
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