The Tribune
SAN FRANCISCO —
A federal appeals court on Tuesday banned the Justice Department from
prosecuting medical marijuana cases if no state laws were broken.
A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ordered the federal agency to
show that 10 pending cases in California and Washington state violated
medical marijuana laws in those states before continuing with
prosecutions.
Marijuana remains illegal under federal
law, but Congress has barred the Justice Department from spending money
to prevent states from regulating the use or sale of medical pot.
Federal prosecutors argued unsuccessfully
that Congress meant only to bar the department from taking legal action
against states and that it could still prosecute individuals who violate
federal marijuana laws. The court rejected that, saying that medical
marijuana-based prosecutions prevent the states from giving full effect
to their own measures.
“If DOJ wishes to continue these
prosecutions, Appellants are entitled to evidentiary hearings to
determine whether their conduct was completely authorized by state law,
by which we mean that they strictly complied with all relevant
conditions imposed by state law on the use, distribution, possession,
and cultivation of medical marijuana,” Judge Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain
wrote for the panel.
Federal prosecutors could ask the 9th
Circuit to reconsider the case or petition the U.S. Supreme Court to
take up the issue. Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said
officials are still reviewing the decision.
Marijuana activists and lawyers
representing medical pot suppliers say the ruling is a significant
addition to the growing support for broad legalization of the drug.
Marijuana is legal for medicinal or recreational use in 25 states and
the District of Columbia. In addition, ten states have marijuana
legalizations measures on the November ballot.
“This is the beginning of the end of
federal prosecutions of state medical marijuana dispensary operators,
growers and patients,” said Marc Zilversmit, an attorney representing
five people who operate four marijuana stores in Los Angeles and nine
indoor growing sites in Los Angeles and San Francisco.
Still, Zilversmit and other medical
marijuana supporters said the Obama administration and federal
authorities are still fighting the drug’s legalization.
On Thursday, the Obama administration
announced that marijuana will remain on the list of most dangerous
drugs, but said it will allow more research into its medical uses.
The Drug Enforcement Administration said
the agency’s decision came after a lengthy review and consultation with
the Health and Human Services Department, which said marijuana “has a
high potential for abuse” and “no accepted medical use.” The decision
means that pot will remain illegal for any purpose under federal law.
Rep. Earl Blumenauer, an Oregon Democrat
who helped draft the language barring the Justice Department and its 93
U.S attorneys across the country from spending money on medical
marijuana prosecutions said the “DOJ has been a little slow to pick up
on” lawmakers’ desire that prosecutors go after organized drug rings and
leave alone medicinal pot sellers and users.
“Congress is increasingly united in the
recognition that we should not interfere with what states are doing with
medical marijuana,” Blumenauer said. “Unfortunately we’ve got the DEA
and 93 U.S. attorneys who have people that are still frying little
fish.”
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