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Lawmakers In 5 States Tell Feds To Back Off Medical Marijuana (365 hits)

WASHINGTON -- Elected lawmakers in five states have a message for the federal government: Don't interfere with state medical marijuana laws.

In an open letter to the federal government, lawmakers from both sides of the political aisle called on the government to stop using scarce law enforcement resources on taking pot away from medical marijuana patients.

"States with medical marijuana laws have chosen to embrace an approach that is based on science, reason, and compassion. We are lawmakers from these states," the lawmakers explained in their letter.

"Our state medical marijuana laws differ from one another in their details, such as which patients qualify for medical use; how much marijuana patients may possess; whether patients and caregivers may grow marijuana; and whether regulated entities may grow and sell marijuana to patients. Each of our laws, however, is motivated by a desire to protect seriously ill patients from criminal penalties under state law."

The letter -- signed by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-Calif.), Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles (D-Wash.), Rep. Antonio Maestas (D-N.M.), Sen. Cisco McSorley (D-N.M.), Assemblyman Chris Norby (R-Calif.), Rep. Deborah Sanderson (R-Maine) and Sen. Pat Steadman (D-Colo.) -- comes directly on the heels of a federal raid in the heart of California's pot legalization movement: medical marijuana training school Oaksterdam University in downtown Oakland, where U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration officials on Monday blocked off doors with yellow tape and carried off trash bags full of unknown substances to a nearby van. An IRS spokeswoman could not comment on the raid except to say the agents had a federal search warrant.

The lawmakers called on President Obama to live up to his campaign promise to leave the regulation of medical marijuana to the states, adding raids would only "force patients underground" into the illegal drug market.

The president as a candidate promised to maintain a hands-off approach toward pot clinics that adhere to state law. At a 2007 town hall meeting in Manchester, N.H., Obama said raiding patients who use marijuana for medicinal purposes "makes no sense." At another town hall in Nashua, N.H., he said the Justice Department's prosecution of medical marijuana users was "not a good use of our resources." Yet the number of Justice Department raids on marijuana dispensaries has continued to rise.

Read the full letter here:

Over the last two decades, 16 states and the District of Columbia have chosen to depart from federal policy and chart their own course on the issue of medical marijuana, as states are entitled to do under our federalist system of government. These states have rejected the fallacy long promoted by the federal government -- that marijuana has absolutely no accepted medical use and that seriously ill people must choose between ignoring their doctors' medical advice or risking arrest and prosecution. They have stopped using their scarce law enforcement resources to punish patients and those who care for them and have instead spent considerable resources and time crafting programs that will provide patients with safe and regulated access to medical marijuana.
States with medical marijuana laws have chosen to embrace an approach that is based on science, reason, and compassion. We are lawmakers from these states.

Our state medical marijuana laws differ from one another in their details, such as which patients qualify for medical use; how much marijuana patients may possess; whether patients and caregivers may grow marijuana; and whether regulated entities may grow and sell marijuana to patients. Each of our laws, however, is motivated by a desire to protect seriously ill patients from criminal penalties under state law; to provide a safe and reliable source of medical marijuana; and to balance and protect the needs of local communities and other residents in the state. The laws were drafted with considered thoughtfulness and care, and are thoroughly consistent with the American tradition of using the states as laboratories for public policy innovation and experimentation.

Unfortunately, these laws face a mounting level of federal hostility and confusing mixed messages from the Obama Administration, the Department of Justice, and the various United States Attorneys. In 2008, then candidate Obama stated that as President, he would not use the federal government to circumvent state laws on the issue of medical marijuana. This promise was followed up in 2009 by President Obama with a Department of Justice memo from former Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden stating that federal resources should not generally be focused "on individuals whose actions are in clear and unambiguous compliance with existing state laws providing for the medical use of marijuana." This provided welcome guidance for state legislators and administrators and encouraged us to move forward with drafting and passing responsible regulatory legislation.

Nonetheless, the United States Attorneys in several states with medical marijuana laws have chosen a different course. They have explicitly threatened that federal investigative and prosecutorial resources "will continue to be directed" towards the manufacture and distribution of medical marijuana, even if such activities are permitted under state law. These threats have generally been timed to influence pending legislation or encourage the abandonment of state and local regulatory programs. They contradict President Obama's campaign promise and policy his first year in office and serve to push medical marijuana activity back into the illicit market.

Most disturbing is that a few United States Attorneys warn that state employees who implement the laws and regulations of our states are not immune from criminal prosecution under the federal Controlled Substances Act. They do so notwithstanding the fact that no provision exists within the Controlled Substances Act that makes it a crime for a state employee to enforce regulations that help a state define conduct that is legal under its own state laws.

Hundreds of state and municipal employees are currently involved in the licensing and regulation of medical marijuana producers and providers in New Mexico, Colorado, Maine, and California, and have been for years. The federal government has never threatened, much less prosecuted, any of these employees. Indeed, the federal government has not, to our knowledge, prosecuted state employees for performing their ministerial duties under state law in modern history. It defies logic and precedent that the federal government would start prosecuting state employees now.

Recognizing the lack of any real harm to state employees, a number of states have moved forward. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie drew on his own experience as a former United States Attorney in deciding that New Jersey state workers were not realistically at risk of federal prosecution in his decision to move forward implementing New Jersey’s medical marijuana program. Rhode Island, Vermont, Arizona, and the District of Columbia are also in the process of implementing their state laws.

Nonetheless, the suggestion that state employees are at risk is have a destructive and chilling impact. Washington Governor Christine Gregoire vetoed legislation to regulate medical marijuana in her state and Delaware Governor Jack Markell suspended implementation of his state's regulatory program after receiving warnings from the United States Attorneys in their states about state employees. Additionally, a number of localities in California ended or suspended regulatory programs after receiving similar threats to their workers.

We, the undersigned state legislators, call on state and local officials to not be intimidated by these empty federal threats. Our state medical marijuana programs should be implemented and move forward. Our work, and the will of our voters, should see the light of day.

We call on the federal government not to interfere with our ability to control and regulate how medical marijuana is grown and distributed. Let us seek clarity rather than chaos. Don’t force patients underground, to fuel the illegal drug market.

And finally, we call on President Obama to recommit to the principles and policy on which he campaigned and asserted his first year in office. Please respect our state laws. And don't use our employees as pawns in your zealous and misguided war on medical marijuana.

Assemblymember Tom Ammiano (D-CA)

Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles (D-WA)

Representative Antonio Maestas (D-NM)

Senator Cisco McSorley (D-NM)

Assemblymember Chris Norby (R-CA)

Representative Deborah Sanderson (R-ME)

Senator Pat Steadman (D-CO)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/02/l...
Posted By: Steve Williams
Saturday, April 7th 2012 at 9:02AM
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And one more broken campaign promise. Why has Obama done an about face on this issue? What is the Federal motivation for attacking medical marijuana?
Saturday, April 7th 2012 at 10:52AM
Steve Williams

love you two guys,

but i'm with the Commander in Chief on this decision..............

Our President Baraka Hussein Obama is the WISEST euroCentric Leader EVER.

thug, bully?

come on..............

Our Commander in Chief is a child of eastAfrica, i accept his judgement............

jenFad, I am not a doctor

BUT

1. In East Africa for CENTURIES the infirm and sick have used a TEA Party of khat.........naturally medicating

2. It is not a MONEY maker for American Drug lords---that have BUILT usaPrision Populations to the WORLDS highest and have KILLED more Americans in 1-ONE- YEAR than were Killed in usaMiddleEast wars in 11 YEARS

3. It would BUILD the economy of East African nations, Kenya-Uganda-Somalia-Tanzania-and Yemen

4. It would allow American taxpayers not to have to pay foreign aid and war aid in Africa.....



Saturday, April 7th 2012 at 12:45PM
powell robert
I have mixed feelings about medical marijuana but Irma, if you decide you need some info on this I have it for you. I say mixed feelings because it does help with many conditions but also has side effects. I myself use it for diabetes and have reduced my insulin dose by half since starting medical marijuana use. The unfortunate side effect is the well documented short term memory loss.

But the really unfortunate (maybe insidious) result of marijuana being illegal at the federal level is that it also makes hemp illegal, and hemp is a very valuable crop, as expressed by the few quotes below found at:

http://relegalize.info/hemp/04-biomass.sht...

"Make the most you can of the Indian Hemp seed and sow it everywhere."
— George Washington 1794

"Hemp is of first necessity to the wealth & protection of the country."
— Thomas Jefferson

"Why use up the forests which were centuries in the making and the mines which required ages to lay down, if we can get the equivalent of forest and mineral products in the annual growth of the hemp fields?"
— Henry Ford


Sunday, April 8th 2012 at 11:32AM
Steve Williams
Here's another one:

"The prestige of government has undoubtedly been lowered considerably by the [cannabis] prohibition law. For nothing is more destructive of respect for the government and the law of the land than passing laws which cannot be enforced. It is an open secret that the dangerous increase of crime in this country is closely connected with this [prohibition]."
— Albert Einstein (My First Impression of the U.S.A., 1921)


Sunday, April 8th 2012 at 11:50AM
Steve Williams
Do you mean Messages or Guestbook comments?
Monday, April 9th 2012 at 5:25AM
Steve Williams
@sTEVEHAVE YOU BEEN READING(i GATHER YOU ARE STILL HERE IN NORTHERN cA.) in your local paper the latest problem for those raiding marjuanan shops are now being met with the stores being raided are giving away free weed and those with medical perscriptions standiing there watching th eraid, smoking....

To tell the truth if tis chemo "I" will be starting next week is as bad as some say it is and how it makes you not be able to eat or keep anythng down, "I" may just join in the cancer reseach study here on this and get me a medical marjuana prescription form the cancer center. (smile)

ONLY NI CA. WHERE ONE CAN GO BUY WEED IN DIFFERENT FLAVORS of one's choice from public VENDING MAChINEs. (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
...and, if "I" do I will be talking about it with the site members in my CHANGING POISON INTO MEDICINE POSTINGS. ..

TO ME PROPER EDUCATION IS ONE OF OUR MAGIC BULLETS AGAINIST DISCRIMINATION.AS IN IGNORANCE(S-M-I-L-E)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
@STEVE, "i" BELIEVE BHO'S NOT TRYING TO OVER RULE THE VOTERS IN CA. IS A GREAT STEP IN HIS NOT INTERFERING IN OUR STATE AS WELL AS FOREIGN NATIONS BY DECLARING OPEN WAR ON THEIR RIGHTS TO DETERMINE THEIR OWN FATES AS THEIR CHOICE NOT HIS AS HE KNOWS AND FULLY ACCEPT HE IS NOT A DICTATOR. (SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
"I" believe if they eveg are able to tax marijuana it will become legal. Even drug counselors prefer and kind of d-r-u-g of choice as better than alcohol. Truth and fact, it is all about the almighty $$$$$$$$ and lobby money and not facts...

(off topic Steve can you take me on as a computer student and teach me how to unblock Jen?)(I went to delete some emails and hit block not delete)

Thanks (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
Nope, on my email page. (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
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