GROWING OUTRAGE
by Jacob Sullum
The DEA's Medical Marijuana
Raids Show Contempt for The Constitution.
Today the House of
Representatives rejected an amendment aimed at
stopping federal raids on
patients who use marijuana and people who
provide it to them in states that
recognize the drug as a medicine.
Sponsored by Reps. Maurice Hinchey (D-N.Y.)
and Dana Rohrabacher
(R.-Calif.), the amendment would have forbidden the
Justice Department
(which includes the Drug Enforcement Administration) from
spending
money to tear up plants, close down clubs, or arrest patients or
providers.
The amendment was defeated by a vote of 273 to 152, which is
closer
than might have been expected. The vote in favor of a 1998
House
resolution condemning state medical marijuana laws was 310 to 93.
It
looks like supporters of the Hinchey/Rohrabacher amendment were
right
in thinking that five years of watching the DEA's cruel and
senseless
campaign against medical marijuana had changed some minds on
Capitol
Hill. "Given the growing outrage over the DEA's raids on patients
and
caregivers in California," Steve Fox of the Marijuana Policy
Project
said before the vote, "we expect it to be much closer this
time."
There is another way to look at this amendment: not as an
endorsement
of medical marijuana or an expression of sympathy for patients
who use
it to make their lives more bearable, but as a modest step
toward
enforcing the Constitution. Strictly speaking, the amendment
was
redundant, since the Constitution does not authorize the DEA's
raids
on medical marijuana users and growers.
Consider Ed Rosenthal,
who grew marijuana in Oakland for patients in
the Bay Area who were permitted
to use it under state law. The pot
never left California, so it's hard to see
why it's the federal
government's business. Yet Rosenthal was arrested by the
DEA and tried
in federal court. Convicted on marijuana cultivation charges,
he could
have gotten five years or more in federal prison but was sentenced
to
time served (one day) by U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer,
who
turned out to be more sympathetic than he initially seemed.
The
Justice Department is appealing the sentence, arguing that
Breyer
impermissibly departed from what should have been the
mandatory
minimum. Rosenthal, for his part, is appealing the conviction. One
of
his arguments is that the Commerce Clause, which gives Congress
the
authority to "regulate Commerce...among the several States," cannot
be
stretched to cover his purely local activities.
The Wo/Men's
Alliance for Medical Marijuana, which ran a pot farm 15
miles north of Santa
Cruz that the DEA raided in September, makes a
similar argument in a federal
lawsuit filed last April. The suit,
which has been joined by the city and
county of Santa Cruz, seeks a
court order that would keep the DEA away from
patients' plants.
The Commerce Clause argument is not a plea for mercy:
Have pity on the
poor patients! It's a demand: Mind your own business! Under
the
federal system created by the Constitution, a state can make
marijuana
legal for medical purposes, or for any purpose at all, and
the
national government has no authority to negate that decision. Even
for
opponents of the war on drugs who have their doubts about the
medical
marijuana movement, this is a principle worth fighting
for.
Substantial changes in the drug laws are most likely to come at
the
state level, but only if the federal government decides to step
back
and respect the Constitution.
This argument looks like a
winner-but only if you don't realize how
elastic the Commerce Clause has
become in the Supreme Court's hands
since the New Deal. In a notorious 1942
case, for instance, the Court
ruled that the Commerce Clause allowed the
federal government to stop
a farmer from growing wheat on his own land even
if he never sold it.
By growing what he otherwise would have purchased, the
Court reasoned,
he affected the demand for wheat, thereby implicating
interstate
commerce, since wheat is bought and sold between states. If
the
Commerce Clause covers wheat grown for home consumption, surely
it
covers weed grown for local consumption.
Then again, in recent
years the Court has rediscovered limits to the
Commerce Clause. If the clause
does not authorize Congress to ban gun
possession near a school, can it
possibly authorize Congress to ban
marijuana possession
everywhere?
Whatever the Supreme Court might decide, members of Congress
have a
duty to stop the federal government from overstepping its
proper
bounds. Today's vote was an opportunity to do that. You can judge
your
representative's respect for the Constitution by how he
responded.
__________________________________________________________________________
Hope you are enjoying your Tidbits. If you're not a member of
ReconsiDer and
would like to join, please fill out our membership application. And be sure to visit our
website.
This site contains copyrighted material
the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright
owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy,
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair
use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US
Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on
this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site
for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission
from the copyright owner.