SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RON BL who wrote (146330)5/18/2001 4:15:05 PM
From: The Street  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Editorial: Supreme Fictions

David Borden, Executive Director, borden@drcnet.org

After last winter's election debacle, some observers of Supreme
Court jurisprudence remarked on an apparent inconsistency in the
court's applications of the Constitutional requirement of equal
protection under the law. Equal protection for Florida's voters
was so important as to pose an insurmountable standard for
carrying out the Florida Supreme Court's order to recount the
votes statewide in the time remaining.

Yet in drug cases involving charges of racial discrimination in
law enforcement, the court has gone 180 degrees to the opposite,
setting an insurmountably high standard for defendants to have
the benefit of equal protection. It was not enough, as we noted
in our December 15th editorial, for Christopher Armstrong and
company to show that not one crack cocaine defendants in Los
Angeles federal court over a four year period was caucasian,
where many caucasians had been sent to state court during the
same period, where penalties were much more lenient. But extreme
racial bias resulting from police and prosecutorial choices
wasn't enough to satisfy a majority on the court that Chris
Armstrong deserved equal protection; Armstrong had to have met
the impossibly high standard of proving that Congress
deliberately intended for there to be a racial disparity.

This week's Supreme Court ruling on the medical marijuana
cooperatives case also raises troubling issues of inconsistency.
The opinion, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, found that there
is no medical necessity defense available for medical marijuana
because Congress deliberately decided when writing the Controlled
Substances Act that marijuana has "no accepted medical use."

But for Congress to say this doesn't make it true. Abundant
evidence exists, and existed then, to prove not only that
marijuana does have medical uses accepted by significant numbers
of physicians, but that the process by which Congress and the
agencies to which the CSA delegates medical scheduling authority
was dishonest and driven by ideology, not science. The same can
accurately be said for the parallel necessary determination for
placing marijuana in Schedule I (banned even for medical use),
having a "high potential for abuse."

This is why the DEA's own administrative law judge, Francis
Young, found in a 1988 ruling that the DEA's placement of
marijuana in Schedule I was "arbitrary and capricious" and that
marijuana is "the safest therapeutically active substance known
to man." Young's ruling was simply rejected by the DEA's top cop
at the time, Robert Bonner (not known for his nonexistent
scientific credentials).

So in ruling against the medical marijuana co-ops this week, the
Court allowed Congress and delegated agencies to author a medical
fiction and use it to perpetuate a tyranny against medical
marijuana patients and their providers. The very sort of tyranny
the Constitution arguably was designed to protect against.

Perhaps the Court can plead lack of jurisdiction -- the Congress,
some might say, and federal agencies as delegated by Congress,
are the proper places for scientific and policy determinations to
be made. Those bodies might do so imperfectly, sometimes even
dishonestly, but the place to correct that is through the
political system. But then why did Judge Young call marijuana's
medically banned status "arbitrary and capricious," language with
specific legal meaning intended to find the process by which that
status was decided as legally invalid?

More importantly, where does Congress derive the right or power
to even be involved in such decisions? This leads to another,
more fundamental fiction that the Court has perpetuated, this
time from a Court of the past. Federal drug prohibition laws
have been justified, in substantial part, on the Constitutional
clause authorizing the federal government to regulate interstate
commerce. This occurred during a time when the courts assisted
in dramatically expanding the power of the federal government vs.
the power of the states.

In this case, at least, the result is ludicrous. No reasonable
person can conclude that having the power to regulate interstate
commerce gives the federal government the right, for example, to
prohibit individuals from growing marijuana in their backyards.
Similarly, the interstate commerce clause cannot reasonably be
thought to justify banning freely associating individuals from
growing this or any other plant in a community for distribution
to patients in that community for medical use. Yet this
indefensible legal fiction has been the accepted Constitution
justification for a federal drug war for decades. Remember that
it took a Constitution amendment to prohibit alcohol. Why not
for other drugs?

The question, then, is why justices such as Thomas and Scalia,
who purportedly stand for a strict interpretation of the
Constitution in its original intent, have not risen in revolt
against a legal fiction perpetrated by a past court that
dramatically and inappropriately expanded federal police power?
A fiction without which federal action against the medical
marijuana co-ops could only be regarded as lawless?

Perhaps the true answer is that courts, past and present
ultimately are influenced by ideologies far more than their
proponents would like to believe, instruments of political power
rather than impartial defenders of law and rights.

The current Supreme Court has some work to do if it wishes to be
seen otherwise.

================
drcnet.org