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Dying Woman Loses Appeal On Marijuana As Medication


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#1 rkzenrage

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Posted 15 March 2007 - 09:53 PM

This is sick, this administration and the AMA wants people like this woman and myself to die and suffer.
It is the truth and it IS that simple.

Quote

Dying Woman Loses Appeal on Marijuana as Medication
By JESSE McKINLEY
Published: March 15, 2007
SAN FRANCISCO, March 14 — Federal appellate judges here ruled Wednesday that a terminally ill woman using marijuana was not immune to federal prosecution simply because of her condition, and in a separate case a federal judge dismissed most of the charges against a prominent advocate for the medicinal use of the drug.

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Angel Raich
The woman, Angel McClary Raich, says she uses marijuana on doctors’ recommendation to treat an inoperable brain tumor and a battery of other serious ailments. Ms. Raich, 41, asserts that the drug effectively keeps her alive, by stimulating appetite and relieving pain, in a way that prescription drugs do not.

She wept when she heard the decision.

“It’s not every day in this country that someone’s right to life is taken from them,” said Ms. Raich, appearing frail during a news conference in Oakland, where she lives. “Today you are looking at someone who really is walking dead.”

In 2002, she and three other plaintiffs sued the government, seeking relief from federal laws outlawing marijuana. The case made its way to the Supreme Court, and in 2005, the court ruled against Ms. Raich, finding that the federal government had the authority to prohibit and prosecute the possession and use of marijuana for medical purposes. But the justices left elements of Ms. Raich’s case to a lower court to consider.

On Wednesday, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit found that while they sympathized with Ms. Raich’s plight and had seen “uncontroverted evidence” that she needed marijuana to survive, she lacked the legal grounds to exempt herself from federal law.

The court “recognizes the use of marijuana for medical purposes is gaining traction,” the decision read. “But that legal recognition has not yet reached the point where a conclusion can be drawn that the right to use medical marijuana is ‘fundamental.’ ”

Eleven states have medical marijuana laws on the books, and the New Mexico Legislature is poised to approve a medical marijuana bill there, with the support of Gov. Bill Richardson. Medical-marijuana advocates estimate more than 100,000 Americans use the drug to treat medical conditions.

California was the first state to legalize medical marijuana, in a 1996 ballot measure, Proposition 215. That measure set off a decade-long fight over a variety of legal issues surrounding marijuana, including state rights and “common law necessity” defenses like the one Ms. Raich was trying to use.

Graham Boyd, director of the Drug Law Reform Project of the American Civil Liberties Union, which has an unrelated medical marijuana case pending before a federal judge in San Jose, said the decision in Ms. Raich’s case was a setback for the movement but not a crippling one.

“Today is just one chapter in a story that is still not over,” Mr. Boyd said

Robert Raich, Ms. Raich’s husband and lawyer, said she might appeal the case to the full Ninth Circuit. In the other ruling on Wednesday, a judge in United States District Court here handed a victory to the marijuana advocate, Ed Rosenthal.

Mr. Rosenthal, 62, said federal prosecutors had unfairly made him a target with an array of drug, money-laundering and tax-evasion charges, many of which closely mirrored charges he was convicted of in 2003, when he was growing medical marijuana under California’s law at a dispensary in Oakland. That conviction was overturned last year by a federal appeals court, which found evidence of jury misconduct.

Mr. Rosenthal had asked the judge, Charles R. Breyer, for a dismissal at a hearing this month, suggesting that the prosecution was vindictive. On Wednesday, Mr. Breyer obliged in part, dismissing the charges of money laundering and tax evasion, but leaving the marijuana charges in place. And while Mr. Breyer said that he believed the prosecutors had acted in good faith, that nonetheless “the presumption of vindictiveness has not been rebutted.”

Joseph Elford, a lawyer for Mr. Rosenthal, said the case had been “a tremendous waste of taxpayer resources.”


Carolyn Marshall contributed from Oakland, Calif.

There are many stories like this.
There are no drugs that help with muscle spasms, certain types of nerve damage and especially nausea and loss of appetite from illness and chemotherapy as well as, and in some cases at all, like marijuana.
The AMA's attempts at synthesizing it, Marinol and others make most people more ill. I am one of those. They do not care.
It is no more a gateway drug than cigarettes or coffee... I've never met an alcoholic or junkie that did not drink coffee or smoke, why not blame their addictions on those drugs? It is the same logic. Idiots.
Only the deluded would believe that religion has nothing to do with this.

Thomas Jefferson-
"If a law is unjust not only does a man have the right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so!"


#2 Survivor35

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Posted 31 July 2007 - 06:13 PM

I whole heartedly "believe this". One of my best friends in the world died last year from Cancer, which started in his lungs, spread to his lymph nodes, and into his brain. The more they tried to treat it, the sicker he became. We live in the state of MD, and there is no such thing as Medical Marijuana, but we learned through a friend to have him try smoking it to increase appetite, etc., etc. His Doctor agreed. Warned him that yes, it was illegal, and please not to get caught, but agreed that it would probably be worth the effort. It absolutely was. The only time he had any appetite, it was the only time he would stop throwing up from the huge amounts of Chemo, and it helped with many other things, right down to his Migraines. Did it cure his cancer? No, obviously not. But it helped to extend his life, and even his doctors have admitted to that, and it improved his quality of life by taking care of some of the pain, and helping eliminate some of the other issues that come from that kindof debilitating (sp?) medication. So, dont believe it. But I've seen it with my own two eyes, as have many, many doctors, and that is why so many states are fighting for medical legalization.
"Courage is the art of being the only one who knows that you are actually scared to death"Chrissy
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#3 Lucydog

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Posted 31 July 2007 - 06:27 PM

I live very close to 2 people who have become cannabis martyrs. Both have been caught dealing and supplying to people with medical needs, and both have got off with the most lenient of sentances. It is not a crime to be in a small amount of the stuff in this country for your own personal use, but it is still a crime to supply which seems to be a bit of a contradiction.....
If I could obtain a small amount leglly I would like to give it a try. Ive had really horrible pain and spasms for the last few weeks and if it might give me some relief then Id give it a go. You dont know til you try and conventional meds certainly havent helped me.

#4 charol9095

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Posted 31 July 2007 - 11:01 PM

View PostLucydog, on Jul 31 2007, 12:27 PM, said:

I live very close to 2 people who have become cannabis martyrs. Both have been caught dealing and supplying to people with medical needs, and both have got off with the most lenient of sentances. It is not a crime to be in a small amount of the stuff in this country for your own personal use, but it is still a crime to supply which seems to be a bit of a contradiction.....
If I could obtain a small amount leglly I would like to give it a try. Ive had really horrible pain and spasms for the last few weeks and if it might give me some relief then Id give it a go. You dont know til you try and conventional meds certainly havent helped me.

I have used marijuana for pain for the past 10 years. I could care less if it's illegal. The "legal" stuff is lousy and the THC pills don't work. It doesn't cure you but it sure takes the pain away. It's #1 in my book........carol

#5 nomis

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Posted 01 August 2007 - 01:25 AM

I had a friend who died of lung cancer a couple of years ago and in her last months she found marijuana was the only thing that eased her pain. She declined all other painkillers so her action was obviously genuine.
It's sad that marijuana has become so political that the truth is being sacrificed. I don't think we'll see a more sensible approach until one of the big drug companies finds a way to make alot of money out of it.
"It's the notion that there is no perfection ~ that this is a broken world and we live with broken hearts and broken lives but still that is no alibi for anything. On the contrary, you have to stand up and say hallelujah under those circumstances. " - Leonard Cohen

#6 wheeliebear75

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Posted 02 August 2007 - 12:12 PM

Well I'm with you guys. I live in California. It's a bit like saying "you can have dairy products, but you can't consume, or sell them, and you may not have a cow". Yeah what ever. I've heard people say all kinds of things in opposition to marijuana.

Q:Does it make it a bit harder to think or impair judgment? (my answer) Yeah a bit but not near as much as 1000mg Darvocet, 25mg Flexerall, and 50mg of Phenergan.
Q: Could I become addicted? (me) If I was going to become addicted I'd have been "hooked" a long time ago from things like Morphine, Demerall, Oxyconton, etc. And if anyone doubts the addictiveness of Rx drugs......go talk to Rush Limbaugh.

One thing nobody can tell me is......how do I stay awake while my kids tell me what they did at their friend's house? Oh I'm diabetic......so how do I keep my sugar up if I don't want to eat because my stomach is queezy? Oh and I really hate seeing tears come from my kids' eyes because they're upset by seeing mommy cry in pain.

I'm the non-custodial parent (and I NEVER use "medicine" around the kids. They only know that mom goes into her room for a little while......it smells a bit funny......then she comes out smiling and ready to spend quality time with them). The kids know that I take pills which are a medicine for my back and that for me so is the pot......but that they don't have anything wrong with them so they don't need any medicine. They're 15,14,13, and 9.

My 60+yr old mother has said she herself would risk jail time just to have it for me. I wear size 8/10 in juniors (this after 4 C'sections) but without pot I was in size 3 and 4....not good. How much would someone give to cure a case of the hangover heeves? Yet politicians want to act like this is just a medical excuse. I too tried the Merinol.....no bad side effects......but no positive ones either.
*Enjoy every sunset, but be grateful for every dawn.*
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*I USE a wheelchair, that does NOT make ME a wheelchair!*




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