In Response to Court Ruling, ACLU of Washington Calls on Legislature to Clarify Medical Marijuana Law (11/22/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
OLYMPIA, WA - The Washington Supreme Court today rejected a seriously ill
woman’s plea to use medical marijuana to alleviate chronic pain, even though she
had a doctor’s written recommendation. The American Civil Liberties Union of
Washington said the 6-3 ruling points to the need to clarify the state’s medical
marijuana law to ensure that patients are able to exercise their rights.
“Despite the clear intent of Washington’s voters, seriously ill people still
are being prosecuted and convicted for using medical marijuana,” said ACLU of
Washington Legislative Director Jennifer Shaw. “The Legislature needs to act to
ensure that qualified patients are able to benefit from medical marijuana.”
In 1998, Washington voters adopted by initiative the Medical Use of Marijuana
Act to enable ill people with a medical recommendation to use marijuana as
medicine. The Act protects qualifying patients and their caregivers from being
punished in state courts for growing, possessing, and using marijuana, but it
does not technically protect them from arrest or prosecution. This discrepancy
has led to the arrest and conviction of people who had physician recommendations
to use marijuana for medicinal purposes, but who were not allowed to defend
themselves in court using the medical marijuana law.
The ACLU is working with Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles to introduce legislation
in the 2007 Legislature to improve the law. The legislation will clarify legal
standards for physician recommendations of medical marijuana, including the
ability of patients with out-of-state physicians to use marijuana for medicinal
purposes.
Today’s ruling stemmed from the case of patient Sharon Tracy, a resident of
Skamania County. Tracy suffers from chronic pain from migraines and hip
deformities, and uses marijuana to control it and to avoid using addictive
prescription medicines.
Tracy lived part-time in California, where she took care of her ill mother,
and had a recommendation from a doctor in that state to use medical marijuana.
During an unrelated visit by a Skamania Sheriff’s detective in May 2003, Tracy
admitted using marijuana and cultivating a few plants in her home. The home was
later searched, and she was arrested and charged with possession and
manufacturing of marijuana.
A trial court did not allow her to raise her defense under the state’s
Medical Use of Marijuana Act. The court ruled that her California medical
marijuana card was not valid in Washington, even though out-of-state doctors may
write prescriptions for stronger medications. Tracy was found guilty; an appeals
court upheld the conviction.
The ACLU and the Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers filed a
friend-of-the-court brief in the appeal to the state supreme court, saying that
Tracy should have been allowed to use Washington’s medical marijuana law in her
defense. The brief was written by the ACLU’s Andy Ko and Alison Chinn Holcomb
and WACDL’s Suzanne Elliott.
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