ACLU Sues Sheriff’s Deputies to Uphold New Mexico Marijuana Law (1/17/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
CARLSBAD,
NM – A paraplegic man is suing Eddy County
Sheriff's deputies for seizing marijuana plants and equipment to grow marijuana,
which he uses to control pain resulting from a spinal cord injury. Leonard
French received a license to cultivate and use small quantities of
marijuana for medicinal purposes from the state of
New Mexico under the Lynn and Erin
Compassionate Use Act. The American Civil Liberties Union of
New Mexico, which represents
French, says the deputies' actions violated not only that law, but also state
forfeiture laws and a constitutional prohibition on unreasonable searches
and seizures.
"The New Mexico
state legislature, in its wisdom, passed the Compassionate Use Act after
carefully considering the benefits the drug provides for people who suffer
from uncontrollable pain, and weighing those benefits against the way federal
law considers cannabis,” said Peter Simonson, ACLU of New Mexico Executive
Director. “With their actions against Mr. French,
Eddy
County officials thwarted that
humane, sensible law, probably for no other reason than that they believed
federal law empowered them to do so."
On September 4, 2007, at least four
Eddy County
deputies, acting as members of the Pecos Valley Drug Task Force, arrived at
French's home in Malaga, New
Mexico and announced, "We're here about the marijuana."
Thinking that the deputies had arrived to check his compliance with the
compassionate use law, French presented the deputies with his state license to
grow marijuana and showed them his hydroponic equipment, including two small
marijuana plants and three dead sprouts. The deputies seized the equipment
and plants and later turned them over to the federal Drug Enforcement
Administration. French has not been charged with any violations of federal
drug laws.
A physician prescribed marijuana for French after other
medications lost their effectiveness in controlling pain and severe muscle
spasms stemming from a 1987 motorcycle accident.
Simonson said, "With the Compassionate Use Act,
New Mexico embarked on an
innovative project to help people who suffer from painful conditions like Mr.
French's. The law cannot succeed if the threat of arrest by county and
local law enforcement hangs over participants in the program. With this
lawsuit, we hope to clear the way for the state to implement a sensible,
conservative program to apply a drug that traditionally has been considered
illicit for constructive purposes."
The ACLU’s complaint is available online at: www.aclu-nm.org/PDF/French_1_17_08.pdf
For more information about the national ACLU Drug Law Reform
Project, go to: www.aclu.org/drugpolicy
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