Plant Prejudice
Opinion Editorial by Jacob Sullum -
Aug 19, 2008
23 ratings from readers
When
Charlie Lynch was convicted of five marijuana-related offenses, for operating a medical dispensary, prejudice against marijuana bested the facts. Actually, the relevant facts were barred from the courtroom.
When
Owen Beck was 17, doctors amputated his right leg to stop the spread
of bone cancer.
His
parents, desperate to find a drug that would relieve their son’s
excruciating phantom limb pain, brought him to Charlie Lynch’s
medical marijuana dispensary in Morro Bay, Calif., carrying a
recommendation from a Stanford University oncologist.
The marijuana
not only eased the pain but also alleviated the nausea caused by
chemotherapy.
Called
to testify as a character witness in Lynch’s federal marijuana
trial, Beck did not get far. When he mentioned his cancer, U.S.
District Judge George Wu cut him off and sent him packing.
Wu
decreed there would be no talk of the symptoms marijuana relieves, no
references to California’s recognition of marijuana as a medicine,
no mention even of the phrase “medical marijuana” in front of the
jury.
In
short, there would be no explanation of how Lynch came to operate
what prosecutors called a “marijuana store” in downtown Morro Bay
for a year, openly serving more than 2,000 customers.
Charles C. Lynch
|
Under
federal law, which forbids marijuana use for any purpose, all that
was irrelevant. So it’s hardly surprising that Lynch was convicted
last week of five marijuana-related offenses that carry penalties of
five to 85 years in prison.
Nor is
it surprising that so many self-described conservatives, including
Republican presidential candidate John McCain, support the
prosecution of people like Charlie Lynch, abandoning their avowed
federalist principles because of blind hostility toward a plant they
associate with draft-dodging, flag-burning hippies.
It’s
not surprising, but it’s shameful.
The
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has raided more than 60
medical marijuana dispensaries in the last two years. Because the
deck is stacked against them, dispensary operators facing federal
drug charges typically plead guilty.
Lynch
instead gambled on a defense known as entrapment by estoppel, which
occurs when someone is arrested for actions the government assured
him were legal.
Before
he opened Central Coast Compassionate Caregivers in 2006, Lynch
called the DEA to ask about his legal exposure. He says an agent told
him he should consult with state and local authorities, which he took
to mean he could avoid trouble as long as he complied with state and
local law.
It’s
not hard to see why Lynch believed he was operating a legitimate
business. He had the blessing of the Morro Bay Chamber of Commerce
and the city council; local officials, including Morro Bay’s mayor,
posed for pictures at the dispensary’s opening; and neither his
neighbors nor the city police objected.
At
Lynch’s trial the DEA denied giving him any sort of green light, or
even a yellow one. But the response he says he got from the agency is
the response he should have gotten, because under the U.S.
Constitution the medical use of marijuana is a local matter.
At one
time John McCain seemed to acknowledge as much. In April 2007 he
said, “I will let states decide that issue.” But he quickly
abandoned that position, and this year he said he’d continue the
DEA’s medical marijuana raids, declaring, “It is a national issue
and not a [state] issue.”
By
contrast, McCain’s Democratic opponent, Barack Obama, has promised
to stop the raids.
McCain’s
medical marijuana position contradicts his professed allegiance to
federalism. “The federal government was intended to have limited
scope,” he says on his website, vowing to appoint judges who
“respect the proper role of local and state governments.”
That
commitment is inconsistent with reading Congress’s power to
regulate interstate commerce broadly enough to cover homegrown
medical marijuana, as the Supreme Court did in 2005. “If Congress
can regulate this under the Commerce Clause,” Justice Clarence
Thomas noted in his dissent, “it can regulate virtually anything —
and the federal government is no longer one of limited and enumerated
powers.”
By
supporting the Bush administration’s medical marijuana policy,
McCain is renouncing such concerns. Worse, his promise to flout the
Constitution probably will enhance his appeal among conservatives.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. His is also the author of For Your Own Good: The Anti-Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public Health. Sullum is a
graduate of Cornell University, where he majored in economics and
psychology. He lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and daughter.