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Feds to
stop
prosecuting
medical
marijuana
users
By
DEVLIN
BARRETT
Associated
Press
Writer
Pot-smoking
patients
or their
sanctioned
suppliers
should
not be
targeted
for
federal
prosecution
in
states
that
allow
medical
marijuana,
prosecutors
were
told
Monday
in a new
policy
memo
issued
by the
Justice
Department.
Under
the
policy
spelled
out in a
three-page
legal
memo,
federal
prosecutors
are
being
told it
is not a
good use
of their
time to
arrest
people
who use
or
provide
medical
marijuana
in
strict
compliance
with
state
law.
The
guidelines
issued
by the
department
do,
however,
make it
clear
that
federal
agents
will go
after
people
whose
marijuana
distribution
goes
beyond
what is
permitted
under
state
law or
use
medical
marijuana
as a
cover
for
other
crimes.
The memo
advises
prosecutors
they
"should
not
focus
federal
resources
in your
states
on
individuals
whose
actions
are in
clear
and
unambiguous
compliance
with
existing
state
laws
providing
for the
medical
use of
marijuana."
The new
policy
is a
significant
departure
from the
Bush
administration,
which
insisted
it would
continue
to
enforce
federal
anti-pot
laws
regardless
of state
codes.
"It will
not be a
priority
to use
federal
resources
to
prosecute
patients
with
serious
illnesses
or their
caregivers
who are
complying
with
state
laws on
medical
marijuana,
but we
will not
tolerate
drug
traffickers
who hide
behind
claims
of
compliance
with
state
law to
mask
activities
that are
clearly
illegal,"
Attorney
General
Eric
Holder
said in
a
statement.
By the
government's
count,
14
states
allow
some use
of
marijuana
for
medical
purposes:
Alaska,
California,
Colorado,
Hawaii,
Maine,
Maryland,
Michigan,
Montana,
Nevada,
New
Mexico,
Oregon,
Rhode
Island,
Vermont
and
Washington.
Some
medical
marijuana
advocates
say
Maryland
shouldn't
be
included
in that
group,
because
the law
there
only
allows
for
reduced
penalties
for
medical
marijuana
usage.

Samuel
Bagdorf
of San
Francisco,
who
suffers
from
anxiety
disorders,
lights
his
marijuana
pipe at
the San
Francisco
Medical
Cannabis
Clinic
in San
Francisco,
Monday,
Oct. 19,
2009.
Pot-smoking
patients
or their
sanctioned
suppliers
should
not be
targeted
for
federal
prosecution
in
states
that
allow
medical
marijuana,
prosecutors
were
told
Monday
in a new
policy
memo
issued
by the
Justice
Department.
Under
the
policy
spelled
out in a
three-page
legal
memo,
federal
prosecutors
are
being
told it
is not a
good use
of their
time to
arrest
people
who use
or
provide
medical
marijuana
in
strict
compliance
with
state
law.(AP
Photo/Eric
Risberg)
California
stands
out
among
those
for the
widespread
presence
of
dispensaries
—
businesses
that
sell
marijuana
and even
advertise
their
services.
Colorado
also has
several
dispensaries,
and
Rhode
Island
and New
Mexico
are in
the
process
of
licensing
providers,
according
to the
Marijuana
Policy
Project,
a group
that
promotes
the
decriminalization
of
marijuana
use.
Advocates
say
marijuana
is
effective
in
treating
chronic
pain and
nausea,
among
other
ailments.
Holder
said in
March
that he
wanted
federal
law
enforcement
officials
to
pursue
those
who
violate
both
federal
and
state
law, but
it has
not been
clear
how that
goal
would be
put into
practice.
The memo
spelling
out the
policy
was sent
Monday
to
federal
prosecutors
in the
14
states,
and also
to top
officials
at the
FBI and
Drug
Enforcement
Administration.
The memo
written
by
Deputy
Attorney
General
David
Ogden
emphasizes
that
prosecutors
have
wide
discretion
in
choosing
which
cases to
pursue,
and says
it is
not a
good use
of
federal
manpower
to
prosecute
those
who are
without
a doubt
in
compliance
with
state
law.
"This is
a major
step
forward,"
said
Bruce
Mirken,
communications
director
for the
Marijuana
Policy
Project.
"This
change
in
policy
moves
the
federal
government
dramatically
toward
respecting
scientific
and
practical
reality."

Buds of
marijuana
are
shown
before
being
placed
into
packets
for sale
at the
San
Francisco
Medical
Cannabis
Clinic
in San
Francisco,
Monday,
Oct. 19,
2009.
Pot-smoking
patients
or their
sanctioned
suppliers
should
not be
targeted
for
federal
prosecution
in
states
that
allow
medical
marijuana,
prosecutors
were
told
Monday
in a new
policy
memo
issued
by the
Justice
Department.
Under
the
policy
spelled
out in a
three-page
legal
memo,
federal
prosecutors
are
being
told it
is not a
good use
of their
time to
arrest
people
who use
or
provide
medical
marijuana
in
strict
compliance
with
state
law.(AP
Photo/Eric
Risberg)
The
change
has
critics,
including
lawmakers
who see
it as a
tactical
retreat
in the
fight
against
Mexican
drug
cartels.
"We
cannot
hope to
eradicate
the drug
trade if
we do
not
first
address
the cash
cow for
most
drug
trafficking
organizations
—
marijuana,"
said
Rep.
Lamar
Smith of
Texas,
the top
Republican
on the
House
Judiciary
Committee.
Administration
officials
said the
government
will
still
prosecute
those
who use
medical
marijuana
as a
cover
for
other
illegal
activity.
In
particular,
the memo
urges
prosecutors
to
pursue
marijuana
cases
which
involve
violence,
the
illegal
use of
firearms,
selling
pot to
minors,
money
laundering
or
involvement
in other
crimes.
And
while
the
policy
memo
describes
a change
in
priorities
away
from
prosecuting
medical
marijuana
cases,
it does
not rule
out the
possibility
that the
federal
government
could
still
prosecute
someone
whose
activities
are
allowed
under
state
law.
The
memo,
officials
said, is
designed
to give
a sense
of
prosecutorial
priorities
to U.S.
attorneys
in the
states
that
allow
medical
marijuana.
It notes
that pot
sales in
the
United
States
are the
largest
source
of money
for
violent
Mexican
drug
cartels,
but adds
that
federal
law
enforcement
agencies
have
limited
resources.
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