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News :: Agriculture : Civil & Human Rights : Drugs : Government Secrecy : Health : Regime
Hearings Begin Today in ACLU Challenge to Government Obstruction of Medical Marijuana Research Current rating: 0
22 Aug 2005
Scientists, Researchers and Lawmakers Demand Fairness From DEA and the Federal Government
WASHINGTON - August 22 - Hearings opened today in the American Civil Liberties Union’s challenge to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s policy of obstructing privately funded, FDA-approved scientific research that could lead to marijuana being approved as a prescription medicine.

Professor Lyle E. Craker is appealing the DEA's denial of application to grow marijuana for medical research.

Learn more about the people who are working to legalize medical marijuana >>
http://www.aclu.org/medicalmarijuana/#profiles

“Despite the DEA’s contentions, the public deserves and, increasingly, demands a full and fair scientific evaluation of the possible health benefits of medical marijuana,” said University of Massachusetts Professor Lyle Craker, Ph.D. “As a scientist, it is my job to make plant material available for research. The DEA’s refusal to permit me to grow marijuana for research necessarily prevents an accurate assessment of this plant’s potential medicinal properties.”

The proceedings, which are scheduled to last through the week, mark the culmination of more than four years of Professor Craker’s efforts to obtain permission to produce marijuana for use in studies on the plant’s medical benefits. Professor Craker, who filed his initial petition in June 2001, seeks a DEA license to grow research-grade marijuana for use in privately funded, FDA-approved studies that aim to develop marijuana into a legal, prescription medicine - an undertaking the DEA has maintained would run counter to public interest.

The U.S. Supreme Court recently held in Gonzales v. Raich that the federal government maintains authority under the commerce clause of the Constitution to enforce federal marijuana laws, even in states that have made the medical use of marijuana legal. Professor Craker’s hearing before the DEA has emerged as the latest front in doctors’ and patients’ struggles to develop marijuana as a prescription medicine safely accessible in pharmacies.

During oral arguments last November in Raich, Justice Stephen Breyer foreshadowed current developments by suggesting that patients pursue regulatory remedies, such as asking FDA to reclassify marijuana for medical use as “the obvious way to get what they want.” Justice Breyer added, “Medicine by regulation is better than medicine by referendum.”

The ACLU pointed out in pre-hearing submissions to a DEA Administrative Law Judge, however, that the federal government has a clear policy of blocking administrative channels and obstructing research that could lead to the development of marijuana as a prescription medicine.

“Almost 80 percent of Americans support making medical marijuana legal, and the Supreme Court has indicated that federal regulatory agencies are the proper channel for medical marijuana patients,” said Allen Hopper, a staff attorney with the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project. “All we are asking is that these agencies respond to the will of the people and the call of science. Let privately funded medical marijuana research go forward.”

Through the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), the federal government currently maintains a monopoly on the supply of marijuana available for research. All other controlled substances, in contrast, are available to researchers from DEA-licensed private laboratories - including MDMA (Ecstasy), LSD, heroin and cocaine. Scientists who want to study the medical benefits of marijuana with the goal of developing it into an FDA-approved prescription medicine either cannot secure marijuana for their research or receive from the institute marijuana of insufficient quality and potency.

The ACLU’s pre-hearing filings further assert that NIDA discriminates against scientists who seek to conduct research aimed at establishing marijuana’s efficacy and safety as an FDA-approved prescription medicine, as such research conflicts with NIDA’s mission to study only the harmful effects of drugs.

“We are frustrated with the DEA’s relentless red tape and the federal government’s indefensible politicization of scientific research and public wellbeing,” said Rick Doblin, Ph.D., president of the non-profit Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, which is sponsoring Professor Craker’s efforts. One of the association’s primary goals is to fund research aimed at developing marijuana into a legal prescription medicine. “Drug war posturing should not be permitted to obstruct our nation’s pharmaceutical development process, especially when it comes to researching a drug with well-founded potential to reduce chronic suffering.”

The hearing is taking place before a Department of Justice-appointed Administrative Law Judge, who will issue recommendations to the DEA Administrator based on the hearing’s findings. Such recommendations, while non-binding, nonetheless influence the DEA and are the sole administrative avenue for appealing the DEA’s regulatory decisions.

In addition to Professor Craker, several other nationally renowned experts are scheduled to testify in opposition to the DEA’s obstruction of marijuana research, including former senior policy analyst for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, Barbara Roberts, Ph.D.

Two members of the U.S. House of Representatives, John W. Olver (D-MA) and Michael E. Capuano (D-MA), have submitted a letter urging the DEA to approve Professor Craker’s petition. The letter states that the government’s current position “jeopardizes important research into the therapeutic effects of marijuana for patients undergoing chemotherapy or suffering from AIDS, glaucoma, or other diseases.”
See also:
http://www.aclu.org
http://www.aclu.org/DrugPolicy/DrugPolicy.cfm?ID=18937&c=81

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