-Caveat Lector-

Alaska Appeals Court Legalizes Simple Marijuana Possession, Law Enforcement
Dazed and Confused, Suffering Denial

"Alaska citizens have the right to possess less than four ounces of marijuana in
their home for personal use." -- Alaska Court of Appeals, Noy v. State, August
29, 2003

The Alaska Court of Appeals ruled August 29 that Alaska residents may possess up
to four ounces of marijuana in their own homes without any criminal or civil
penalty. The ruling, which cites a 1975 Alaska Supreme Court finding that the
Alaska constitution's privacy provisions protect the personal possession and use
of marijuana in the home, once again makes Alaska the only state in the country
with legal marijuana in the home. (After the 1975 Ravin v. Alaska decision, the
Alaska legislature eventually removed criminal penalties for possession of less
than four ounces, but a 1990 voter initiative cheerlead by then drug czar
William Bennett recriminalized simple pot possession. It has taken until now for
the appeals courts to rule on a case that challenged the constitutionality of
the 1990 vote.)

While sources in the Alaska Attorney General's office told DRCNet the state
would appeal the ruling, as of last Friday the Court of Appeals' decision is the
law of the land. But Alaska law enforcement, starting with the attorney
general's office, doesn't seem to get it. Law enforcement spokesmen asked by
DRCNet how they were reacting to the decision responded with a mixture of
confusion and determination to keep on arresting domestic pot smokers and
possessors.

For police in Anchorage, the state's largest city, it's business as usual. "We
are still enforcing the law the way we were before this," said Anchorage Police
Department public affairs officer Ron McGee. "As far as that goes, there has
been no change," he told DRCNet. "And it's still illegal under federal law," he
added.

Greg Wilkinson, spokesman for the Alaska Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Enforcement,
told DRCNet bureau representatives were meeting with other state law enforcement
officials this week to try to figure out how to respond. "We are approaching
this from two angles," he said. "One feeling is that is will be business as
usual. The other was that it will not." Busting personal users in their homes is
not a high priority, he said, adding that the bureau's focus was on large-scale
commercial operations, but that agents who encountered personal marijuana may
still act. "The feeling is that we may end up just confiscating the marijuana
now," he said. He could not explain on what basis police would seize people's
legal property.

And Alaska Chief Assistant Attorney General Dean Guaneli was reading from the
same script. "When police come into a home, whether on a domestic violence call
or something else, and see marijuana, we are not in a position to tell them to
turn their back on it," he told DRCNet. "We are telling the police it is not
legal to possess. We will continue to do as we have done, we will file charges
and leave it up to the courts."

When Guaneli was asked his position squared with the Court of Appeals' unanimous
and unequivocal ruling -- "Alaska citizens have the right to possess less than
four ounces of marijuana in their home for personal use" -- he in turn asked,
"What does that mean? If tomorrow a new medical study showed marijuana has the
same addictive properties for long-term users as cocaine or heroin, does that
mean the state is prevented from prosecuting those cases? We've think if we have
the chance to go into court, we can show that the reasons for making marijuana
possession a crime are important enough to override our constitutional right to
privacy," Guaneli argued. "It is not quite right to say this ruling makes it
completely legal. If we can go in right, we can get the court to change this."

Unsurprisingly, Fairbanks defense attorney Bill Satterberg, who successfully
argued the ground-breaking case as well as other related cases
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/295.shtml#alaskaruling), begged to differ with
Guaneli's interpretation of the ruling. "Is the possession of less than four
ounces of marijuana in your own home legal in Alaska?" he asked. "The answer is,
under state law, yes; under federal law, no," he told DRCNet. "We are moving
into an area where a state constitution grants greater freedom than the US
Constitution." As a practical matter, Satterberg added, federal prosecutions for
simple marijuana possession are highly unusual.

But if state and local law enforcement is going to argue that it can make
marijuana possession arrests because of federal law, they could be in for some
tough sledding, he suggested. "If state law enforcement officers attempt to
override state constitutional guarantees to prosecute federal laws, they will be
treading on dangerous ground," Satterberg said. "The police need to get some
good legal advice. These officers are sworn to uphold the law, and what I'm
hearing them say is they're not going to. If the police are saying they are not
going to follow state law, I find that incredible."

While Satterberg deemed himself incredulous at the prospect of police
recalcitrance, Allan St. Pierre of the National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws (http://www.norml.org) was less shocked. "It is not surprising,"
he told DRCNet. "Certainly, in California and other states, there have been
pockets of police that are resistant to living with new marijuana laws."

But police in Alaska have not been abiding by the law since 1990, when a voter
initiative recriminalized simple possession in the home, St. Pierre argued. "The
1975 Alaska Supreme Court ruling legalizing personal use of small amounts of
marijuana in one's home has been the law of the land, despite the
unconstitutional initiative. Since that ruling had never been revisited or
overruled, the onus was on Alaska law enforcement to enforce the Supreme Court
decision. If the police were to obey the law of the land, they would not have
been arresting people for the use of marijuana in their homes. That has always
been our position, and this ruling only reinforces our interpretation."

As of last Friday, Alaska has the most liberal marijuana possession laws in the
United States. The Alaska Supreme Court would have to overturn its own 1975
decision in Ravin v. Alaska to undo the Court of Appeals decision, and there is
little indication it will do so, despite Chief Assistant Attorney General
Guaneli's fervent hope that it will find differences between the marijuana of
1975 and the marijuana of today so great as to override the privacy protections
the Supreme Court cited.

Visit http://www.touchngo.com/ap/html/ap-1897.htm to read the Alaska Court of
Appeals opinion online.

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