-Caveat Lector-

  Covert cannabis clubs aid patients

   State attorney general says that unless the federal government changes
its policy, Proposition 215 can't be legally implemented

 By Jordan Lite
 ASSOCIATED PRESS
---------------------------------------

 MIDDLETOWN -- Ryan Landers didn't plan on being a farmer. Then again,
he never planned on getting AIDS and needing marijuana to stay hungry
enough to keep him from wasting away.

 He used to buy pot at the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Club. But that club,
like many that opened after a 1996 medical marijuana initiative passed,
has been shut down by federal court order.

 Now many club members like Landers are increasingly forced to seek out
small, low-profile groups and buy from street dealers. Dozens have been
arrested for having plants. Short of a federal change of heart allowing
doctors to prescribe marijuana, co-ops that grow pot to give or sell to
patients may be their best hope.

 For Landers, that means traveling 100 miles to this tiny rural town in the
wine county, about 90 miles north of San Francisco, to buy the pot that will
ease his nausea. Here, Proposition 215 author Dennis Peron and
members of his two defunct San Francisco pot clubs grow marijuana. This
summer, Peron plans to begin delivering plants to thousands of San
Francisco patients who will pay for them at cost.

 "This was really horrible when the clubs shut down," Landers said.
"(People) don't know where to get plants and seeds.

 "It's been more than two years. People should be growing pot. They
shouldn't be scared to."

 After the medical marijuana law passed, the number of clubs in California
peaked at around 30, said Dave Fratello, one of the authors of the bill.
Similar medical marijuana measures later passed in five other states and
the District of Columbia.

 But in California, then-Attorney General Dan Lungren oversaw a series of
state-initiated efforts that closed about two-thirds of the clubs, most in
Northern California. Federal raids and court rulings also contributed to the
shutdowns, although some advocates say that for every club that's closed,
at least another has opened -- albeit quietly -- in its place.

 State officials and medical marijuana advocates say a national Institutes of
Medicine review scheduled for release next month will be critical in getting
federal officials to consider reclassifying marijuana as a less dangerous
drug or allowing doctors to prescribe pot. The 18-month review of the
health effects and medical treatment benefits of marijuana was ordered by
drug czar Barry McCaffrey.

 "The cannabis clubs were a great stop-gap measure … but it wasn't a
solution," said Scott Imler, director of the Los Angeles cannabis Resource
Center in West Hollywood. The center is one of two well-known pot clubs in
Southern California and has 1,100 members from Bakersfield to Palm
Springs.

 Imler and others are optimistic that things will change with a new governor
and attorney general in office and new district attorneys and sheriffs in
communities that have been hostile to distribution efforts.

 "The main problem we've had is lack of guidance to law enforcement,"
said Jason Browne, a trustee of the Humboldt cannabis Center in Arcata.
"Everyone is waiting for someone else to do something, and meanwhile,
the patients are at risk."

 Brian Steel, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Justice, would not
comment on why smaller co-ops have survived while the larger groups
were shut down.

 "The Department of Justice is committed to following the law that
Congress has passed, and to that end, Congress has said the use or
distribution of marijuana is illegal," he said. "Consistent with that, that's
what we're going to do."

 Advocates say the clubs were safe and convenient.

 "I like the clubs better. There's no hassle, no pressure. You get what you
need and leave," said Chris Ward, 39, who bought pot at the Oakland club
to ease the effects of chemotherapy. Now he plans to go to a new Berkeley
co-op, about 200 miles south of his home in Oak Run.

 Gov. Gray Davis, a Democrat, hasn't said whether he'll support proposed
legislation to authorize $1 million annually to study medical marijuana or a
plan to specify or standardize the enforcement of Proposition 215.

 "I believe good science should resolve this issue," Davis has said.

 Attorney General Bill Lockyer, also a Democrat, said he voted for the
medical marijuana law and agrees more guidance is needed. His mother
and sister both died of leukemia.

 "There are omissions and gaps and ambiguities in the initial statute that
would benefit from clarification," Lockyer said. "It's unclear exactly who can
be a caretaker and exactly what the system is for setting up a dispensary
and clinic."

 Patients can still get pot at operations in San Francisco, West Hollywood,
San Diego, Fairfax, Sonoma County, Ukiah, Arcata, Berkeley and
Hayward. Peron's farm was twice raided by Drug Enforcement Agency
officials, who confiscated hundreds of plants but made no arrests.

 "Unless the federal government changes its policy or adopts a noninvasive
role, the California statute scheme can never be legally implemented,"
Lockyer said.

 "If our law were tighter and there was more of a clinic -- not cult structure to
the statute -- that might be partially persuasive to the federal government if
they see there is a tight regulatory system."

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