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US CA: Probation Or Prohibition - Rave.ca
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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Probation Or Prohibition
Title:US CA: Probation Or Prohibition
Published On:2005-11-24
Source:Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 07:49:03
PROBATION OR PROHIBITION?

Treatment Courts At Odds With Prop. 215 Patients

A Butte County medical marijuana patient who is on probation for
domestic violence is hoping she won't be made an example of, as she
fears county prosecutors are gearing up to "take [her] to war" over
her use of medical cannabis.

"I have serious polycystic ovarian disease. It causes pain
constantly," Holly Hogan, a defendant in the county's Domestic
Violence Own Recognizance (DVOR) program, said.

"I've had this condition for over two years. I told them I had this
disease and I have to smoke marijuana. It's the only thing that helps
the pain."

Yet she said she was told in court that if she doesn't quit using
pot, she may end up being used as a test case to challenge
California's medical marijuana law, at least as far as it relates to
people on probation.

Hogan, 24, landed in the court system when she got into a fight with
the father of her 4-year-old son at his Chico home last September.
She spent four days in jail and was recommended for DVOR, a court
program that basically places defendants on probation and rewards or
punishes their behavior during a year-long observation phase.
Defendants in such "treatment court" or "behavioral court" programs
are barred from taking drugs or alcohol and often must attend
meetings and counseling sessions meant to help them deal with their
underlying problems.

Hogan has smoked marijuana to treat her pain for at least two years.
While she was on probation, she got a doctor's recommendation for
medical marijuana under the state's Compassionate Use law. But the
terms of her probation forbid her from taking unauthorized drugs,
medical, legal or otherwise.

This conflict in the law has set up a situation in which prosecutors,
defendants, patients and probation officers are having a hard time
figuring out when a defendant has violated probation.

"Now they want to put me in jail for two years," Hogan lamented.
"[Treatment court prosecutor] Helen Harberts told probation to write
me a violation. They want me to go to rehab for medical marijuana,
but I can't afford it. I actually do have a medical condition that
requires surgery."

Harberts, when contacted for comment, said in an e-mail that she
wasn't able to talk about specific cases. But she acknowledged that
treatment courts are increasingly having difficulties with defendants
using Prop. 215 recommendations in a way that Harberts said amounts
to a loophole that allows them to continue using marijuana while on probation.

"If people are in a court program for addiction issues, they must
abstain from all addictive substances without prior permission of
their probation officer," Harberts wrote. "People get addicted to
both legal and illegal drugs. We serve many pharmaceutical drug
addicts in our courts. Marijuana is different only in the context
that it is not pharmaceutical grade."

Harberts went on to state that allowing court participants to smoke
marijuana undermines their treatment programs. Citing a study by
Berkeley clinical researcher Mark Stanford, Ph.D., Harberts said that
marijuana has proven to be addictive and is therefore "a dangerous
substance for addicts."

Other studies, however, such as one conducted by Loyola College's
Daniel M. Perrine, Ph.D., have rated marijuana's addictive properties
as being less than that of coffee or cigarettes. While marijuana has
been used as a medicine for at least 5,000 years, it is currently
designated by the federal government as a Schedule I illegal
substance, which classifies it as extremely harmful and having no
accepted medical use. According to various studies, more than 20
million Americans have used marijuana in the past year and more than
30 percent of Americans have tried it, making it the most widely used
illicit drug in the U.S.

While advocates tout its benefits as an appetite enhancer, pain
reliever and relaxant, detractors of medical marijuana tend to
believe that the medpot movement is a Trojan horse for drug legalization.

Hogan said she has made every court appearance and follows the
program as well as she is able, but doesn't want to stop using what
she said is the only drug that eases her pain.

"I'm like a shining star on probation," she said. "I could see if I
was on meth, but this is state law. I have a valid recommendation."

Harberts sees it another way.

"For me, this is a treatment and addiction issue," she wrote. "I do
not believe the voters ever intended Prop. 215 to permit addicted
offenders to use addicting drugs. If necessary, we will look for a
test case to see if exceptions can be carved into the law."

Hogan will find out if hers is indeed the aforementioned test case on
her next court date, Nov. 28.
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