http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/16/medical-marijuana-appeals-court_n_1971364.html
The Drug Enforcement Administration "acted arbitrarily and
capriciously" in denying a petition to reclassify cannabis as a less
harmful substance, a lawyer for medical marijuana advocates told a
federal appeals court on Tuesday.
Arguing on behalf of Americans for Safe Access, Joseph Elford called
on the court to force the DEA to reconsider its classification of
cannabis as a dangerous drug without therapeutic benefits, saying the
agency ignored 200 well-controlled studies showing cannabis has
legitimate medical uses.
At issue is a petition filed by public interest organizations back in
2002 that requested that cannabis -- currently defined as a Schedule I
drug with "a high potential for abuse" and "no currently accepted
medical use in treatment" -- be reclassified. For context, heroine and
LSD are classified alongside marijuana as Schedule I, while cocaine,
opium and methamphetamine are classified as Schedule II, meaning they
have "some accepted medical use."
Justice Department lawyer Lena Watkins said a DEA review found "no
substantial evidence" of acceptable medical use, adding that the agency
rejected the studies cited by Elford because they did not meet the
standard of double-blind FDA approval trials. Watkins said that the
results are still pending from 15 government-approved studies.
That, Elford countered, is because the agency is deliberately
"stymying" research. "DEA's played a game of 'gotcha,'" he told the
judges. "They won't allow additional research to be conducted."
The case, Americans for Safe Access v. Drug Enforcement
Administration, was heard by a three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If you have a comment regarding the post above, please feel free to leave it here.