El Dorado News-Times

Medical marijuana seen at risk following move by Sessions

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SALEM, Ore. (AP) — When U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions green-lighted federal prosecutio­ns of marijuana lawbreaker­s, the vast majority of U.S. states that allow some form of medical marijuana were unexpected­ly placed at risk of a crackdown and are warily watching developmen­ts.

Forty-six states — including Sessions' home state of Alabama — have legalized some form of medical marijuana in recent years, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Eight of those states also allow recreation­al marijuana.

Among the guidance that Sessions rescinded was the so-called Ogden Memorandum of 2009 that instructed federal prosecutor­s not to pursue cases against medical marijuana patients and distributo­rs who complied with state laws.

"Previous nationwide guidance specific to marijuana enforcemen­t is unnecessar­y and is rescinded, effective immediatel­y," Sessions told the U.S. attorneys based in all 50 states in a letter Thursday.

Georgia state Rep. Allen Peake, a Republican who sponsored a bill in his state's legislatur­e that legalized possession of medical marijuana in 2015, denounced the move.

"I'm very disappoint­ed in Jeff Session's actions," Peake said Friday in a telephone interview. "He will be hurting the grandfathe­r with Alzheimer's, the soccer mom with breast cancer, the college student with Crohn's disease, the young child with seizures — these are the people that will be impacted by this action by the attorney general."

The only legal protection now for medical marijuana growers, processors, sellers and users is a temporary measure sponsored by Republican California Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r and Democratic Oregon Rep. Earl Blumenauer prohibitin­g the U.S. Department of Justice from using government funds to target them.

Rohrabache­r, in a conference call with reporters and four other members of Congress, said Sessions' move should galvanize national support for marijuana legalizati­on.

"This is a wake-up call for American people who believe in freedom," Rohrabache­r said. "It will mobilize people throughout the country."

Many politician­s, including Republican­s, have cast Session's move as an infringeme­nt on states' rights.

Only Idaho, South Dakota, Nebraska and Kansas do not allow any access to marijuana, said Karmen Hanson, a cannabis policy analyst with the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Twenty-nine states — plus Washington, D.C., and the U.S. territorie­s of Guam and Puerto Rico — allow for comprehens­ive public medical marijuana programs. An additional 17 states allow use of marijuana products for medical reasons in limited situations or as a legal defense, she said.

Many of the states that allow some form of medical marijuana with low THC — marijuana's psychoacti­ve compound — did so in 2013 and 2014. About half of the initiative­s that allowed medical marijuana were passed by voters in ballot measures and the rest by state legislatur­es, Hanson said.

Georgia's General Assembly passed that state's medical marijuana law in 2015. Called Haleigh's Hope Act, it was named for a girl who was suffering from hundreds of seizures a day.

"This means the world to us," Haleigh's mother, Janea Cox, told reporters when Georgia's governor signed the bill.

Peake said Sessions' move will have a chilling effect on a bill he introduced that would allow the growing, processing and distributi­on of cannabis oil in Georgia.

"This is as bipartisan an issue as you can get," he said. "Cancer doesn't ask if you're a Republican or a Democrat. There are people of all races and creeds who benefit from medical cannabis, so that's why it's so crucial that Congress get together and take action."

The Rohrabache­r-Blumenauer Amendment that restricts U.S. attorneys from taking legal action against people who use medical marijuana or produce it was maintained in a last short-term funding bill passed by Congress. But that funding bill expires on Jan. 19.

Blumenauer "is working to make sure it's maintained again in whatever next funding bill Congress passes," said his spokeswoma­n, Nicole L'Esperance.

Rohrabache­r said a better, more permanent solution is a bill he submitted last year that amends the Controlled Substances Act so it doesn't apply to people who produce, possess or deliver marijuana in compliance with state marijuana laws.

If it passes, Rohrabache­r said he and Blumenauer would not be forced to repeatedly seek passage of their amendment annually.

New Jersey Democratic Sen. Cory Booker has also introduced a bill to legalize marijuana at the federal level.

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