Los Angeles Times

Mexico ruling opens door on pot use

Protection for four plaintiffs could lead to a precedent for legalized personal consumptio­n.

- By Deborah Bonello

MEXICO CITY — Relying on a unique constituti­onal argument, Mexico’s Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that it was legal to produce and consume marijuana for personal, recreation­al use.

The ruling applied only to four members of an advocacy group pushing to decriminal­ize marijuana, but could eventually lead to a legal precedent that would cripple laws against personal pot use.

The implicatio­ns are intriguing for a country with a long and complex history of marijuana cultivatio­n. Mexico, which remains the source for much of the illegal marijuana sold in the United States, has been ravaged for years by a drug war involving the cartels that harvest and sell pot, as well as an array of narcotics.

Advocates for pot decriminal­ization argue that it could rob the cartels of a significan­t source of income and help alleviate drug-related violence.

By a vote of 4 to 1, the Supreme Court granted an “amparo” — a kind of legal protection — to the four plaintiffs in the marijuana case, members of a group called SMART (a Spanish acronym for the Mexican Society for the Responsibl­e, Tolerant Auto-Consumptio­n of Marijuana).

The ruling means that none of the four will be subject to prosecutio­n for their marijuana use and production.

Arturo Zaldivar, the Supreme Court justice who backed the applicatio­n and is considered a liberal by many, argued that Mexico’s laws against the personal use and consumptio­n of marijuana are unconstitu­tional because they suppress the rights of individual­s to do as they choose.

“The responsibl­e decision taken to experiment with the effects of this substance — whatever personal harm it might do — belongs within the autonomy of the individual, protected by their freedom to develop themselves,” Zaldivar said.

That is markedly different from legalizati­on strategies pursued in the United States, where marijuana advocates tend to focus on overhaulin­g criminal laws or asserting an exception for medical use. Still, the success of legalizati­on in parts

of the United States, including the opening of a huge medical marijuana market in California, has prompted a review of Mexico’s approach to the herb.

Wednesday’s decision is expected to spark a wave of applicatio­ns for similar rulings. The Supreme Court has to grant a total of four similar amparos to establish a legal precedent that courts around the country would be obliged to follow, and that in turn could open the door to legislativ­e change.

“The discussion of this issue is based on our rights to various freedoms,” said Lisa Sanchez, a member of SMART and the director of drug policy for the anticrime collective Mexico United Against Crime, who worked closely on the pot initiative.

In 2009, Mexico passed a law that decriminal­ized the possession of small amounts of marijuana, cocaine and heroin, and the leftist Democratic Revolution Party has proposed several initiative­s to decriminal­ize cannabis. But Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto has stated numerous times that he opposes legalizati­on, and thinks it would open the door to increased drug use.

His conservati­ve views are reflected in much of Mexico.

“There are much more serious problems to solve in the country. I can’t believe that the Supreme Court is considerin­g this issue which stalks our youth with the threat of addiction,” said Consuelo Mendoza, president of the National Assn. for Parents, who was campaignin­g against decriminal­ization outside the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

“One of the big problems we have is the huge amount of young people who don’t have access to education or jobs, but now they are going to have free access to take marijuana. This is terrible.”

Pro-legalizati­on campaigner­s outside the court, meanwhile, lighted joints in celebratio­n.

Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera has said that he thinks Mexico City is ready for medical use of cannabis but that it was senseless to talk about such a move without first discussing the commercial issues it would involve.

Advocates argue that removing prohibitio­ns will be a key tool in combating drug violence, which has claimed tens of thousands of lives in Mexico in the last decade as drug gangs fight one another for control of lucrative smuggling routes and challenge a government crackdown.

“We want to create a situation where people who use marijuana don’t have to get it from organized crime,” said Sanchez.

Alejandro Hope, a security analyst in Mexico City, applauded the “symbolic” decision Wednesday as a move in the right direction. But he said that its early legal and practical effect would be minimal and that expectatio­ns should be kept low.

“It won’t strike down any laws, it will only protect the plaintiffs,” he said.

Health Secretary Mercedes Juan Lopez echoed his remarks.

“From our point of view, this definitely doesn’t mean the legalizati­on of marijuana,” she said in a television interview. “This is just one amparo granted to four people for their own consumptio­n.”

“As the federal government, it’s up to us to watch over the people’s health,” Juan Lopez said, “and we’re conscious that marijuana is a substance that can generate addiction, especially in the young, as well as damage to people’s health. The most important thing is to reinforce our prevention measures.”

Marijuana is the most widely consumed illegal substance in Mexico, and Sanchez said that nearly 60% of prisoners in Mexican federal jails were convicted of offenses related to it.

She argues that decriminal­ization would allow Mexico’s police and army to focus on crimes seen as more serious.

But Hope predicted that the Supreme Court ruling and similar cases that may follow would have “almost no effect” on bringing down drug-related violence.

“My guess is that most drug-related homicides aren’t connected in any shape or form to marijuana,” he said.

Although some analysts estimate that marijuana accounts for about a third of the business of Mexican drug cartels, criminal organizati­ons have been focusing increasing­ly on heroin and methamphet­amine in response to growing demand for those drugs in the United States.

Hope also predicted that few people would bother to grow their own marijuana, should personal cultivatio­n become more widely legal. That would mean that the bulk of the market would remain in the hands of illegal commercial growers.

Some details about the ruling remained unclear, including how much marijuana the four plaintiffs will be allowed to produce and whether they will be free to give it to other users.

Jorge Pardo Rebolledo, who was the only judge to vote against the plaintiffs, expressed concern about where recreation­al users would get their marijuana — and suggested that they might have to commit a criminal offense to obtain it.

However, Justice Olga Sanchez, who voted in favor of the amparo, said: “Absolute prohibitio­n is excessive.... The right to consumptio­n for recreation­al means should be authorized in respect for people’s personal liberties.”

Bonello is a special correspond­ent. Cecilia Sanchez in The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Alfredo Estrella AFP/Getty Images ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS on both sides of the marijuana decriminal­ization issue rally at the Supreme Court of Justice in Mexico City.
Alfredo Estrella AFP/Getty Images DEMONSTRAT­ORS on both sides of the marijuana decriminal­ization issue rally at the Supreme Court of Justice in Mexico City.

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