For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RS20998 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Order Code RS20998 Updated June 14, 2005 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Marijuana for Medical Purposes: A Glimpse of the Supreme Court's Decision in United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative and Related Legal Issues Charles Doyle Senior Specialist American Law Division Summary There is no medical necessity defense against prosecution for the federal crimes of cultivating or distributing marijuana, even in places where state law recognizes such a defense. So said the Supreme Court in United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, 532 U.S. 483, 486 (2001). Although there may be some question as to their vitality, the Court left undecided issues involving a necessity defense for possession and possible commerce clause, enactment clause, and due process clause challenges. In Gonzales v. Raich, 125 S.Ct. 2195 (2005), the Court held that Congress's' power under the commerce clause enabled it to enact a regulatory scheme that extended to the purely local cultivation and possession of marijuana for medical purposes. There are proposals in this Congress to reverse the impact of the Court's decisions. This is an abbreviated form of CRS Report RL31100, Marijuana for Medical Purposes: The Supreme Court's Decision in United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative and Related Legal Issues, stripped of its footnotes and citations to authority. Penalties authorized for violations of the Controlled Substances Act are discussed in CRS Report 97-141, Drug Smuggling, Drug Dealing and Drug Abuse: Background and Overview of the Sanctions Under the Federal Controlled Substances Act and Related Statutes. Background: The federal Controlled Substances Act (the Act) outlaws the cultivation, distribution, or possession of marijuana. The ban is a component of federal and state schemes which regulate the sale and possession of drugs and other controlled substances. The State of California has created a medical necessity exception to its marijuana prohibitions. The Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative (the Coop) was one of the entities which dispensed marijuana to patients qualified to receive it under state law. Congressional Research Service ~ The Library of Congress CRS-2 Federal authorities sued to enjoin cultivation and distribution of marijuana in violation of federal law by the Coop and its suppliers. The federal district court granted a preliminary injunction, which the Court of Appeals overturned for failure to consider an implicit medical necessity defense. The necessity or "choice of evils" defense has been recognized under various circumstances by a number of other lower federal appellate courts. The Supreme Court seemed to verify its vitality, at least indirectly, when it described the prerequisites for the defense to an escape charge: "where a criminal defendant is charged with escape and claims that he is entitled to an instruction on the theory of duress or necessity, he must proffer evidence of a bona fide effort to surrender or return to custody as soon as the claimed . . . necessity has lost its coercive force." Supreme Court's Coop Decision: The Coop argued that necessity, as a common law defense, was an implicit exception to the Act's prohibitions. No member of the Supreme Court agreed. In fact, the Court questioned the very existence of a federal necessity defense, although as the concurring opinion points out, the case holds no more than that there is no necessity defense to the federal proscription on the cultivation or distribution of marijuana. On the basic point, the members of the Court were of one mind -- Congress in the Act addressed and rejected the very exception for which the Coop sought recognition. Congress outlawed manufacturing or distributing controlled substances except as authorized in the Act. The only authorized exception for Schedule I controlled substances, such as marijuana, is government approved research; the Coop did not argue that it was engaged in government approved research; there is no other explicit exception for marijuana. But the federal necessity defense is a creature of common law, frequently assumed if rarely cited by name, and Congress did not reject it by name. Yet Congress did limit Schedule I to those controlled substances with "no currently accepted medical use." It assigned marijuana to Schedule I. Thus, "[i]t is clear from the text of the Act that Congress has made a determination that marijuana has no medical benefits worthy of an exception. The statute expressly contemplates that many drugs