Medical marijuana should be a
dead issue. After a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year,
state laws legalizing marijuana for medical purposes were
supposed to be trumped by federal laws outlawing the drug.
But at the Pier 5 Law Offices in San Francisco, medical
marijuana cases have become such a thriving business that
a handful of attorneys left to start their own practice
dedicated to marijuana-related work.
“I’ve got cases in almost every county, all on this
marijuana stuff,” says Danny Schultz, one of the lawyers
who left to found the Jackson Square Law Offices. “Last
week I was only home on Saturday. I think I’ve stayed at
every Best Western in every small town in this state.”
The Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Gonzales v.
Raich, 125 S. Ct. 2195 (June 6, 2005), upheld federal
power under the commerce clause to bar medical marijuana.
The court ruled that federal drug laws override
initiatives such as California’s Proposition 215 that
allow limited marijuana distribution for medical purposes.
As a result, federal law enforcement agents could
theoretically shut down all growers and medical marijuana
clinics that operate according to these state laws. But
they haven’t.
Indeed, medical marijuana dispensaries are thriving.
According to the California chapter of the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, the number
of cannabis dispensaries in the state has grown from a
handful a few years ago to around 150 today. And
dispensaries continue to exist elsewhere, including
Oregon, Nevada and nine other states that have enacted
similar laws.
“When the first cases came down against medical
marijuana growers, I thought at the time they would just
sweep up all the clubs—at the time there were only about
20, all in the Bay Area, so it would have been easy,”
says Dale Gieringer, who coordinates NORML in California.
“But it never came.”
The resulting growth has meant a boom for lawyers
specializing in drug law. Representing marijuana
dispensaries is far from a lucrative practice area, say
lawyers involved in the specialty. But since Proposition
215 passed in 1996, there has been a regular and steady
demand for legal services in this area.
What does the practice entail? A lot of paper pushing,
says Terence Hallinan, who was the district attorney in
San Francisco when Proposition 215 passed and is now in
private practice representing several medical marijuana
dispensaries.
Hallinan supported Proposition 215 as district attorney
in San Francisco and his office made a point to leave
medical marijuana dispensaries alone. He now uses his
experience in City Hall to help medical marijuana
distributors file the complex permits required to operate
such a business. His son Brendan helps out with land use
and zoning issues, something drug lawyers did not need to
know much about in the past. “Right now they need a lot
of help getting past the bureaucracy,” Hallinan says.
NOT AN ORDINARY PRACTICE AREA
But no one should confuse a marijuana practice with an
average business law practice. Marijuana lawyers have to
advise their clients that they could be arrested at any
time should federal law enforcement officers choose to
enforce drug laws.
“It’s not really a zoning issue the way builders or
developers understand it,” says Ed Rosenthal, an
Oakland, Calif.-based marijuana activist and one of the
first people arrested for growing medical marijuana.
“It’s more like zoning laws for porn shops.”
Most attorneys in this practice say they take medical
marijuana-related cases for political and personal reasons
rather than to just make money. “To me, this is one of
the coolest, most interesting practices around. When I’m
at a party and I tell another lawyer what I do, they say,
‘I want your practice,’ ” says Omar Figueroa, a
criminal defense attorney in the Pier 5 Law Offices in San
Francisco. “It may not be lucrative, but do I want to
represent huge, faceless corporations for $400 an hour
like my classmates from Stanford? No, I want to represent
human beings.”
Lawyers must also be willing to be put in difficult
positions, thanks to the disconnect between California law
and federal law. Even though California law seems
permissive, ambiguity and confusion remain over what is
legal—and where. Regulations vary from county to county
regarding issues such as how many marijuana plants a
dispensary can grow. And lawmakers in San Diego and other
cities have made it prohibitively difficult for
dispensaries to open in their jurisdictions.
And raids do happen. Federal agents with the Drug
Enforcement Administration have hit a number of medical
marijuana growers in California, but NORML says the
targets have been either high-profile activists who have
attracted publicity or commercial-scale growers who have
been turned over for federal prosecution by local law
enforcement. Local police have also raided several
dispensaries, confiscating marijuana plants when it
appeared there were more than the law allows. But news
reports indicate most dispensaries reopened hours later.
Many local law enforcement officials support the aims
of medical marijuana dispensaries but want to reel in
excesses. “We’re in about the same situation as when
this all started; it’s still one heck of a mess for law
enforcement,” says Bob Hussey, executive director of the
California Narcotic Officers’ Association. “But the
fact is a lot of people use this as a guise to continue to
deal.”
WEEDING OUT MISUSE
Attorneys also admit that some healthy people use the
dispensaries, but they argue that the problem is waning.
“I think that was a legitimate complaint in the
beginning, but that’s been largely weeded out,”
Schultz says. “[The dispensaries] know they’re on thin
ice, so they check people out extremely closely.”
Hallinan has taken to advising his clients to keep as
little paperwork as possible to make it hard for law
enforcement to prosecute them.
Matthew Kumin, a civil rights and business law attorney
in San Francisco, says counseling medical marijuana
clients can be difficult. “Any lawyer can be on the edge
with a client, but how far is it before they step over a
line?” Kumin says. “I tell clients that are pondering
whether to open up a dispensary [that] I think you’re
crazy to take this risk.”
Lawyers who work with dispensaries hope that they and
their clients can negotiate uncertain legal terrain until
federal law changes.
“As medical marijuana becomes more legitimate, our
clients will eventually be just like any other
businesses,” Figueroa says. “There will be a Whole
Foods of medical marijuana, and in the long run I’m sure
there will be plenty of boutique law firms that specialize
in this area.”
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