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Good Cop, Bad Cop: Federal Prosecution of
State-Legalized Medical Marijuana
Use After United States v. Lopez
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Alistair E. Newbern
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| The Supreme Court's recent decisions in United States v. Lopez and
United States v. Morrison articulate a vision of federalism under which
Congress's regulatory authority under the Commerce Clause is severely limited
in favor of returning traditional areas of state concern, particularly
criminal law enforcement, to local or state control. The Court's decisions
in these cases coincide with ballot initiatives legalizing the medical
use of marijuana garnering a majority of the vote in California, Arizona,
Alaska, Colorado, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Maine, and Washington D.C.
Those who use marijuana for medical purposes under sanction of state law,
however, still face the threat of federal prosecution under the
Controlled Substances Act. Medical marijuana proponents have traditionally,
and unsucessfully, contested federal prosecution using individual rights
arguments under theories of equal protection or substantive due process.
This Comment argues that after Lopez and Morrison, the federal government's
authority to regulate intrastate use of marijuana for medicinal purposes
is not the foregone conclusion it once was. The author suggests that proponents
of medical marijuana use should invoke the federalism arguments of Lopez
and Morrison and argue for state legislative independence from the federal
government on this issue. |
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© 2000 by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
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