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Pot and Prosecution in Montana
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Robin Prosser has become Missoula, Montana's poster child for legalizing the medicinal use of marijuana. Two years ago, she sustained a 60-day hunger strike to call attention to the need for legally prescribed marijuana. In May, Prosser, who suffers from severe pain and nausea caused by an immunosuppressive disorder, could no longer endure the chronic pain. She attempted suicide. Police helped her psychologist enter her apartment in order to save her.
They allegedly found pipes and pot residue. On May 10, she was charged with possession of an illegal substance and paraphernalia. Now, Prosser may be off the hook.
On Sept. 2, a deferred prosecution agreement was filed, signed by Prosser and the city of Missoula, by which Prosser's case will be deferred for nine months if she meets certain conditions. She "shall commit no acts that could result in charges for violations of federal, state, or local law." There's one exception: "Defendant's use of treatment recommended by her health care providers for her chronic painful permanent medical condition is not a violation of this subsection."
In short, Prosser may continue to use marijuana. If she complies with the conditions, after nine months "the city of Missoula will not oppose a motion to dismiss" the charges presently pending.
Patients like Robin Prosser may also be relieved from prosecution for possession of marijuana if the Montana Medical Marijuana Act, Initiative-148, passes in November. Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and, most recently, Vermont have passed similar measures.
If the initiative is approved, I-148 would authorize the Department of Health and Human Services to issue ID cards to qualifying patients and caregivers and absolve qualifying patients and physicians from prosecution for using or prescribing medical marijuana. Physicians would be able to prescribe marijuana to qualifying patients without being subjected to arrest, prosecution or disciplinary action by the board of medical examiners. Patients like Prosser would be able to treat pain and nausea with marijuana without fear of prosecution.
Relief from MS
Linda Merchant, 42, who lives in the town of Broadus, in Powder River County, is one such patient. She has long wanted to see such legislation.
"I've wanted it to be on the ballot years ago after seeing so many people suffer," she says.
Merchant splits her time between her own home in town and, when she isn't feeling well, her parents' ranch in the country. She suffers from multiple sclerosis (MS), an auto-immune disease that affects the central nervous system.
"There is no cure," she says. There is only management. Over the course of her illness, she has taken Valium, Neurotin, Robaxin, B-12 shots, vitamins, bee pollen and marijuana. She has had extreme adverse reactions to some medications.
"I'm very allergic to all the Betaserons," she says, of a medication commonly used to treat MS.
Other meds she takes in high doses.
"I am on morphine," she says. "Enough to knock a horse off his feet."
Merchant tired of the pills that were supposed to stymie her seizures or increase her appetite. Some made her "walk drunk." Others made her feel worse.
"I would have to take a pill to keep a pill down, you know?" she says.
About eight years ago, she started smoking marijuana for her headaches and nausea. She had used pot recreationally in the past, but she says she hasn't been high in years. "All it does [now] is take away the pain."
The MS causes pressure in Merchant's head, including excruciating eye pain.
"Instantly, when I take a hit, I get relief," she says. "The pressure starts going down."
And her appetite returns a little, to where "Maybe I can keep down half a sandwich."
Broadus is a small town, population 448. Everybody knows everybody else's business, says Merchant. While she's convinced her marijuana use isn't a secret, she doesn't flaunt it. Law enforcement officials, she says, have not troubled her, and she isn't worried about going to jail.
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