Carl Olsen’s Letter to Governor Jan Brewer

Carl Olsen
Jan­u­ary 14, 2012

Jan­ice K. Brewer
Gov­er­nor of Ari­zona
1700 West Wash­ing­ton Street
Phoenix, Ari­zona 85007

Dear Gov­er­nor Brewer,

Governor Jan Brewer Portrait 2011

Jan­ice K. Brewer — Gov­er­nor of Arizona

On June 3, 2011, I tried to inter­vene in your case against the United States, Ari­zona v. United States, No. 11-cv-01072-PHX-SRB (Docket No. 6)[1], argu­ing that the proper course for Ari­zona to pro­tect its cit­i­zens would be to notify U.S. Attor­ney Gen­eral Eric Holder that mar­i­juana has accepted med­ical use in the United States (in Ari­zona) and must there­fore be imme­di­ately removed from its cur­rent fed­eral clas­si­fi­ca­tion as a sub­stance with no accepted med­ical use in the United States.  I cited the U.S. Supreme Court deci­sion in Gon­za­les v. Ore­gon, 546 U.S. 243 (2006) (state law­mak­ers, not fed­eral admin­is­tra­tive offi­cials, decide what is accepted for med­ical use in a state), as proof of the valid­ity of my claim.

On July 6, 2011, the Hon­or­able Susan R. Bolton dis­missed my motion to inter­vene (Docket No. 29)[2], stat­ing that I did not have a suf­fi­ciently pro­tected inter­est in the case to jus­tify grant­ing my motion and that any rights I might arguably have had were pro­tect by the other par­ties in the case.  As it turns out, the case was dis­missed on Jan­u­ary 4, 2012 (Docket No. 71)[3], and any rights I might arguably have had were protected.

I see you have decided not to join the states of Wash­ing­ton and Rhode Island in their peti­tion to have mar­i­juana reclas­si­fied by the DEA[4].  Nor have you decided to join the state of Col­orado in its request to have mar­i­juana reclas­si­fied by the DEA[5].  I’m writ­ing to tell you that you’ve made the right deci­sion not to sup­port those efforts, because those states are giv­ing away the store by fail­ure to assert states’ rights accord­ing to the U.S. Supreme Court rul­ing in Gon­za­les v. Ore­gon.  I like your let­ter to Act­ing U.S. Attor­ney Ann Birm­ing­ham Scheel[6], but you need to be more aggres­sive.  Your let­ter does not assert that mar­i­juana is mis­clas­si­fied under the fed­eral Con­trolled Sub­stances Act, which is the key to this whole mess.

The rea­son you should lis­ten to me is because I’m cur­rently an inter­venor in the fed­eral mar­i­juana resched­ul­ing peti­tion for judi­cial review, Amer­i­cans for Safe Access, et al. v. DEA, No. 11–1265, in the United States Court of Appeals for the Dis­trict of Colum­bia Cir­cuit.  My motion to inter­vene was granted on Sep­tem­ber 1, 2011[7].  The DEA filed a motion to dis­miss me from the case on Sep­tem­ber 9, 2011[8].  A three judge panel denied the DEA’s motion to dis­miss me on Decem­ber 7, 2011[9], and set a brief­ing sched­ule for the par­ties (includ­ing me) on Decem­ber 8, 2011[10].  My orig­i­nal argu­ment for inter­ven­ing was that none of the states that have accepted the med­ical use of mar­i­juana had noti­fied the fed­eral gov­ern­ment that mar­i­juana must be removed from its cur­rent clas­si­fi­ca­tion as a sub­stance with no med­ical use in the United States.  And, of course, on Novem­ber 30, the states of Wash­ing­ton and Rhode Island filed requests with the DEA to have mar­i­juana reclassified.

Unfor­tu­nately, the Gov­er­nor of Wash­ing­ton tells me the deci­sion on whether mar­i­juana has accepted med­ical use in the United States should be made by a fed­eral reg­u­la­tory admin­is­tra­tor, not by state law­mak­ers[11].  I’m going to write to the Gov­er­nor of Col­orado later this week­end to com­plain about Colorado’s let­ter to the DEA, which also cedes state sov­er­eignty to a fed­eral reg­u­la­tory admin­is­tra­tor.  I will be com­plain­ing about these states in my argu­ment before the U.S. Court of Appeals, because it vio­lates the Tenth Amend­ment bal­ance between state and fed­eral gov­ern­ments, for­mally known as “fed­er­al­ism.”  States can­not cede their power to the fed­eral gov­ern­ment unless Con­gress specif­i­cally pre­empts them in clear and unam­bigu­ous lan­guage.  Gon­za­les v. Ore­gon makes it clear that Con­gress never intended to pre­empt the states from decid­ing what to accept or reject for med­ical use.  That is why we have 50 state con­trolled sub­stances acts, instead of one fed­eral law to rule them all.

If I can be of any fur­ther assis­tance to you, please let me know.  Your point that state employ­ees deserve pro­tec­tion is well taken, and state cit­i­zens deserve pro­tec­tion as well.  It is within your power to pro­tect them, so I wish you every suc­cess in ful­fill­ing your con­sti­tu­tional duty to pro­tect and serve the peo­ple who elected you.

Sin­cerely,

Carl Olsen
130 NE Aurora Ave., Des Moines, IA 50313–3654
515–288-5798 (home) • 515–343-9933 (cell)
carl@carl-olsen.com • www.carl-olsen.com


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3 Responses to Carl Olsen’s Letter to Governor Jan Brewer

  1. Carl

    Thanks so much for your clar­ity of mind and pur­pose. We need more peo­ple like you in our judi­cial sys­tem. Much appre­ci­a­tion from a fel­low advo­cate and should you ever need any­thing at all, please do not hes­i­tate to call me.

    Robert Calkin
    818 515 7600
    Pres­i­dent
    Can­na­jobs
    Cannabis Career Insti­tute
    Cannabis State Uni­ver­sity
    and South­ern Ca Vape-Pen distributor

  2. Thanks for keep­ing at it. Super straight. You’ve backed them into a cor­ner and if they are not bought out and are meerly deluded, you’ve got a good chance for a great vic­tory against fed incroach­ment. Token help to be mailed. Thanks again. PEACE rcs

    • Carl Olsen says:

      I agree I have them backed into a cor­ner. I know the money is dri­ving this, but I did win my court case against the Iowa Board of Phar­macy and the board did pay for pub­lic hear­ings out of their own oper­at­ing bud­get after I won that case. And the board did make a unan­i­mous rul­ing that mar­i­juana is med­i­cine at the con­clu­sion of those hear­ings. So, the les­son here is that they will not spend money vol­un­tar­ily just because you ask them. If you sue them in court and win, then they will spend the money. The sys­tem is stacked against us, but it is on autopi­lot. If you can knock them off autopi­lot, they really will pay atten­tion and do the right thing. I think we often over­look the fact they are on autopi­lot. It’s not so much them plot­ting and plan­ning against us in some con­scious way. They just don’t think about it unless we give them a good rea­son (like a court order). Any­way, the sys­tem does work, but it’s not easy.

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