Cancer Patient Todd
McCormick Jailed for 3 Weeks;
Because Federal Prosecutor Was "Not Ready for the Hearing"
See
Arrest Warrant
For Todd McCormick For Failing Urine Test Only Two Weeks After Order To Stop Using Legal
Marinol!
and
Wage Peace. Letter from Todd McCormick:
"Do not be daunted by their cruelty, PLEASE continue to fight for freedom"
and
My Comments on
Todd McCormick and the Challenge His Case Presents to the Prohibitionists.April
3, 1998
From www.marijuanamagazine.com
Todd McCormick, who voluntarily surrendered himself this morning at 9:00 AM as he had
agreed to do yesterday, was taken before Federal Magistrate Judge James McMahon at 11:00
AM this morning.
The federal prosecutor claimed McCormick had violated his parole by using medical
marijuana. McCormick claims he did not. The prosecution, however,
did not call the necessary witnessesor any witnesses, for that matterto
substantiate its claim. The federal prosecutor admitted the government was not ready for
the hearing.
"Mr. McCormick is not a flight risk," McCormicks attorney, Eric Shevin,
told the court. "He turned himself in this morning, as agreed. He is out on $500,000
bond. He is not a danger to the community. He is charged with a nonviolent act, legal in
California. There is no logical or legal reason to imprison Mr. McCormick just because
the government is not ready to present its evidence."
Nevertheless, Judge McMahon jailed McCormick until April 22, 1998, while the federal
prosecutors call witnesses that could easily have been called today.
McCormick had passed every one of the almost 100 drug tests he was subjected to since
his release on bail in August 1997. Deprived his drug of choice, medical marijuana, he has
been in unbearable cancer-induced pain. And yet, he remained marijuana-free for seven
months.
In early March 1998, McCormick received a prescription for Marinol® from his
physician. Marinol® is a powerful synthetic form of THC, an active ingredient in medical
marijuana. McCormick informed the government of his prescription, and took this FDA- and
DEA-approved medication until March 17, 1998, when Judge McMahon ordered him to stop using
it.
McCormick was then drug tested five days in a row. The results of those tests, as
expected, show fluctuating levels of THC, spiraling downward. This
is precisely the pattern scientists would expect as the body eliminates an oil-based
prescription medication.
In todays non-hearing, the federal prosecutor failed to
call the necessary scientific expert(s) to present its case that McCormick had used
marijuana. (The federal prosecutor thought another federal agency had done this,
but the other agency thought the prosecutor had.) The government
only had a piece of paper with test results, but no one to verify whose test results they
were or what the test resultsa series of numbersactually mean.
Without at least one expert witness, such a scientist from the laboratory that had
tested McCormick, there was no legal way to link McCormick to the
test results or even know the meaning of the results. The prosecution was simply not ready
for the hearing.
Furthermore, because the government failed to call its expert witness(es) as required,
McCormicks attorney could not prove under cross examination what any expert in
drug-testing knows: If you take synthetic THC in the legal form of Marinol®, your urine
will test positive for THC for weeks thereafter.
So, without a formal hearing, McCormick is being held in federal
custody.
This concerns his friends greatly, who have noticed a marked deterioration in
McCormicks physical and mental condition. The constant pain he has had to endure for
more than seven months is taking its toll. "I cannot sleep for
more than an hour a night," he wrote a friend. "Every time I turn over, the pain
wakes me up." The agony is so great as to cause mild nausea; McCormicks weight
is dangerously low.
A motion for an emergency appeal is being filed this afternoon. The earliest it could
be heard is next week. Meanwhile, McCormick sits in federal custody, without a formal
hearing, for taking a prescription medication.