Defense
Fund for Montana Medical Marijuana
Patients
Honors
Life & Death of State’s Leading
Patient-Activist
A
statewide support group for Montana’s medical
marijuana and pain patients has established a
defense fund to help patients who face legal
problems, in honor of the life and death of Robin
Prosser, a medical marijuana patient-activist who
took her own life in Missoula 11 days
ago.
Donations
to the “Robin Prosser Memorial
Patients’ Legal Defense Fund” will be
used exclusively to support medical marijuana
patients who face legal problems in spite of
Montana’s compassionate medical marijuana
law, said Bob Meharg, chairman of the board of
directors of Patients & Families United
(www.mtpfu.org).
In
2004, 62% of Montana voters (the largest margin of
voter support ever achieved in a public vote on
this issue in history) approved a state law which
allows people with certain medical conditions, and
a physician’s recommendation, to use
marijuana as medicine. As of September, 2007,
more than 400 Montanans in 38 counties were
registered as patients in the state health’s
department’s program, based on
recommendations from 130
physicians.
“But
lots of Montana’s law enforcement agencies,
including city and county prosecutors, don’t
even know that Montana’s medical marijuana
law exists, and many seem to misunderstand it or
look for ways to ignore its compassionate
meaning,” Meharg explained.
“Patients are facing unfair legal problems,
and in some instances lower court judges and parole
officers are directly interfering with physician
recommendations,” he
reported.
“The
remarkable medicinal value of marijuana,
particularly for pain relief, has been thoroughly
established,” Meharg said, “and
Montanans have a right to the medical care of their
choice. Cops, prosecutors and judges
don’t have the right to practice medicine
without a license. They don’t have the
authority to ignore a Montana law just because they
don’t like it, and with the death of Robin
Prosser we are more determined than ever to fight
for patients’ rights under the law,” he
declared.
Prosser,
50, suffered for 23 years from systemic lupus, a
condition in which the immune system literally
attacks one’s own tissues and organs, said
Meharg, a retired trauma nurse. For Prosser,
lupus involved constant excruciating pain and
horrible side-effects, and she was allergic to
“traditional” pharmaceuticals.
Only medical marijuana brought her the relief from
pain that made her life bearable, Meharg
reported.
Prosser
was a leading advocate of the Montana medical
marijuana initiative, and when voters passed it in
2004 she had every reason to expect that her
quality of life would improve, Meharg
explained. But last spring, agents of the
federal Drug Enforcement Agency confiscated her
medicine, leading her legally registered caregiver
to fear prosecution, interrupting her
supply.
“Our
patient support group was working hard to improve
her situation, but Robin couldn’t endure her
pain for as long as it takes to grow the precise
strain of medical marijuana that she needed,”
Meharg said. Prosser took her own life on
October 18th
rather than continue to suffer.
Patients
& Families United “will never forget
Robin Prosser’s struggle. She lost her
personal physical fight, but her moral fight for
patients’ rights lives on. We hope her
enduring legacy, through our patients’ legal
defense fund, will be to help other patients
succeed where she failed,” he
said.