Court
Rules that Alaska Constitution Protects Personal Possession
of Marijuana
in the Home
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CCLE Top Nwes:
on September 2, 2003
http://www.cognitiveliberty.org/dll/noy1.html
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The Alaska Court of Appeals ruled Friday that the Alaska Constitution’s
privacy guarantee protects an adult’s right to possess up to four
ounces of marijuana in the home for personal use. The ruling (Noy v. State,
No. 1897) overturns the conviction of David Noy, a North Pole medical marijuana
patient.
The decision was the first to resolve a legal conflict between a 1975 Supreme
Court of Alaska decision, Ravin v. State, 537 P.2d 494, and a voter initiative
passed in 1990.
The Ravin case determined that while there was no fundamental right to
possess or use marijuana, an amendment to the Alaska constitution protecting
the right of privacy was broad enough to protect possession of marijuana
in the home by adults, provided the possession was purely personal and
non-commercial in nature. The 1975 decision affirmed the state’s
interest in prohibiting marijuana to protect public welfare, but found
that while that interest properly justified laws against driving under
the influence of marijuana or laws prohibiting possession of marijuana
by minors, it did not justify barring an adult’s personal possession
of marijuana inside a home.
Shortly after the Ravin decision, the Alaska legislature amended the state’s
marijuana laws and set an upper limit of less than four ounces for personal
possession. This earned Alaska the popular, if incorrect, reputation for
having legalized marijuana.
In 1990, with the support of then federal drug-czar William Bennett, Alaska
voters responded by introducing an initiative to criminalize possession
of any amount of marijuana in any location. The initiative, which was carefully
designed to invalidate the Ravin decision, passed with 55% of the vote.
Prior to Friday’s ruling, then the question of whether the voter
initiative could legally trump the Supreme Court’s interpretation
of the Alaska constitution remained unresolved.
On Friday, August 29, the Court of Appeals ruled that when a statute like
the voter initiative conflicts with a constitutional provision, the statute
must give way. “[A] statute which purports to attach criminal penalties
to constitutionally protected conduct is void,” the court stated.
To reconcile the initiative with the state constitution, the appellate
court restricted its enforcement to personal possession of four ounces
or more of marijuana.
Alaska Attorney General, Gregg Renkes, has criticized the decision as going
too far, and intends to appeal it to the Alaska Supreme Court.
The Noy decision can be read online at:
http://www.state.ak.us/courts/ops/ap-1897.pdf
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