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Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics (ACT)
Formation1981
PurposeMedical Marijuana Legalization
LeaderRobert Randall

The Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics (ACT) is an organization supporting medical marijuana that was founded in 1981 by Robert C. Randall and Alice O'Leary.[1] Following his diagnosis of glaucoma, Randall appealed to the U.S. government for the ability to access medical marijuana to treat his condition. In 1976, after a non-jury trial and four months of deliberation, D.C. Superior Court Justice Judge James Washington found Randall not guilty of marijuana possession by reason of medical necessity. Moreover, the FDA included Randall in a research program in which he received ten marijuana cigarettes a day to treat his glaucoma. Randall was the first person known to have successfully used medical necessity as a defense against a charge of marijuana possession in violation of the Controlled Substances Act.[2]

History

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The Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics was started in 1981 by Randall and his wife, Alice O-Leary-Randall. The ACT'S goal was to establish federal access to marijuana for individuals with serious and/or life threatening conditions, a polarizing conversation during the time period.[1] After extensive research and lobbying efforts, bill H.R. 4498 was introduced in the House of Representatives in September of 1981.[1] Despite being sponsored and cosponsored by 85 house republicans, the scheduled hearings were never held. Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, a democrat from California, never formally held hearings in part due to his own agenda of establishing heroin as a federally regulated therapeutic agent and worried that the ACT bill would undermine the cause. [2]

Clare Hodges aka Elizabeth Brice founded the UK Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics (ACT) after contacting the Alice O'Leary and Robert Randall in 1992 about the medical benefits of marijuana for individuals suffering from multiple sclerosis[3]. Using the pseudonym Clare Hodges, Brice wrote extensively about her cannabis usage and the positive affects on her mental and physical health dealing with MS. According to Brice, medicinal usage of cannabis drastically improved her life, stating, "Cannabis helps to stabilize my health and I find I can now do simple things that I hadn't been able to do, like go to the shops, or cook my children dinner after school".[3] The renewed ACT focused heavily on lobbying efforts to move cannabis from a Schedule I to a Schedule II drug, in order to restore cannabis's status as a legal medicine.

Randall and O'Leary were still active in proposing medicinal cannabis usage in the US before the UK chapter of the ACT was formed. The group participated in the 1986 hearings on cannabis rescheduling in the United States. ACT along with NORML petitioned for review of the final order of the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration which followed the hearings. See Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics v. DEA, 930 F.2d 936 (D.C.Cir.1991)[4] Moreover, Randall started the Marijuana AIDS Research Service in the 1990's, helping AIDS patients like himself to apply to the FDA program providing individuals with cannabis for medical use.[4] The ACT during this time period became very involved in the British Medicine Association Report, taking delegations of esteemed people such as Professor Patrick Wall and Lord Whaddon to confer with the British Ministry of Health.[5] Following the director of the company GW Pharmaceuticals joining the lobby delegation in 1997, the pharmaceutical company was granted access by British Department of Health Minister Paul Boateng to grow cannabis for medical research. [6]


The ACT is now widely recognized as one of the most influential groups in the promotion of medicinal and recreation cannabis, both in the US and UK. In the UK, cannabis was rescheduled from a Schedule I to a Schedule II substance in November of 2018, with cannabis possession currently legal for those with clinical need. As of 2024, medicinal cannabis is legal in 38 US states, with recreational use legal in 24 states. Despite Randall and Brice both passing away before public medicinal legalization, their contribution to the movement through the ACT was extremely influential in promoting medicinal cannabis usage.

References

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  1. ^ a b "About Robert C. Randall, father of medical marijuana movement". Alice O'Leary Randall & Project 50. Retrieved 2024-11-20.
  2. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-05. Retrieved 2009-02-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ Rosner, Abbie. "A Conversation With Veteran Cannabis Activist Alice O'Leary Randall". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-08-19.
  4. ^ "930 F.2d 936: Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics, Petitioner, v. Drug Enforcement Administration, Respondent.the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, Petitioner, v. Drug Enforcement Administration, Respondent :: US Court of Appeals Cases :: Justia". Cases.justia.com. Retrieved 2011-04-20.
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