BRIAN D. STRONG
Brian Strong - Criminal Defense Lawyer
Criminal Defense Lawyer
Senior Associate

Email: strong@azlegal.com

Contact Numbers:
480-833-2341 (direct line 24/7) 480.833.1113 (office)
480.833-1114 (fax)

MY PRACTICE AREAS
Criminal Defense in Arizona
- Misdemeanors
- Felonies
- Deadly weapons
- Sex offenses
- Drug offenses
- White collar crimes
- DUIs/Traffic offenses
- Juvenile delinquency
- Domestic violence
- Civil Rights reinstatements
- Probation modifications
- Probation violations
- Criminally related civil forfeitures
- Representation before the
  Board of Executive Clemency

* AV® Preeminent Peer Review Rating is a certification mark of Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., used in accordance with the Martindale-Hubbell certification procedures, standards and policies."

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To Marinol, or not to Marinol? That is the Question.

With all the political hubbub and legal strife over medical marijuana, as one who tried to be an educated voter, I found myself asking: “Why don’t we just make a synthetic version of THC (the active natural substance in marijuana) and disburse it in pill form?” The simple answer to that question was, as I found out - we already have.

Synthetic THC has been available for decades. Dronabinol (the man-made form of THC) is approved by both the United States Food and Drug Administration and the United States Drug Enforcement Administration and is marketed under the brand name of Marinol.

Proponents of medical marijuana assert that chemotherapy patients must be granted legal access to marijuana to curb their severe nausea and vomiting. Yet, according to WebMD, Marinol is not only effective in reducing severe nausea and vomiting, but it is “also used to treat loss of appetite and weight loss in patients infected with HIV (the virus that causes AIDS).” See If a THC pill is already available by prescription, why then has there been such a massive political effort to legalize marijuana cigarettes? After all, Morphine is an accepted medical drug, but legalized opium smoking was not on last year’s ballot. This question becomes even more perplexing when one understands that:

There are no FDA-approved medications that are smoked. For one thing, smoking is generally a poor way to deliver medicine. It is difficult to administer safe, regulated dosages of medicines in smoked form. Secondly, the harmful chemicals and carcinogens that are byproducts of smoking create entirely new health problems. There are four times the level of tar in a marijuana cigarette, for example, than in a tobacco cigarette.

Since Marinol has been around for decades, I am dumbfounded as to why medical marijuana has caused our state (and nation) so much political grief. In a struggling economy, the federal and state governments certainly have better things to do with our taxes than sue each other over whether or not the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution includes marijuana cigarettes. There must be some hidden rationale or agenda that I am missing, because it is clear that the proponents of legalizing marijuana cigarettes are not focused solely on the medical benefits of THC.

If you or family members are ever in need of a criminal Defense attorney, please call me at (480) 833-2341 where I am available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.


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