This is a long but very informative article. If you don't feel like all that reading, here's the gist: The petitioners were trying to show that marijuana satisfies the DEA's criteria for accepted medical use. Unfortunately, since the DEA make and change those criteria as necessary to keep marijuana a Schedule 1 drug, it can never meet their criteria. What the petitioners should have been disputing are the DEA's arbitrary and ever-changing criteria. But without that issue being raised, there was nothing the court could do but decide that the DEA followed their own rules. http://newamsterdampsychedeliclaw.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-meaning-of-deas-recent-victory-in.html?m=1
Excellent synopsis Tony. It's going to take a State suing the Feds over scheduling to move this forward. To date no State has stepped up to the plate and it's the one case the Feds are bending over backwards to avoid.
Thanks. I don't believe this will be settled in the courts. After all, the DEA lost a court decision on rescheduling back in 1987 (?), and well, here we still are today. I believe only the President or Congress can force the the DEA to reschedule cannabis.