Therefore the federal law does not accommodate the modern day change. The legalization of marijuana is complex as there are so many different levels of government regulating and restricting its use and/or possession.
Federal Controlled Substances Act: Designates marijuana as a schedule I drug, making it illegal to cultivate, distribute or possess. Marijuana’s classification recognizes no medical use and comes with the toughest drug penalties. No exception for medical use is provided under federal law.
According to the supremacy clause, states cannot enact laws in conflict with federal law. Yet the legalization of marijuana for medicinal purposes is, in fact, in direct opposition to the federal law stated above. The conflict has led the federal government to adopt a policy incongruous with its own laws: a hands-off approach to states with laws recognizing acceptable uses of marijuana. In doing so, the federal government opens the door to the activity, but at the same time, the actual nature of the criminality under federal law has not been altered. The question now is whether or not the federal government will continue to embrace the hands-off